Results for 'Material culture in literature'

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  1.  8
    Treasuring Yemen: Notes on Exchange and Collection in Rasūlid Material Culture.Ellen Kenney - 2021 - Der Islam: Journal of the History and Culture of the Middle East 98 (1):27-68.
    Often distinguished by their characteristic five-petalled rosette emblems, objects dedicated to the Rasūlid sultans of Yemen in Egypt or Syria have long been identified as a distinct corpus in histories of Islamic art. Whether treated singly or as a group, these objects have usually been positioned in the periphery of discussions about Mamlūk luxury arts or cited briefly as evidence of diplomatic relations between the Mamlūk and Rasūlid leadership. Perhaps reflecting a general marginalization of South Arabia in the historiographic traditions (...)
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  2.  41
    Bioethics Resources on the Web.National Reference Center for Bioethics Literature - 2000 - Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 10 (2):175-188.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 10.2 (2000) 175-188 [Access article in PDF] Scope Note 38 Bioethics Resources on the Web * Once described as an "enormous used book store with volumes stacked on shelves and tables and overflowing onto the floor" (Pool, Robert. 1994. Turning an Info-Glut into a Library. Science 266 (7 October): 20-22, p. 20), Internet resources now receive numerous levels of organization, from basic directory listings (...)
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  3. American material culture in mind, thought, and deed.Anne Yentsch & Mary C. Beaudry - 2001 - In Ian Hodder (ed.), Archaeological theory today. Malden, MA: Blackwell. pp. 214--40.
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  4.  6
    Deina Ta Polla: Protocol of the Fifty-first Colloquy, 5 May 1985.Thomas G. Rosenmeyer, William R. Herzog & Center for Hermeneutical Studies in Hellenistic and Modern Culture - 1986
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  5.  3
    Creating Material Worlds: the uses of identity in archaeology.Elizabeth Pierce, Anthony Russell, Adrián Maldonado & Louisa Campbell (eds.) - 2016 - Oxford: Oxbow Books.
    Despite a growing literature on identity theory in the last two decades, much of its current use in archaeology is still driven toward locating and dating static categories such as 'Phoenician,' 'Christian' or 'native.' Previous studies have highlighted the various problems and challenges presented by identity, with the overall effect of deconstructing it to insignificance. As the humanities and social sciences turn to material culture, archaeology provides a unique perspective on the interaction between people and things over (...)
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  6.  5
    Transforming Toxic Materialities: Microbes in Anthropogenically Polluted Soils.Alicia Ng - forthcoming - Theory, Culture and Society.
    In this essay, I explore non-human multispecies interactions in soils polluted by electronic waste and subsequently bioremediated by plants and microbes. I argue that regenerative transformation in polluted soil environments is principally through microbial degradation, a significant process for survival amidst disaster. In doing so, I combine two separate research areas – the materiality of electronic waste and of soils – thus contributing to theorization on the persistent problem of anthropogenically polluted soils. I do so by examining the process of (...)
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  7.  18
    Taste and Ideology in Seventeenth-Century France.Michael Moriarty & Centenary Professor of French Literature and Thought Michael Moriarty - 1988 - Cambridge University Press.
    This book analyses the use of the crucial concept of 'taste' in the works of five major seventeenth-century French authors, Méré, Saint Evremond, La Rochefoucauld, La Bruyère and Boileau. It combines close readings of important texts with a thoroughgoing political analysis of seventeenth-century French society in terms of class and gender. Dr Moriarty shows that far from being timeless and universal, the term 'taste' is culture-specific, shifting according to the needs of a writer and his social group. The notion (...)
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  8.  37
    Comparison Analysis on Architectural Culture in China and Western Countries.Xiaoxiao Wang - 2010 - Cultura 7 (1):97-110.
    Architecture culture is the synthesis of material possession and spiritual wealth, created by human society history development and reflects historic continuity and nationality character. This paper has a comprehensive comparison analysis on distinctions of originality, architecture characteristic, developing logic, art forms, and intention between China and Western Countries exhibited on architectural culture, including three parts: ancient period, current period, and future development. Through comparison studies, it presents a comprehensive cognition on different cultural backgrounds and unique exhibition forms (...)
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  9. Chastity in Early Stuart Literature and Culture.Bonnie Lander Johnson - 2015 - Cambridge University Press.
    In this book, Bonnie Lander Johnson explores early modern ideas of chastity, demonstrating how crucial early Stuart thinking on chastity was to political, medical, theological and moral debates, and that it was also a virtue that governed the construction of different literary genres. Drawing on a range of materials, from prose to theatre, theological controversy to legal trials, and court ceremonies - including royal birthing rituals - Lander Johnson unearths previously unrecognised opinions about chastity. She reveals that early Stuart theatrical (...)
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  10.  5
    Culture, Genre, and Literary Vocation: Selected Essays on American Literature.J. Leland Miller Professor of American History Literature and Eloquence Michael Davitt Bell & Michael Davitt Bell - 2001 - University of Chicago Press.
    In Culture, Genre, and Literary Vocation, Michael Davitt Bell charts the important and often overlooked connection between literary culture and authors' careers. Bell's influential essays on nineteenth-century American writers—originally written for such landmark projects as The Columbia Literary History of the United States and The Cambridge History of American Literature—are gathered here with a major new essay on Richard Wright. Throughout, Bell revisits issues of genre with an eye toward the unexpected details of authors' lives, and invites (...)
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  11.  27
    Aromas, Scents, and Spices: Olfactory Culture in China before the Arrival of Buddhism.Olivia Milburn - 2021 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 136 (3):441.
    Research into early Chinese olfactory culture is only just beginning. This paper argues that before the arrival of Buddhism, elite scent culture had already begun to be transformed by the importation of foreign aromatics, though these substances arrived shorn of their original cultural context. Prior to the importing of intense foreign perfumes, the aromatics available were mostly local, and traditional Chinese practice stressed the use of individual scents in religious contexts, a concept which also had a profound influence (...)
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  12.  13
    Cultural Differences in Consumer Responses to Celebrities Acting Immorally: A Comparison of the United States and South Korea.In-Hye Kang & Taehoon Park - 2021 - Journal of Business Ethics 180 (1):373-389.
    Scandals involving celebrities’ moral transgressions are common in both Western and Eastern cultures. Existing literature, however, has been primarily based on Western cultures. We examine differences between South Korea and the United States in consumers’ support for celebrities engaged in moral transgressions and for the brands they endorse. Across six studies, we find that Korean consumers show lower support for celebrities who engaged in moral transgressions. This effect occurs because Korean consumers have a stronger belief that an individual’s competence (...)
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  13.  3
    Raw Material: Producing Pathology in Victorian Culture[REVIEW]David Knight - 2002 - Isis 93:137-138.
    Readers expecting a history of nineteenth‐century pathology are in for a surprise. They will find instead a self‐conscious example of cultural studies, critical of some assumptions made in this field and of some feminist writing, but containing some alarming sentences like “My goal has been to give shape to the accidental palimpsests of an inveterately verbal, and increasingly visual, culture; to assemble a particular series of hermeneutic loose ends into a coherent account of how an extraordinarily bizarre system of (...)
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  14.  3
    Women, Writing, and the Reproduction of Culture in Tudor and Stuart Britain.Mary Burke, Jane L. Donawerth, Linda L. Dove & Karen Nelson - 2000 - Syracuse University Press.
    In Tudor and Stuart Britain, women writers took active roles in negotiating cultural ideas and systems to gain power by participating in politics through writing, shaping the aesthetics of genre, and fashioning feminine gender, despite constraints on women. Through the lens of cultural studies, the authors explore the ways in which women of this era worked to actually create culture. Articles cover five areas: women, writing, and material culture; women as objects and agents in reproducing culture; (...)
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  15.  9
    The role of material culture in human time representation: Calendrical systems as extensions of mental time travel.Johan De Smedt & Helen De Cruz - 2011 - Adaptive Behavior 19 (1):63 - 76.
    Humans have cognitive mechanisms that allow them to keep track of time, represent past events, and simulate the future, but these capacities have intrinsic constraints. Here, we explore the role of material culture as an extension of internal time representations through anthropological and archeological case studies, focusing on Upper Paleolithic material culture. We argue that calendars complement and extend internal time representations, because they enable humans to project past events into the future more accurately than is (...)
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  16.  16
    Food for Love: Bicolano’s Culture in Merlinda Bobis’ Novel.Sherill A. Gilbas - 2014 - Iamure International Journal of Literature, Philosophy and Religion 6 (1).
    Food satisfies hunger and hunger obeys desire. Accordingly, desire and longing result in societal problems. Food and love may be extreme needs of humans, but the fulfillment of a human’s wants through food and love may help ease such societal problems. This paper aims to unravel the culture of the Bicolanos as the theme highlighted in Merlinda Bobis’ Banana Heart Summer. As a contemporary novel, Banana Heart Summer depicts the material and nonmaterial culture of Region V known (...)
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  17.  6
    Literature, Art and the Pursuit of Decay in Twentieth-Century France.Timothy Mathews - 2001 - Cambridge University Press.
    In Literature, Art and the Pursuit of Decay, Timothy Mathews examines work by a range of writers and painters working in France in the twentieth century. The well-illustrated book engages with canonical figures - Guillaume Apollinaire, Marguerite Duras and Jean Genet, Roland Barthes, Pablo Picasso and René Magritte - as well as more neglected individuals including Robert Desnos and Jean Fautrier. Mathews draws on psychoanalysis, existentialism and poststructuralism to show how both literature and fine art promote the value (...)
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  18.  2
    "Philosophy of Culture" by G.V. Florovsky in the early years (1920s) of the European creative period.Aleksandr Aleksandrovich Dubonosov - forthcoming - Philosophy and Culture (Russian Journal).
    The subject of the research in this article are certain aspects of the "philosophy of culture" of the prominent thinker, theologian, historian of Russian thought Georgy Vasilyevich Florovsky, which influenced the evolution of his worldview. Special attention is paid to the facts of the "European" period of his biography, the analysis of his "Eurasian" works, as well as his assessments of the philosophical concepts of some Russian thinkers and calls for the conversion of the process of cultural creativity to (...)
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  19.  53
    The Singing Voice’s Charms. Aesthetic and Transformative Aspects of Singing in Literature, Art, and Philosophy.Małgorzata A. Szyszkowska - 2022 - Eidos. A Journal for Philosophy of Culture 6 (2):26-36.
    Music, as sung and listened to, has been described in many a tale as powerful and transformative. Yet, the important question is not so much if that claim is true or whether it may be verified, but what kind of power and transformation are alluded to in those mythical and literary sources? Taking these symbolic claims and elaborating on their possible meaning, alongside thinkers such as Carolyne Abbate or Roland Barthes, proceeds to find ways in which these claims may suggest (...)
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  20.  14
    Material virtue: ethics and the body in early China.Mark Csikszentmihalyi - 2004 - Boston: Brill.
    The turn to descriptive studies of ethics is inspired by the sense that our ethical theorizing needs to engage ethnography, history, and literature in order to address the full complexity of ethical life. This article examines four books that describe the cultivation of virtue in diverse cultural contexts, two concerning early China and two concerning Islam in recent years. All four emphasize the significance of embodiment, and they attend to the complex ways in which choice and agency interact with (...)
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  21. Material Virtue: Ethics and the Body in Early China.Mark Csikszentmihalyi, Anna Gade, Saba Mahmood & Edward Slingerland - 2007 - Journal of Religious Ethics 35 (4):713-728.
    The turn to descriptive studies of ethics is inspired by the sense that our ethical theorizing needs to engage ethnography, history, and literature in order to address the full complexity of ethical life. This article examines four books that describe the cultivation of virtue in diverse cultural contexts, two concerning early China and two concerning Islam in recent years. All four emphasize the significance of embodiment, and they attend to the complex ways in which choice and agency interact with (...)
     
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  22.  7
    Scale in Literature and Culture.Michael Tavel Clarke & David Wittenberg (eds.) - 2017 - Cham: Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan.
    This collection emphasizes a cross-disciplinary approach to the problem of scale, with essays ranging in subject matter from literature to film, architecture, the plastic arts, philosophy, and scientific and political writing. Its contributors consider a variety of issues provoked by the sudden and pressing shifts in scale brought on by globalization and the era of the Anthropocene, including: the difficulties of defining the concept of scale; the challenges that shifts in scale pose to knowledge formation; the role of scale (...)
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  23. Adolescent Sexuality and Pregnancy. Edited by Patricia Voydanoff & Brenda W. Donnelly. Pp. 131.(Sage, London, 1990.)£ 9.95 (paperback). This is a brief, competent, well-presented literature review of almost exclusively American material. Cross-cultural perspectives receive less than one page's treatment. Americans have much to concern them. Over a million teenagers (one in nine). [REVIEW]Stanley J. Uluaszek - forthcoming - Journal of Biosocial Science.
     
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  24.  8
    Jan-Peer Hartmann and Andrew James Johnston, eds., Material Remains: Reading the Past in Medieval and Early Modern British Literature. (Interventions: New Studies in Medieval Culture.) Columbus: The Ohio State University Press, 2021. Pp. x, 294; black-and-white figures. $99.95. ISBN: 978-0-8142-1474-9. Table of contents available online at https://ohiostatepress.org/books/titles/9780814214749.html. [REVIEW]Eric Weiskott - 2022 - Speculum 97 (4):1202-1204.
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  25.  28
    Literature Is Philosophy: On the Literary Methodological Considerations That Would Improve the Practice and Culture of Philosophy.Amir R. Jaima - 2019 - The Pluralist 14 (2):13-29.
    How should one write, what words should one select, what forms and structures and organization, if one is pursuing understanding? Sometimes this is taken to be trivial question. I shall claim that it is not.[T]here is nothing that so alters the material qualities of the voice as the presence of thought behind what is being said: the resonance of the diphthongs, the energy of the labials are profoundly affected—as is the diction.philosophy and literature are akin in rich and (...)
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  26.  3
    Reconsidering the link between past material culture and cognition in light of contemporary hunter-gatherer material use.Duncan N. E. Stibbard-Hawkes - forthcoming - Behavioral and Brain Sciences:1-53.
    Many have interpreted symbolic material culture in the deep past as evidencing the origins sophisticated, modern cognition. Scholars from across the behavioural and cognitive sciences, including linguists, psychologists, philosophers, neuroscientists, primatologists, archaeologists and paleoanthropologists have used such artefacts to assess the capacities of extinct human species, and to set benchmarks, milestones or otherwise chart the course of human cognitive evolution. To better calibrate our expectations, the present paper instead explores the material culture of three contemporary African (...)
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  27.  20
    Material basis of ethical attitude towards desire in ancient eastern religious and philosophical systems.S. V. Alushkin - 2019 - Anthropological Measurements of Philosophical Research 16:171-182.
    Purpose of this article is to study the phenomenon of desire in Ancient Chinese and ancient Indian society, to reveal a material basis for the appearance and formation of the specific ethical attitude towards desire in the philosophical reflection of ancient thinkers. To fulfil this purpose, we should study and analyse methodology of desire studies in philosophical and psychological literature, analyse the ethical attitude towards desire in religious and philosophical texts of Chinese and Indian thinkers, understand social and (...)
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  28. More broadly, computer networks have made interaction between.Cultures In Collision - 2002 - In James Moor & Terrell Ward Bynum (eds.), Cyberphilosophy: The Intersection of Philosophy and Computing. Blackwell.
  29.  6
    Lying in early modern English culture: from the Oath of Supremacy to the Oath of Allegiance.Andrew Hadfield - 2017 - Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press.
    Lying in Early Modern English Culture is a major study of ideas of truth and falsehood in early modern England from the advent of the Reformation to the aftermath of the failed Gunpowder Plot. The period is characterised by panic and chaos when few had any idea how religious, cultural, and social life would develop after the traumatic division of Christendom. While many saw the need for a secular power to define the truth others declared that their allegiances belonged (...)
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  30.  47
    Distributed Cognition in Victorian Culture and Modernism.Miranda Anderson, Peter Garratt & Mark Sprevak (eds.) - 2020 - Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.
    Reinvigorates our understanding of Victorian and modernist works and society Offers a wide-ranging application of theories of distributed cognition to Victorian culture and Modernism Explores the distinctive nature and expression of notions of distributed cognition in Victorian culture and Modernism and considers their relation to current notions Reinvigorates our understanding of Western European works – including Wordsworth, T. S. Eliot and Virginia Woolf – and society by bringing to bear recent insights on the distributed nature of cognition Includes (...)
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  31. The co-evolution of tools and minds: cognition and material culture in the hominin lineage.Ben Jeffares - 2010 - Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 9 (4):503-520.
    The structuring of our environment to provide cues and reminders for ourselves is common: We leave notes on the fridge, we have a particular place for our keys where we deposit them, making them easy to find. We alter our world to streamline our cognitive tasks. But how did hominins gain this capacity? What pushed our ancestors to structure their physical environment in ways that buffered thinking and began the process of using the world cognitively? I argue that the capacity (...)
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  32.  50
    Guarding what is essential: Critiques of material culture in Thoreau and Yang Zhu.Alan Fox - 2008 - Philosophy East and West 58 (3):pp. 358-371.
    In his book "Walden", Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862) describes an experiment intended to determine what is essential in life. His analysis includes a critique of the excesses of material culture, concluding that the most important concerns for human beings revolve around the retention of what he calls "heat." I suggest that there are a number of interesting parallels between this analysis and a cluster of ideas generally describable as "protodaoist" and often attributed to the legendary and obscure figure (...)
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  33.  47
    Beauty in Arabic culture.Doris Behrens-Abouseif - 1999 - Princeton, NJ: Markus Wiener Publishers.
    Although beauty, in the pre-modern Arab world, was enjoyed and promoted almost everywhere, Islam does not possess a general theory on aesthetics or a systematic theory of the arts. This is a study of the Arabic discourse on beauty. The author had to search for her evidence in written statements from a wide variety of sources, such as the Qur'an, legal, religious and Sufi texts, chronicles, biographies, belle-lettres, literary criticism, and scientific, geographic and philosophical literature. The result is a (...)
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  34.  9
    Music, body, and desire in medieval culture: Hildegard of Bingen to Chaucer.Bruce W. Holsinger - 2001 - Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press.
    Ranging chronologically from the twelfth to the fifteenth century and thematically from Latin to vernacular literary modes, this book challenges standard assumptions about the musical cultures and philosophies of the European Middle Ages. Engaging a wide range of premodern texts and contexts, from the musicality of sodomy in twelfth-century polyphony to Chaucer's representation of pedagogical violence in the Prioress's Tale, from early Christian writings on the music of the body to the plainchant and poetry of Hildegard of Bingen, the author (...)
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  35.  5
    Material Culture of the Northern Sea Peoples in Israel. By Ephraim Stern.Eric H. Cline - 2021 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 136 (1).
    The Material Culture of the Northern Sea Peoples in Israel. By Ephraim Stern. Harvard Semitic Museum Publications, Studies in the Archaeology and History of the Levant, vol. 5. Winona Lake, Ind.: Eisenbrauns, 2013. Pp. ix + 74, illus. $29.50.
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  36.  16
    Devotionalism, Material Culture, and the Personal in Greek Religion.K. A. Rask - 2016 - Kernos 29:9-40.
    Malgré l’accent porté sur les aspects publics, ritualistes de la pratique ancienne, les images et les objets grecs attestent des rencontres privées et personnelles avec des dieux. Cet article recourt à la documentation archéologique pour explorer les traits personnels, vécus, de la vie religieuse de l’Athènes attique. Bien qu’elles soient parfois décrites comme des « transactions », le développement des relations personnelles avec les dieux et de la manipulation de choses matérielles semble être l’un des éléments les plus saillants de (...)
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  37.  8
    The material culture and politics of artifacts in nuclear diplomacy.Maria Rentetzi & Kenji Ito - 2021 - Centaurus 63 (2):233-243.
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  38.  7
    The betrayal of substance: death, literature, and sexual difference in Hegel's "Phenomenology of spirit".Mary C. Rawlinson - 2020 - New York: Columbia University Press.
    Few works have had the impact on contemporary philosophy exerted by Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit. Twentieth-century philosophers in France were bound together by a reading of Hyppolite's translation and commentary. Sartre, Merleau-Ponty, Lacan, and Bataille were all shaped by Kojève's lectures on the book. Late twentieth-century philosophers such as Derrida, Lyotard, Deleuze, and Irigaray all operate against a Hegelian horizon. Similarly, in Germany Heidegger, Adorno, and Habermas developed their philosophies in large part through an engagement with Hegel. In the United (...)
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  39.  16
    Quotations in Vedic Literature: Is the Changing of a Mantra a Stylistic Device or the Degeneration of a “Beautiful Mind?”.Elena Mucciarelli - 2015 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 43 (4-5):559-579.
    Many stanzas of the Ṛgvedasaṃhitā are re-used in the liturgical literature, that is, mainly in the Saṃhitās of the Yajurveda and in the Brāhmaṇas. Most of them are quoted precisely and they are apportioned in each different rite; yet, there are quite a few cases in which some variations have been adopted and the material of the sourcetext has been manipulated. As to the cultural development that resulted in such a use of the hymns, one of the most (...)
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  40. Textual and Material Culture in Anglo-Saxon England: Thomas Nothcote Toller and the Toller Memorial Lectures. [REVIEW]Stephen Harris - 2004 - The Medieval Review 2.
     
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  41.  21
    Exaptation in the Co-evolution of Technology and Mind: New Perspectives from Some Old Literature.Oliver Schlaudt - 2022 - Philosophy and Technology 35 (2):1-26.
    The term exaptation, describing the phenomenon that an existing trait or tool proves to be of new adaptive value in a new context, is flourishing in recent literature from cultural evolution and cognitive archaeology. Yet there also exists an older literature from the nineteenth and twentieth centuries which studied more or less systematically the phenomenon of “change of function” in culture and tool use. Michel Foucault and Ludwig Noiré, who devoted themselves to the history of social institutions (...)
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  42.  4
    Organizational Culture and Social climate in Kazakhstani Higher Education Institutions during the COVID-19 Crisis: KazNU Case Study.Aigerim Belyalova & Byong-Soon Chun - 2020 - Cultura 17 (2):151-164.
    The purpose of this study is to analyze the current characteristics of organizational culture and climate in Kazakhstani higher educational institutions during the COVID-19 crisis. Materials for the study were collected from interviews and online discussions published on the website of Al-Farabi Kazakh National University. In addition, results from the social monitoring systems of the university’s educational activities as well as an official survey have been used. The study offers details of how Kazakhstani universities dealt with the crisis by (...)
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  43.  24
    Distributed Cognition in Enlightenment and Romantic Culture.Miranda Anderson, George Rousseau & Michael Wheeler (eds.) - 2019 - Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.
    11 essays by international specialists open up the research field of distributed cognition and the cognitive humanities in the Enlightenment and Romantic periods - The third book in an ambitious four-volume set looking at distributed cognition in the history of thought - Brings together essays on literature, history, philosophy, art, archaeology, medicine, science and material culture - Includes a general and a period-specific introduction to distributed cognition and the cognitive humanities - For students and scholars in Enlightenment (...)
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  44.  27
    Explorations in the Understanding of Landscape: A Cultural Geography.William Norton - 1989 - Praeger.
    An innovative contribution to the literature of cultural geography, this book explores the evolution of landscape--both material and symbolic--from the standpoint of the populations, cultures, and human decision-making processes that shape and give it meaning. Focusing on evolution, behavior, symbolism, and ecology, Norton offers a critique of the literature of cultural and social geography and articulates a framework of central issues that connect a wide range of theoretical approaches. In the first four chapters, Norton gives detailed consideration (...)
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  45.  6
    Material Culture as Amulets: Magical Elements and the Apotropaic in Ancient Roman World.Vagner Carvalheiro Porto - 2020 - Philosophy Study 10 (8).
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  46.  4
    Other things.Bill Brown - 2015 - Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
    From the pencil to the puppet to the drone—the humanities and the social sciences continue to ride a wave of interest in material culture and the world of things. How should we understand the force and figure of that wave as it shapes different disciplines? Other Things explores this question by considering a wide assortment of objects—from beach glass to cell phones, sneakers to skyscrapers—that have fascinated a range of writers and artists, including Virginia Woolf, Man Ray, Spike (...)
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  47.  53
    Material culture and mass consumption.Daniel Miller - 1987 - New York, NY, USA: Blackwell.
    Exploring materialism and social relationships in modern culture Material Culture and Mass Consumption offers an in-depth exploration of objects, objectification, ideology, and materialism in modern society. Drawing from Hegel, Marx, Munn, and Simmel, the discussion delves into the physicality of the material world and attempts to understand materialism as a form of cultural expression. Targeting mass production as the root of mass consumption, rather than the result, this book positions material goods at odds with genuine (...)
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  48.  5
    Isn't it ironic?: irony in contemporary popular culture.Ian Kinane (ed.) - 2021 - New York: Routledge.
    This volume addresses the relationship between irony and popular culture and the role of the consumer in determining and disseminating meaning. Arguing that in a cultural climate largely characterised by fractious communications and perilous linguistic exchanges, the very role of irony in popular culture needs to come under greater scrutiny, it focuses on the many uses, abuses, and misunderstandings of irony in contemporary popular culture, and explores the troubling political populism at the heart of many supposedly satirical (...)
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  49.  26
    Material Culture Objects In The Epics Of Dede Korkut And Âşık Garip Folk Romance.Süheyla Saritaş - 2008 - Journal of Turkish Studies 3:89-95.
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  50.  7
    Malleable Anatomies. Models, Makers, and Material Culture in Eighteenth-Century Italy.Margaret Carlyle - 2021 - Annals of Science 78 (1):128-131.
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