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Consider the vast array of things around you, from the building you
are in, the lights illuminating the interior, the computational
devices mediating your life, the music in the background, even the
crockery, furniture and glassware you are in the presence of.
Common to all these objects is that their concrete, visual and
technological forms were invariably conceived, modelled, finished
and tested in sites characterised as studios. Remarkably, the
studio remains a peculiar lacuna in our understanding of how
cultural artefacts are brought into being and how 'creativity'
operates as a located practice. Studio Studies is an agenda setting
volume that presents a set of empirical case studies that explore
and examine the studio as a key setting for aesthetic and material
production. As such, Studio Studies responds to three contemporary
concerns in social and cultural thought: first, how to account for
the situated nature of creative and cultural production; second,
the challenge of reimagining creativity as a socio-materially
distributed practice rather than the cognitive privilege of the
individual; and finally, to unravel the parallels, contrasts and
interconnections between studios and other sites of
cultural-aesthetic and technoscientific production, notably
laboratories. By enquiring into the operations, topologies and
displacements that shape and format studios, this volume aims to
demarcate a novel and important object of analysis for empirical
social and cultural research as well to develop new conceptual
repertoires to unpack the multiple ways studio processes shape our
everyday lives.
Is another future possible? So called 'late modernity' is marked by
the escalating rise in and proliferation of uncertainties and
unforeseen events brought about by the interplay between and
patterning of social-natural, techno-scientific and
political-economic developments. The future has indeed become
problematic. The question of how heterogeneous actors engage
futures, what intellectual and practical strategies they put into
play and what the implications of such strategies are, have become
key concerns of recent social and cultural research addressing a
diverse range of fields of practice and experience. Exploring
questions of speculation, possibilities and futures in contemporary
societies, Speculative Research responds to the pressing need to
not only critically account for the role of calculative logics and
rationalities in managing societal futures, but to develop
alternative approaches and sensibilities that take futures
seriously as possibilities and that demand new habits and practices
of attention, invention, and experimentation.
Is another future possible? So called 'late modernity' is marked by
the escalating rise in and proliferation of uncertainties and
unforeseen events brought about by the interplay between and
patterning of social-natural, techno-scientific and
political-economic developments. The future has indeed become
problematic. The question of how heterogeneous actors engage
futures, what intellectual and practical strategies they put into
play and what the implications of such strategies are, have become
key concerns of recent social and cultural research addressing a
diverse range of fields of practice and experience. Exploring
questions of speculation, possibilities and futures in contemporary
societies, Speculative Research responds to the pressing need to
not only critically account for the role of calculative logics and
rationalities in managing societal futures, but to develop
alternative approaches and sensibilities that take futures
seriously as possibilities and that demand new habits and practices
of attention, invention, and experimentation.
The first of a two volume set showcasing current research in model
theory and its connections with number theory, algebraic geometry,
real analytic geometry and differential algebra. Each volume
contains a series of expository essays and research papers around
the subject matter of a Newton Institute Semester on Model Theory
and Applications to Algebra and Analysis. The articles convey
outstanding new research on topics such as model theory and
conjectures around Mordell-Lang; arithmetic of differential
equations, and Galois theory of difference equations; model theory
and complex analytic geometry; o-minimality; model theory and
noncommutative geometry; definable groups of finite dimension;
Hilbert's tenth problem; and Hrushovski constructions. With
contributions from so many leaders in the field, this book will
undoubtedly appeal to all mathematicians with an interest in model
theory and its applications, from graduate students to senior
researchers and from beginners to experts.
The second of a two volume set showcasing current research in model
theory and its connections with number theory, algebraic geometry,
real analytic geometry and differential algebra. Each volume
contains a series of expository essays and research papers around
the subject matter of a Newton Institute Semester on Model Theory
and Applications to Algebra and Analysis. The articles convey
outstanding new research on topics such as model theory and
conjectures around Mordell-Lang; arithmetic of differential
equations, and Galois theory of difference equations; model theory
and complex analytic geometry; o-minimality; model theory and
non-commutative geometry; definable groups of finite dimension;
Hilbert's tenth problem; and Hrushovski constructions. With
contributions from so many leaders in the field, this book will
undoubtedly appeal to all mathematicians with an interest in model
theory and its applications, from graduate students to senior
researchers and from beginners to experts.
Consider the vast array of things around you, from the building you
are in, the lights illuminating the interior, the computational
devices mediating your life, the music in the background, even the
crockery, furniture and glassware you are in the presence of.
Common to all these objects is that their concrete, visual and
technological forms were invariably conceived, modelled, finished
and tested in sites characterised as studios. Remarkably, the
studio remains a peculiar lacuna in our understanding of how
cultural artefacts are brought into being and how 'creativity'
operates as a located practice. Studio Studies is an agenda setting
volume that presents a set of empirical case studies that explore
and examine the studio as a key setting for aesthetic and material
production. As such, Studio Studies responds to three contemporary
concerns in social and cultural thought: first, how to account for
the situated nature of creative and cultural production; second,
the challenge of reimagining creativity as a socio-materially
distributed practice rather than the cognitive privilege of the
individual; and finally, to unravel the parallels, contrasts and
interconnections between studios and other sites of
cultural-aesthetic and technoscientific production, notably
laboratories. By enquiring into the operations, topologies and
displacements that shape and format studios, this volume aims to
demarcate a novel and important object of analysis for empirical
social and cultural research as well to develop new conceptual
repertoires to unpack the multiple ways studio processes shape our
everyday lives.
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Energy Babble (Paperback)
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