|
Showing 1 - 25 of
181 matches in All Departments
This international collection brings together scientists, scholars
and artist-researchers to explore the cognition of memory through
the performing arts and examine artistic strategies that target
cognitive processes of memory. The strongly embodied and highly
trained memory systems of performing artists render artistic
practice a rich context for understanding how memory is formed,
utilized and adapted through interaction with others, instruments
and environments. Using experimental, interpretive and
Practice-as-Research methods that bridge disciplines, the authors
provide overview chapters and case studies of subjects such as: *
collectively and environmentally distributed memory in the
performing arts; * autobiographical memory triggers in performance
creation and reception; * the journey from learning to memory in
performance training; * the relationship between memory, awareness
and creative spontaneity, and * memorization and embodied or
structural analysis of scores and scripts. This volume provides an
unprecedented resource for scientists, scholars, artists, teachers
and students looking for insight into the cognition of memory in
the arts, strategies of learning and performance, and
interdisciplinary research methodology.
Since the celebration of the bicentenary of The Wealth of Nations,
the last twenty years have seen a burgeoning interest in Adam
Smith's contribution to economics. Jan Peil's book aims to provide
a new model for interpreting Smith's contribution to economic
science. This model elucidates Smith's vision of the free market
economy by placing it in the historical circumstances of the time.
In the first part of the book the author discusses how we should
read Smith and outlines the new hermeneutical model of
interpretation of his economic thought. For example, in reviewing
The Wealth of Nations, the author places Smith's work firmly in the
context of moral philosophy and the debate on the sense and meaning
of the emerging commercial society which was taking place in the
18th century. In discussing Smith's economics, the author clearly
focuses on the question: why should we re-read Smith and according
to which model of interpretation? Finally, he discusses the
relevance of reinterpreting Smith's economics as part of moral
philosophy for today's debate on the principles of economics. This
innovative book will be of great interest to historians of economic
thought and political economy, scholars and students of the
philosophy and methodology of economics and all those interested in
Adam Smith and his relevance for economics today.
This edited volume explores different meanings of media convergence
and deconvergence, and reconsiders them in critical and innovative
ways. Its parts provide together a broad picture of opposing trends
and tensions in media convergence, by underlining the relevance of
this powerful idea and emphasizing the misconceptions that it has
generated. Sergio Sparviero, Corinna Peil, Gabriele Balbi and the
other authors look into practices and realities of users in
convergent media environments, ambiguities in the production and
distribution of content, changes to the organization of media
industries, the re-configuration of media markets, and the
influence of policy and regulations. Primarily addressed to
scholars and students in different fields of media and
communication studies, Media Convergence and Deconvergence
deconstructs taken-for-granted concepts and provides alternative
and fresh analyses on one of the most popular topics in
contemporary media culture. Chapter 1 is available open access
under a CC BY 4.0 license at link.springer.com
Crete offers rich material for investigating questions at the heart
of research on social organization in ancient Greece. The essays in
these proceedings use archeological and historical approaches to
analyze the processes of structural change that took place in the
cities of Crete during the archaic and classical periods, bringing
together for the first time various research methods to develop a
coherent perspective.
Performance generating systems are systematic and task-based
dramaturgies that generate performance for or with an audience. In
dance, such systems differ in ways that matter from more closed
choreographed scores and more open forms of structured
improvisation. Dancers performing within these systems draw on
predefined and limited sources while working on specific tasks
within constraining rules. The generating components of the systems
provide boundaries that enable the performance to self-organize
into iteratively shifting patterns instead of becoming repetitive
or chaotic. This book identifies the generating components and
dynamics of these works and the kinds of dramaturgical agency they
enable. It explains how the systems of these creations affect the
perception, cognition and learning of dancers and why that is a
central part of how they work. It also examines how the combined
dramaturgical and psychological effects of the systems
performatively address individual and social conditions of trauma
that otherwise tend to remain unchangeable and negatively impact
the human capacity to learn, relate and adapt. The book provides
analytical frameworks and practical insights for those who wish to
study or apply performance generating systems in dance within the
fields of choreography and dance dramaturgy, dance education,
community dance or dance psychology. Featured cases offer unique
insight into systems created by Deborah Hay and Christopher House,
William Forsythe, Ame Henderson, Karen Kaeja and Lee Su-Feh.
Â
This book focuses on technical safety, means of expanding the
current procedures, and making the related risks more predictable.
It identifies the 'hidden commonalities' of the various technical
safety concepts and formulates a corresponding procedure,
applicable across disciplines, in a single guideline. The future is
now: we constantly face change through science, research and
technologies, change through industrial development, and new
innovations and complexities. Our society fundamentally depends on
technical systems, infrastructures and interconnected smart
components, in every corner of the human environment. And these
systems bring with them the need for technical safety. The risks of
extending what is technically feasible have to be identified and
analyzed at an early stage so as to avoid and/or mitigate potential
harm by means of appropriate countermeasures. Every technical field
interprets technical safety in its own way. However, if a safety
concept is to be comprehensively applied, it must be compatible
with all technical fields - a challenge this book successfully
addresses.
The Handbook of Economics and Ethics portrays an understanding of
economic methodology in which facts and values, though distinct,
are closely interconnected in a variety of ways. From theory
building to data collection, and from modelling to policy
evaluation, this encyclopaedic Handbook is at the intersection of
economics and ethics. Irene van Staveren and Jan Peil bring
together 75 unique and original papers to provide up-to-date
insights on topics such as markets, globalization, human
development, rationality, efficiency, and corporate social
responsibility. The book presents contributions from an array of
international scholars using methodological and theoretical
approaches, and convincingly demonstrates the death of the
positive/normative dichotomy that so long held economics in its
grip. This invaluable resource will strongly appeal to students of
economics and economic methodology, philosophy of science and
ethics. It will also be of great benefit to academics and
policy-makers involved in economic policies and ethics.
Most of the papers contained in this volume grew out of
presentations given attheInternational Workshop
StatGIS03-InterfacingGeostatistics, GISand Spatial Data Bases,
which was held in Portschach, Austria, Sept. 29-Oct. 1, 2003, and
ensuing discussions, afterwards. Some of the papers are new and
have not been given at the conference. Therefore, most of the
papers should not be considered as conference proceedings in its
original sense but rather
moreasself-containedandactualcontributionstothethemeoftheconference,
the interfacing between geostatistics, geoinformation systems and
spatial data base management. Although some progress has been made
toward interfacing, we still feel
thatthereisonlylittleoverlapbetweenthedi?erentcommunities.Thepresent
volume is intended to provide a bridge between specialists working
in di?erent areas. According to the topics of the above mentioned
workshop, this volume has been divided into three parts: Part I
starts with general aspects of geostatistical model building
(Pebesma) and then new methodological developments in geostatics
are p- sented, in particular this pertains to neural networks
(Parkin and Kanevski), Gibbs ?elds as used in statistical physics
(Hristopulos). Furthermore, new - velopments in Bayesian spatial
interpolation with skewed heavy-tailed data and new classi?cation
methods based on wavelets (Hofer et al.) and support vector
machines (Chaouch et al.) are presented.
This volume presents a selection of articles on statistical
modeling and simulation, with a focus on different aspects of
statistical estimation and testing problems, the design of
experiments, reliability and queueing theory, inventory analysis,
and the interplay between statistical inference, machine learning
methods and related applications. The refereed contributions
originate from the 10th International Workshop on Simulation and
Statistics, SimStat 2019, which was held in Salzburg, Austria,
September 2–6, 2019, and were either presented at the conference
or developed afterwards, relating closely to the topics of the
workshop. The book is intended for statisticians and Ph.D. students
who seek current developments and applications in the field.
Ten international dramaturg-scholars advance proposals that reset
notions of agency in contemporary dance creation. Dramaturgy
becomes driven by artistic inquiry, distributed among collaborating
artists, embedded in improvisation tasks, or weaved through
audience engagement, and the dramaturg becomes a facilitator of
dramaturgical awareness.
This book provides an overview of the role of statistics in Risk
Analysis, by addressing theory, methodology and applications
covering the broad scope of risk assessment in life sciences and
public health, environmental science as well as in economics and
finance. Experimental Design plays a key role in many of these
areas, therefore there is special attention paid to joining Risk
Analysis and Experimental Design topics. The contributions of this
volume originate from the 8th International Conference on Risk
Analysis (23-26 April, 2019, Vienna). The conference brought
together researchers and practitioners working in the field of Risk
Analysis. The most important contributions at the conference have
been refereed and developed into chapters to show the latest
developments in the field.
How can we make sense of human rights in China's authoritarian
system? In this insightful book, China law expert Eva Pils offers a
nuanced account of this contentious area, examining human rights as
a set of social practices involving a variety of actors, including
officials of the system and civil society actors. Drawing on a wide
range of resources including years of interaction with Chinese
human rights defenders, Pils discusses sources of human rights
violations, as well as institutional avenues of protection and
social practices of human rights defence. Three central areas are
given special attention: liberty and integrity of the person and
the right not to be tortured; freedom of thought and expression;
and inequality and socio-economic rights. Pils argues that the
Party-State system is inherently opposed to human rights principles
in all these areas. Yet, civil society actors have developed social
practices of human rights advocacy whose political significance is
not entirely dependent on the Party-State. Despite
authoritarianism's lengthening shadows, China's human rights
movement has so far proved resourceful and resilient, and the
trajectories discussed in this book will continue to shape ongoing
struggles.
Performance generating systems are systematic and task-based
dramaturgies that generate performance for or with an audience. In
dance, such systems differ in ways that matter from more closed
choreographed scores and more open forms of structured
improvisation. Dancers performing within these systems draw on
predefined and limited sources while working on specific tasks
within constraining rules. The generating components of the systems
provide boundaries that enable the performance to self-organize
into iteratively shifting patterns instead of becoming repetitive
or chaotic. This book identifies the generating components and
dynamics of these works and the kinds of dramaturgical agency they
enable. It explains how the systems of these creations affect the
perception, cognition and learning of dancers and why that is a
central part of how they work. It also examines how the combined
dramaturgical and psychological effects of the systems
performatively address individual and social conditions of trauma
that otherwise tend to remain unchangeable and negatively impact
the human capacity to learn, relate and adapt. The book provides
analytical frameworks and practical insights for those who wish to
study or apply performance generating systems in dance within the
fields of choreography and dance dramaturgy, dance education,
community dance or dance psychology. Featured cases offer unique
insight into systems created by Deborah Hay and Christopher House,
William Forsythe, Ame Henderson, Karen Kaeja and Lee Su-Feh.
Contemporary art relies on an expansionist, modernist ideal and
still progresses through a critique of earlier forms of
democratisation. But beneath this democratic drive, lurks a
creeping crisis. Under neoliberalism, criticality has become a zone
of value production. A self-deprecating irony, exposing and
re-enacting this position of impotence, is one of the few gestures
left in the arsenal of critical art. Against this irony, this book
pits overidentification. This term has been taken to mean a kind of
parodic mimicry of institutional power. Using a broad tapestry of
sources, from political philosophers to art theorists, from
post-Marxist critiques of labour to ethnographic studies, it
proposes an interpretation of overidentification that does not
collapse into ironic posturing. The authors differentiate this from
bad faith flirting with taboo aesthetics by focusing on practices
grounded in a genuine identification with power that ushers the
kind of excess implied by overidentification. It is these forms of
overidentification that destabilise the metastasis of
liberal-democracy. Staging forms of critique not so readily
absorbed into the structure of the present, these subversive
performances herald a future beyond the democratic paradox.
Global crises-from pandemics to climate change-demonstrate the
vulnerability of the biosphere and each of us as individuals,
calling for responses guided by creative analysis and compassionate
reflection. Transforming, building on its companion volume,
Awakening, explores actions that create paths of understanding and
collaboration as the groundwork for transformative community. The
community of scholars in this volume offers perspectives that
collectively form a complex tapestry of resources. The volume
engages with the complex range of challenges and possibilities
across a variety of sectors, and provides an interdisciplinary
approach to the prospects for transformative healing of human and
non-human communities, and the global environment we inhabit.
Spirituality is essential to this, and, as such, the work explores
vital dimensions of emerging spiritual concepts, methods, and
practices that harbor interfaith potential for genuine
reconciliation and communion.
|
Near-Rings and Near-Fields - Proceedings of the Conference on Near-Rings and Near-Fields, Stellenbosch, South Africa, July 9-16, 1997 (Hardcover, 2001 ed.)
Yuen Fong, Carl Maxson, John Meldrum, G. F. Pilz, Andries van der Walt, …
|
R1,582
Discovery Miles 15 820
|
Ships in 12 - 17 working days
|
This volume contains three invited lectures and sixteen other
papers which were pre- sented at the 14th International Conference
on Nearrings and Nearfields held in Stellen- bosch, South Africa,
July 9-161997. It was also the first nearring conference to be held
after the untimely death of James R Clay, who over the years had
been an inspiration to many algebraists interested in nearring
theory. The occasion was marked by the invitedtalk of Gerhard
Betsch, which was devoted to an overview of Clay's contributions to
nearring and nearfield theory. This book is affectionately
dedicated to the memory of James R Clay. All the papers presented
here have been refereed under the supervision of the Editorial
Board: Fong Yuen, Carl Maxson, John Meldrum, GUnterPilz, Leon van
Wyk and Andries van der Walt. Thanks are due to the referees and to
the Editorial Board. A special word of thanks is due to Wen-fong Ke
for preparing the final version of the TEX files, and to Fong Yuen
for his pains in arranging for the publication of the volume with
Kluwer Academic Publishers. Andries van der Walt Stellenbosch,
August 1999 COMBINATORIAL ASPECTS OF NEARRING THEORY TO THE MEMORY
OF JAMES RAY CLAY GERHARDBETSCH A briefcurriculum vitae ofJames Ray
(Jim) Clay Born November5,1938 at Burley (Idaho). Died January 16,
1996 at Tucson (Arizona). Married since 1959 to Carol Cline BURGE,
"a truly beautiful daughter of Zion" (Dedication ofJim's 1992
book). Three daughters, ten grand-children.
This book explores how the Indian education and training system
prepares young people for the world of work and for the
requirements of the employment market - because India is a leading
industrialised nation with a very young population and a high
demand for a skilled workforce. Indian experts write from a
course-specific perspective, offering a comprehensive picture of
educational policy, curriculum design and cultural characteristics.
The virtual absence of a formalised system of vocational training
in India underlines the importance of this research.
Global crises-from pandemics to climate change-demonstrate the
vulnerability of the biosphere and each of us as individuals,
calling for responses guided by creative analysis and compassionate
reflection. Transforming, building on its companion volume,
Awakening, explores actions that create paths of understanding and
collaboration as the groundwork for transformative community. The
community of scholars in this volume offers perspectives that
collectively form a complex tapestry of resources. The volume
engages with the complex range of challenges and possibilities
across a variety of sectors, and provides an interdisciplinary
approach to the prospects for transformative healing of human and
non-human communities, and the global environment we inhabit.
Spirituality is essential to this, and, as such, the work explores
vital dimensions of emerging spiritual concepts, methods, and
practices that harbor interfaith potential for genuine
reconciliation and communion.
Irish women writers entered the British and international
publishing scene in unprecedented numbers in the period between
1878 and 1922. Literary history is only now beginning to give them
the attention they deserve for their contributions to the literary
landscape of Ireland, which has included far more women writers,
with far more diverse identities, than hitherto acknowledged. This
collection of new essays by leading scholars explores how women
writers including Emily Lawless, L. T. Meade, Katharine Tynan, Lady
Gregory, Rosa Mulholland, Ella Young and Beatrice Grimshaw used
their work to advance their own private and public political
concerns through astute manoeuvrings both in the expanding
publishing industry and against the partisan expectations of an
ever-growing readership. The chapters investigate their dialogue
with a contemporary politics that included the topics of education,
cosmopolitanism, language, empire, economics, philanthropy,
socialism, the marriage 'market', the publishing industry,
readership(s), the commercial market and employment. -- .
This volume features original contributions and invited review
articles on mathematical statistics, statistical simulation and
experimental design. The selected peer-reviewed contributions
originate from the 8th International Workshop on Simulation held in
Vienna in 2015. The book is intended for mathematical
statisticians, Ph.D. students and statisticians working in
medicine, engineering, pharmacy, psychology, agriculture and other
related fields. The International Workshops on Simulation are
devoted to statistical techniques in stochastic simulation, data
collection, design of scientific experiments and studies
representing broad areas of interest. The first 6 workshops took
place in St. Petersburg, Russia, in 1994 - 2009 and the 7th
workshop was held in Rimini, Italy, in 2013.
This book offers a unique insight into the role of human rights
lawyers in Chinese law and politics. In her extensive account, Eva
Pils shows how these practitioners are important as legal advocates
for victims of injustice and how bureaucratic systems of control
operate to subdue and marginalise them. The book also discusses how
human rights lawyers and the social forces they work for and with
challenge the system. In conditions where organised political
opposition is prohibited, rights lawyers have begun to articulate
and coordinate demands for legal and political change. Drawing on
hundreds of anonymised conversations, the book analyses in detail
human rights lawyers' legal advocacy in the face of severe
institutional limitations and their experiences of repression at
the hands of the police and state security apparatus, along with
the intellectual, political and moral resources lawyers draw upon
to survive and resist. Key concerns include the interaction between
the lawyers and their bureaucratic, professional and social
environments and the forms and long term political impact of
resistance. In addressing these issues, Pils offers a rare
evaluative perspective on China's legal and political system, and
proposes new ways to assess domestic advocacy's relationship with
international human rights and rule of law promotion. This book
will be of great interest and use to students and scholars of law,
Chinese studies, socio-legal studies, political studies,
international relations, and sociology. It is also of direct value
to people working in the fields of human rights advocacy, law,
politics, international relations, and journalism.
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R164
Discovery Miles 1 640
|