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Ralph P. Locke deposited ‘Aida’ and Nine Readings of Empire in the group
Ottoman and Turkish Studies on Humanities Commons 7 years, 10 months agoThis paper assesses nine prominent readings of the imperial context/content of Verdi’s ‘Aida’ and offers a new perspective more adequate to basic tensions in the work. Readings have ranged from the literal (imperial Europe here stages an archaeological “ancient Egypt”) to the metaphorical (“Egypt” here is any repressive government). Or–somew…[Read more]
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Ralph P. Locke deposited Beyond the exotic: How in the group
Ottoman and Turkish Studies on Humanities Commons 7 years, 10 months agoCommentators often express disappointment that the music for the main characters in _Aida_ is not more distinctive, i.e., does not make much use of the exotic styles that mark the work’s ceremonial scenes and ballets. It has also been argued that exotic style-elements here are mostly confined to female, hence powerless, characters. Such…[Read more]
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José Angel GARCÍA LANDA deposited Derrida, ‘Limited Inc.’, Normativity in the group
Linguistics on Humanities Commons 7 years, 11 months agoThis note criticises some equivocations and ambivalent notions in the writings of Derrida, especially ‘Limited Inc’ and ‘De la grammatologie’, as regards the notions of norm, intention, system, center, consciousness, writing, speech act and literal meaning. Derrida is shown to both have his cake and eat it, using his own text as a paradoxical…[Read more]
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José Angel GARCÍA LANDA deposited Nietzsche, Wittgenstein, Nihilism, and Arbitrariness in the group
Linguistics on Humanities Commons 7 years, 11 months agoThis is a brief note criticising some anti-foundationalist and anti-essentialist semiotic assumptions in Nietzsche and Wittgenstein, from the standpoint of a classical structuralist perspective which (following Saussure) sees the play of differences as crucially constitutive of a system of positive terms.
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Joakim Parslow started the topic CfP: Future Histories of the Middle East and South Asia (edited volume) in the discussion
Ottoman and Turkish Studies on Humanities Commons 7 years, 11 months agoCfP: Future Histories of the Middle East and South Asia (edited volume)
(Apologies for cross-posting.)
Contributions are invited for an edited anthology tentatively titled Future Histories of the Middle East and South Asia. The anthology will be open to articles dealing with future histories and science fiction across time periods written in any…[Read more]
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Antonio Fruttaldo deposited International Conference “Words, Images and Ideology of Populism 3.0” – Book of Abstracts in the group
Linguistics on Humanities Commons 7 years, 11 months agoBook of Abstracts of the International Conference “Words, Images and Ideology of Populism 3.0”
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Astrid Menz deposited The conditional in South Siberian Turkic in the group
Linguistics on Humanities Commons 7 years, 11 months agoThis article gives an overview of the conditional and its functions in the
South Siberian Turkic languages Altay Turkic, Shor, Khakas, Tuvan and Tofan. -
Tyler Bilton deposited An examination of hockey: identity, gender construction, hegemonic masculinity, women’s hockey, and Turkey in the group
Ottoman and Turkish Studies on Humanities Commons 7 years, 12 months agoThe purpose of this study was to examine hockey’s identity, how the game constructs identity, and how the increasing participation of females in hockey in Canada and Turkey is altering identity. Through qualitative research and personal experience it is revealed that in order for hockey and Turkey to modernize, a new male identity needs to e…[Read more]
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Astrid Menz deposited The Gagauz female marker -(y)ka in the group
Linguistics on Humanities Commons 8 years agoThis article deals with the global copy of a bound morpheme in Gagauz. The feminine marker -(y)ka, copied from Slavic, is used to build female forms of denominations for persons.
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Ted Underwood deposited The Transformation of Gender in English-Language Fiction in the group
Linguistics on Humanities Commons 8 years agoPreprint to appear in a special issue of Cultural Analytics on “Identity.” The article explores the paradox that the representation of gender in fiction became more flexible while the sheer balance of attention between fictional men and women was growing more unequal. We measure the rigidity of gendered roles by asking how easy it is to infer…[Read more]
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dirk schmidt deposited Automating Color-coding for Pronunciation-Guided Tibetan Text: Using regular expressions to generate HTML color codes for the four main sound profiles within central standard Tibetan in the group
Linguistics on Humanities Commons 8 years agoReading is a complex and difficult skill. The main difficulty beginning readers face is learning which letters represent which sounds—and then getting used to those patterns by reading them, again and again, in different combinations and contexts. It takes practice to learn how to read. Research also shows that the easier reading is, the more l…[Read more]
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Nalan Erbil (Nalan Erbil-Erkan) deposited “Language, Aesthetics, and Ideology: Conceptual Frameworks for Turkish Literary Criticism” in the group
Ottoman and Turkish Studies on Humanities Commons 8 years agoThis study attempts to investigate the salient features of Turkish literary criticism through deconstructing the concepts of language, aesthetics and ideology intersecting the disciplines of sociology and history. It questions the nationality of the self-evident category of “Turkish literature” exploring in what ways the Turkish Literary Criticism…[Read more]
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Çimen Günay-Erkol deposited Taking up the gauntlet: fictionists in the Turkish parliament in the group
Ottoman and Turkish Studies on Humanities Commons 8 years, 1 month agoTurkey has a long tradition of involvement of men of letters in political transformation processes. Several important figures of literature appear as key names in the history of Turkey who contributed to daily politics, manipulated and challenged it, sometimes with the fiercest discourses. Focusing on some prominent fiction writers who accessed…[Read more]
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James McElvenny deposited International Language and the Everyday: Contact and Collaboration Between C.K. Ogden, Rudolf Carnap and Otto Neurath in the group
Linguistics on Humanities Commons 8 years, 1 month agoAlthough now largely forgotten, the international language movement was, from the 1880s to the end of the Second World War, a matter of widespread public interest, as well as a concern of numerous scientists and scholars. The primary goal was to establish a language for international communication, but in the early twentieth century an increasing…[Read more]
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James McElvenny deposited Grammar, typology and the Humboldtian tradition in the work of Georg von der Gabelentz in the group
Linguistics on Humanities Commons 8 years, 1 month agoA frequently mentioned if somewhat peripheral figure in the historiography of late nineteenth-century linguistics is the German sinologist and general linguist Georg von der Gabelentz (1840–1893). Today Gabelentz is chiefly remembered for several insights that proved to be productive in the development of subsequent schools and subdisciplines. I…[Read more]
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James McElvenny deposited Christina Behme, Evaluating Cartesian Linguistics: From historic antecedents to computational modeling (Frankfurt am Main, 2014) in the group
Linguistics on Humanities Commons 8 years, 1 month agoReview of Evaluating Cartesian Linguistics, by Christina Behme
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James McElvenny deposited The fate of form in the Humboldtian tradition: The Formungstrieb of Georg von der Gabelentz in the group
Linguistics on Humanities Commons 8 years, 1 month agoThe multifaceted concept of ‘form’ plays a central tole in the linguistic work of Wilhelm von Humboldt (1767–1835), where it is deeply entwined with aesthetic questions. H. Steinthal’s (1823–1899) interpretation of linguistic form, however, made it the servant of psychology. The Formungstrieb (drive to formation) of Georg von der Gabelentz…[Read more]
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Will Hanley posted an update in the group
Ottoman and Turkish Studies on Humanities Commons 8 years, 1 month agoNew database on #Ottoman historiography @OttomanHistory @OttomanArchive : https://t.co/OiIWlF7A9i pic.twitter.com/1V92Y3mNBh
— MENALIB (@menalib) December 19, 2017
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Pavel Rudnev deposited Why Turkish kendisi is a pronominal in the group
Linguistics on Humanities Commons 8 years, 1 month agoThis paper is concerned with the syntax and semantics of the Turkish pronominal element kendisi ‘self.3SG’ that has so far received very little attention in the literature on anaphoric relations. We start out by examining the properties of this pronoun proceeding next to discuss the few existing proposals highlighting their inadequacies when con…[Read more]
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Pavel Rudnev deposited Kendisi revisited in the group
Linguistics on Humanities Commons 8 years, 1 month agoThe present contribution follows up on Rudnev (2011). It is for this reason that I omit most of the arguments for the pronominal nature of kendisi and
present a formalisation of its semantic properties based on Partee (1983) and Elbourne (2008). - Load More