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Rachel Rafael Neis deposited When Species Meet in the Mishnah in the group
Science Studies and the History of Science on Humanities Commons 6 years, 9 months agoThis short essay considers rabbinic ideas of reproduction, likeness, and species variation in conversation with the work of Joann Sfar and Sunaura Taylor. Part of Ancient Jew Review’s Forum on Animals.
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Marcelo Vitores deposited Vere Gordon Childe y la Arqueología Social Latinoamericana in the group
Science Studies and the History of Science on Humanities Commons 6 years, 9 months agoEste escrito trata sobre la vinculación entre la obra de Vere Gordon Childe y los planteos de la Arqueología Social Latinoamericana que tomó explícitamente al primero como referente y estímulo inicial de una arqueología marxista que ligara el pasado y el presente. Se revisan algunas continuidades, diferencias y convergencias entre este arque…[Read more]
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Sara Zadrozny deposited Women’s Ageing as Disease in the group
Medical Humanities on Humanities Commons 6 years, 9 months agoIn the medical humanities, there has been a growing interest in diagnosing disease in fictional characters, particularly with the idea that characters in Charles Dickens’s novels may be suffering from diseases recognised today. However, an area that deserves greater attention is the representation of women’s ageing as disease in Victorian lit…[Read more]
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Alistair Kwan deposited “Do not kill guinea pig before setting up apparatus:” : the kymograph’s lost educational context in the group
Science Studies and the History of Science on Humanities Commons 6 years, 9 months agoThe objects of science education are transformed, degraded and disappeared for many reasons, and sometimes take other things with them when they go. This close reading of an undergraduate physiology laboratory report demonstrates how the kymograph was never a stand-alone instrument, but intertwined with conceptual frameworks and technical skills,…[Read more]
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Alistair Kwan deposited “Do not kill guinea pig before setting up apparatus:” : the kymograph’s lost educational context in the group
Medical Humanities on Humanities Commons 6 years, 9 months agoThe objects of science education are transformed, degraded and disappeared for many reasons, and sometimes take other things with them when they go. This close reading of an undergraduate physiology laboratory report demonstrates how the kymograph was never a stand-alone instrument, but intertwined with conceptual frameworks and technical skills,…[Read more]
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A. David Lewis deposited Diagnosis Deafness in Cancer Comics in the group
Medical Humanities on Humanities Commons 6 years, 9 months agoA brief piece on what I call “diagnosis deafness.” In short, to depict the sudden disorientation and shock of being diagnosed with cancer, comics artists frequently employ a visual rhetoric usually reserved for instances of deafness. At least momentarily – during an immensely significant moment in the life of the character – words fail, dev…[Read more]
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Valeria Graziano deposited Handling Replacement: Tending to a Local Library and Repair Centre in the group
Environmental Humanities on Humanities Commons 6 years, 10 months agoThis short article offers a perspective on the social organization of repair and re-use of public infrastructures in the UK today by focusing on an former public library now transferred to a social enterprise which also hosts a repair centre for the processing of used household goods.
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Christopher Collins deposited Poetics of the Medieval Dream in the group
Science Studies and the History of Science on Humanities Commons 6 years, 10 months agoThe early Church regarded dreams as potential messages from God, private revelations that appear as visions while the soul is undistracted by bodily sensations. Sleep, with its accompanying dreams, was also believed to be the temporary state of the disembodied soul as it awaits the resurrection of its body at the Last Judgment. Not only did…[Read more]
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Christopher Collins deposited Awareness and Attention: The Evolution of the Dyadic Mind. in the group
Science Studies and the History of Science on Humanities Commons 6 years, 10 months ago[Abstract. This paper begins by examining some of the claims of Dual-Process Theory (also known as Dual-System Theory), in particular its opposition of rapid, intuitive, automatic thought processes to those that are relatively slow, analytic, and consciously controlled. The former traits we share with our primate cousins and with other mammals,…[Read more]
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John Welsh deposited The Political Aesthetic of the British City‐State: Class Formation through the Global City in the group
Environmental Humanities on Humanities Commons 6 years, 10 months agoThe British State has been terraformed over recent decades through the changing spatio-temporal dynamics of capital accumulation in the world-system entailed in financialisation, neoliberalsiation, and the emergence of global cities. A new post-industrial constellation of political domination has thus emerged in that state that requires urgent…[Read more]
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Gabriel Finkelstein deposited Haeckel and du Bois-Reymond: rival German Darwinists in the group
Science Studies and the History of Science on Humanities Commons 6 years, 10 months agoErnst Haeckel and Emil du Bois-Reymond were the most prominent champions of Darwin in Germany. This essay compares their contributions to popularizing the theory of evolution, drawing special attention to the neglected figure of du Bois-Reymond as a spokesman for a world devoid of natural purpose. It suggests that the historiography of the German…[Read more]
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Rachel Rafael Neis deposited The Reproduction of Species: Humans, Animals and Species Nonconformity in Early Rabbinic Science in the group
Science Studies and the History of Science on Humanities Commons 6 years, 10 months agoTracing an early rabbinic approach to the human, this article analyzes how the Tannaim (early Palestinian Jewish sages) of the Mishnah and Tosefta (redacted ca. early 3rd century CE) set the human side by side with other species, and embedded their account within broader considerations of reproduction, zoology and species crossings. The human here…[Read more]
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Omer Aijazi deposited Religion in Spaces of Social Disruption: Re-Reading the Public Transcript of Disaster Relief in Pakistan in the group
Environmental Humanities on Humanities Commons 6 years, 10 months agoThis paper explores how everyday religious narratives in post-disaster contexts can be interpreted as key sites of agency articulated in resistance to dominant discourses of disaster relief. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork among affected communities after the 2010 floods in Pakistan, we argue that religious discourses code everyday actions with…[Read more]
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Bernd Brabec de Mori deposited Shipibo Laughing Songs and the Transformative Faculty: Performing or Becoming the Other (2013) in the group
Medical Humanities on Humanities Commons 6 years, 10 months agoShipibo indigenous people perform a sophisticated array of vocal musical genres, including short ‘laughing songs’ called osanti. These song-jokes make fun of certain non-humans, mostly animals. They are by definition sung from within the non-humans’ perspective. Osanti are only performed by trained specialists in indigenous medicine and sorce…[Read more]
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Key MacFarlane deposited Time, Waste, and the City: The Rise of the Environmental Industry in the group
Science Studies and the History of Science on Humanities Commons 6 years, 10 months agoIn many US cities, especially those in the Rust Belt, the environmental goods and services (EGS) industry has played a significant role in restructuring local economies to promote new, flexible, and “creative” forms of service-based labour. And yet much of the environmental work conducted in these cities has been directed at an industrial pas…[Read more]
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Key MacFarlane deposited Time, Waste, and the City: The Rise of the Environmental Industry in the group
Environmental Humanities on Humanities Commons 6 years, 10 months agoIn many US cities, especially those in the Rust Belt, the environmental goods and services (EGS) industry has played a significant role in restructuring local economies to promote new, flexible, and “creative” forms of service-based labour. And yet much of the environmental work conducted in these cities has been directed at an industrial pas…[Read more]
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J. Britt Holbrook deposited A cartography of philosophy’s engagement with society in the group
Science Studies and the History of Science on Humanities Commons 6 years, 10 months agoShould philosophy help address the problems of non-philosophers or should it be something isolated both from
other disciplines and from the lay public? This question became more than academic for philosophers working in
UK universities with the introduction of societal impact assessment in the national research evaluation exercise,
the REF.…[Read more] -
Key MacFarlane deposited A thousand CEOs: Relational thought, processual space, and Deleuzian ontology in human geography and strategic management in the group
Science Studies and the History of Science on Humanities Commons 6 years, 10 months agoOver the last 20 years the imbrication between capital and the university has grown much firmer. This
paper seeks to map one point at which this binding occurs: in critical theory. Recently scholars in strategic
management have turned to processual and relational ontologies in an attempt to reimagine the logics of
profit, value, and growth.…[Read more] -
Taylor R. Genovese deposited “Death is a disease”: Cryopreservation, neoliberalism, and temporal commodification in the U.S. in the group
Science Studies and the History of Science on Humanities Commons 6 years, 11 months agoIn this article, I will be focusing specifically on cryopreservation and two of the American biotechnomedical tenets introduced by Robbie Davis-Floyd and Gloria St. John in their technocratic model of medicine: the “body as machine” and “death as defeat.” These axioms are embraced by both the biotechnomedical establishment as well as the cryopre…[Read more]
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William Ceurvels deposited The Sleeping Giant Under the Peach Tree: A novel explanation for the prominence of the peach in Daoist iconography. in the group
Medical Humanities on Humanities Commons 6 years, 11 months agoThis paper draws on chinese folklore, chinese medical theory, chinese materia medica and western ethnobotany and comparative religion to construct a theory of how the common infestation of ganoderma lucidum on peach trees in China would have led to an association of peach trees with immortality, daoist alchemy and the ability to vanquish ghosts…[Read more]
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