Results for ' dress'

762 found
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  1.  41
    Distance geometry and geometric algebra.Andreas W. M. Dress & Timothy F. Havel - 1993 - Foundations of Physics 23 (10):1357-1374.
    As part of his program to unify linear algebra and geometry using the language of Clifford algebra, David Hestenes has constructed a (well-known) isomorphism between the conformal group and the orthogonal group of a space two dimensions higher, thus obtaining homogeneous coordinates for conformal geometry.(1) In this paper we show that this construction is the Clifford algebra analogue of a hyperbolic model of Euclidean geometry that has actually been known since Bolyai, Lobachevsky, and Gauss, and we explore its wider invariant (...)
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  2.  32
    Comparing Patient, Clinician, and Caregiver Perceptions of Care for Early Psychosis: A Free Listing Study.Erich M. Dress, Rosemary Frasso, Monica E. Calkins, Allison E. Curry, Christian G. Kohler, Lyndsay R. Schmidt & Dominic A. Sisti - 2018 - Narrative Inquiry in Bioethics 8 (2):157-178.
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  3. Die theologie Gersons.Walter Dress - 1931 - Gütersloh,: C. Bertelsmann, verlagsbuchhandlung.
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  4. Dressing Down Dressing Up—The Philosophic Fear of Fashion.Karen Hanson - 1990 - Hypatia 5 (2):107-121.
    There is, to all appearances, a philosophic hostility to fashionable dress. Studying this contempt, this paper examines likely sources in philosophy's suspicion of change; anxiety about surfaces and the inessential; failures in the face of death; and the philosophic disdain for, denial of, the human body and human passivity. If there are feminist concerns about fashion, they should be radically different from those of traditional philosophy. Whatever our ineluctable worries about desire and death, whatever our appropriate anger and impatience (...)
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  5.  19
    Dress Matters: Change and Continuity in the Dress Practices of Bosnian Muslim Refugee Women.Pierrette Hondagneu-Sotelo & Kimberly Huisman - 2005 - Gender and Society 19 (1):44-65.
    Dress serves as a discursive daily practice of gender, and this article explains the dress practices of Bosnian Muslim refugee women living in Vermont. These dress practices tend toward elaborate, carefully cultivated styles for hair, makeup, and dress. Based on participant observation, in-depth interviews, and secondary historical sources, the authors seek to explain the meanings and practice of these dress practices. They argue that gendered dress practices reflect agentic processes that are situated within the (...)
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  6.  69
    Paradigm Dressed as Epoch: The Ideology of the Anthropocene.Jeremy Baskin - 2015 - Environmental Values 24 (1):9-29.
    The Anthropocene is a radical reconceptualisation of the relationship between humanity and nature. It posits that we have entered a new geological epoch in which the human species is now the dominant Earth-shaping force, and it is rapidly gaining traction in both the natural and social sciences. This article critically explores the scientific representation of the concept and argues that the Anthropocene is less a scientific concept than the ideational underpinning for a particular worldview. It is paradigm dressed as epoch. (...)
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  7.  26
    Dressed: a philosophy of clothes.Shahidha Bari - 2020 - New York: Basic Books.
    For readers of Women in Clothes, a philosophical guide to fashion. We all get dressed. But how often do we pause to think about the place of our clothes in our world? What unconscious thoughts do we express when we dress every day? Can a philosophy of living be wrapped up in a winter coat? Can we see clothes not as objects, but as ideas? Dressed is the thinking person's book about clothes, exploring these questions by ranging freely from (...)
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  8.  26
    Female Cross-Dressing in Chinese Literature Classics and their English Versions.Anna Wing Bo Tso - 2014 - International Studies. Interdisciplinary Political and Cultural Journal 16 (1):111-124.
    Cross-dressing, as a cultural practice, suggests gender ambiguity and allows freedom of self expression. Yet, it may also serve to reaffirm ideological stereotypes and the binary distinctions between male and female, masculine and feminine, homosexual and heterosexual. To explore the nature and function of cross-dressing in Chinese and Western cultures, this paper analyzes the portrayals of cross-dressing heroines in two Chinese stories: The Ballad of Mulan, and The Butterfly Lovers. Distorted representations in the English translated texts are also explored..
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  9.  38
    Cross-Dressing and Gender (Tres)Passing: The Transgender Move as a Site of Agential Potential in the New Iranian Cinema.Roshanak Kheshti - 2008 - Hypatia 24 (3):158-177.
    This article traces the historical becoming of the contemporary supersaturation of images of queer and transgendered Iran through the narrative and tropic devices introduced by filmmakers in the past twenty years. I argue that the censorship code enforced by the Ministry of Culture and Islamic Guidance is partly responsible for the formation of what has come to be a ubiquitous figure in the New Iranian cinema: the “cross-dressing” or “passing” figure. By performing close readings of Baran and Dokhtaraneh Khorshid—two films (...)
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  10. Provocative Dress and Sexual Responsibility.Jessica Wolfendale - 2016 - Georgetown Journal of Gender and the Law 17 (2):599-624.
    Numerous studies have found that many people believe that a provocatively dressed woman is at greater risk for sexual assault and bears some responsibility for her assault if she is attacked. Furthermore, in legal, academic, and public debates about sexual assault the appropriateness of the term ‘provocative’ as a descriptor of certain kinds of women’s clothing is rarely questioned. Thus, there is a widespread but largely unquestioned belief that it is appropriate to describe revealing or suggestive women’s clothing as ‘provocative’ (...)
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  11.  19
    “Suits To Self-Sufficiency”: Dress for Success and Neoliberal Maternalism.Linda M. Blum & Emily R. Cummins - 2015 - Gender and Society 29 (5):623-646.
    In 1997 the women-run nonprofit organization Dress for Success opened its first location with the aim of empowering low-income women by providing gently used suits for job interviews. Drawing on eight months of fieldwork in an affiliate office, we analyze cross-race and cross-class interactions between privileged volunteers and low-income clients to demonstrate the emergence of what we term “neoliberal maternalism.” Historical forms of maternalism—the mother-centric voluntarism aimed at assisting indigent families a century ago—emphasized women’s domesticity and promoted the earliest (...)
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  12.  24
    Dressing like the Great King: Amerindian Perspectives on Persian Fashion in Classical Athens.S. Douglas Olson - 2021 - Polis 38 (1):9-20.
    This paper examines the phenomenon of individual Athenians adopting elements of Persian clothing, making use of exotic items such as gold and silver drinking vessels, and the like, by comparison to what I argue is a similar sort of contact and exchange involving the European fabric trade and evolving standards of dress and fashion in the Early Modern Atlantic. The ancient literary and archaeological sources discussed document the reaction of a relatively insignificant, marginal people to the dress practices (...)
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  13.  41
    Dress, Ideology, and Control: The Regulation of Clothing in Early Modern English Utopian Texts, 1516–1656.Jane MacRae Campbell - 2017 - Utopian Studies 28 (3):398-427.
    Clothing is central to the worlds described in early modern utopian texts: of twenty-three utopian texts written and published in England between 1516 and 1656, 91 percent mention dress, and 82 percent contain more extensive description or comment upon clothing. Written by elite authors for elite readers, these texts assign clothing a leading role in the establishment and maintenance of social order in a range of areas, including governance, social and religious control, personal expression, and ideological stance. Separated from (...)
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  14.  39
    (Un)Dressing to Unveil a Spiritual Self.Sabrina D. MisirHiralall - 2018 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 52 (3):23.
    I am an American born faith-based Kuchipudi Hindu dancer and educator with Indian ancestry regardless of what I wear. For the purposes of this article, I focus my attention on a dress narrative to explore an authentic self. Here, clothing is an artifact that creates an image that provokes a phenomenological experience. Dress choices become appropriate or inappropriate, religious or anti-religious depending upon the social constructions of culture. Also, there is a feminist issue that provokes a social construction (...)
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  15.  32
    Dressing as a Sage: Clothing and Self-cultivation in Early Confucian Thought.Naiyi Hsu - 2021 - Dao: A Journal of Comparative Philosophy 20 (4):567-588.
    This article examines the reasons early Confucians offer to support the belief that clothing is formative of its wearer’s character, as well as the arguments other early Chinese texts raise to object to it. It focuses on early Confucian discourses about three representative items of clothing, including the cap used in the coming-of-age ceremony, the accessories made by jade, and a style of clothing named shenyi 深衣. These cases demonstrate that, in early Confucian thought, clothing is said to be able (...)
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  16.  25
    Window dressing inequalities and constructing women farmers as problematic—gender in Rwanda’s agriculture policy.Karolin Andersson, Katarina Pettersson & Johanna Bergman Lodin - 2022 - Agriculture and Human Values 39 (4):1245-1261.
    Rwanda is often depicted as a success story by policy makers when it comes to issues of gender. In this paper, we show how the problem of gendered inequality in agriculture nevertheless is both marginalized and instrumentalized in Rwanda’s agriculture policy. Our in-depth analysis of 12 national policies is informed by Bacchi’s _What’s the problem represented to be?_ approach. It attests that gendered inequality is largely left unproblematized as well as reduced to a problem of women’s low agricultural productivity. The (...)
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  17.  16
    Dressing vs. Fixing: On How to Extract and Interpret Gauge-Invariant Content.P. Berghofer & J. François - 2024 - Foundations of Physics 54 (6):1-26.
    There is solid consensus among physicists and philosophers that, in gauge field theory, for a quantity to be physically meaningful or real, it must be gauge-invariant. Yet, every “elementary” field in the Standard Model of particle physics is actually gauge-variant. This has led a number of researchers to insist that new manifestly gauge-invariant approaches must be established. Indeed, in the foundational literature, dissatisfaction with standard methods for reducing gauge symmetries has been expressed: Spontaneous symmetry breaking is deemed conceptually dubious, while (...)
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  18.  20
    Folk Dress, Fiestas, and Festivals.Sherry L. Field, Michelle Bauml, Ron W. Wilhelm & Joelle Jenkins - 2012 - Journal of Social Studies Research 36 (1):22-46.
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  19.  7
    Dress and Identity in Christian Nubia.Arielle Winnik - 2024 - Convivium 11 (1):90-101.
    In the 1960s, archaeologists excavating the Lower Nubian site of Qasr Ibrim uncovered, adjacent to the cathedral, a cemetery from the Christian era, which contained the well-preserved textiles of high-ranking ecclesiastics. Elisabeth G. Crowfoot (1914–2005) undertook analysis of this material, but her complete publication of it, Qasr Ibrim: The Textiles from the Cathedral Cemetery, was not published until 2011. The volume describes in meticulous detail the graves and materials unearthed. Working from excavators’ notes, photographs, and, in some fortunate cases, retained (...)
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  20.  32
    French Dressing: Race, Gender, and the Hijab Story.Judith Ezekiel - 2006 - Feminist Studies 32 (2):256.
  21.  43
    Nigerian dress as a symbolic language.Grace Ebunlola Adamo - 2011 - Semiotica 2011 (184):1-9.
    Before someone opens her mouth to speak, her clothes are available for interpretation. This means that the way a person dresses provides the first information that we are presented with about her. This paper discusses the many ways in which people create and exchange meanings in communication through dress. In this case, dress serves both instrumental and communication functions. In addition to protecting the body from the elements, it also conveys socially relevant information via cultural categories, cultural processes, (...)
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  22.  1
    Dressed to impress: signet rings in the middle Byzantine period.Brad Hostetler - 2024 - Byzantinische Zeitschrift 117 (3):625-642.
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  23. The pen, the dress, and the coat: a confusion in goodness.Miles Tucker - 2016 - Philosophical Studies 173 (7):1911-1922.
    Conditionalists say that the value something has as an end—its final value—may be conditional on its extrinsic features. They support this claim by appealing to examples: Kagan points to Abraham Lincoln’s pen, Rabinowicz and Rønnow-Rasmussen to Lady Diana’s dress, and Korsgaard to a mink coat. They contend that these things may have final value in virtue of their historical or societal roles. These three examples have become familiar: many now merely mention them to establish the conditionalist position. But the (...)
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  24.  15
    The Politicization of Scottish Dress: A Study of Highland Garb.Victoria Hinderks - 2014 - Constellations (University of Alberta Student Journal) 5 (2).
    What began as an inexpensive dress for peasants and workers became a form of rebellion, and then the tool with which the Highlands became a modern industrialized society. This evolution was enhanced by the English, through the creation of the kilt, the institution of first the Act of Union and then a Hanoverian Government, and then the formulation of the manner with which the Highlands would use the economy to modernize. Within this paper I hope to argue that Scottish (...)
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  25.  31
    Dressing Up Naked Leadership.Joanne B. Ciulla - 2013 - Business and Professional Ethics Journal 32 (3-4):271-276.
    This paper is a commentary on C. Richard Panico’s article “Naked Leadership: Lead to Win Hearts and Minds.” The relationship between academic and practitioner literature on leadership is symbiotic. Both approaches have their limitations. Academic theories may be impractical and practitioner’s ideas are sometimes anecdotal and highly contextual. Yet, as the paper demonstrates, the two literatures can overlap in interesting ways.
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  26.  22
    “To dress a room for Montagu”: Pacific Cosmopolitanism and Elizabeth Montagu’s Feather Hangings.Ruth Scobie - 2014 - Lumen: Selected Proceedings From the Canadian Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies 33:123.
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  27.  49
    Dressed to the Nines: Oriental Feudalism and the Outward Appearance of Subordination.Kayla Reddecliff - 2013 - Constellations (University of Alberta Student Journal) 4 (2).
    Extravagantly rich and exotic come to mind when thinking of the bygone world of Indian royalty, yet almost all of the 565 princely states abruptly and peacefully came to an end in 1947. In fact, the dazzling princely dress had come to represent subordination to the Queen of Britain. Because Indian rulers were unable to perform the princely duties of defending their state under colonial rule, Indian royalty directed their excess resources to the consumption of luxury goods. These goods, (...)
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  28. Dressing up and growing up : rehearsals on the threshold of intelligibility.Jonathan Bollen - 2007 - In Judith Butler & Bronwyn Davies (eds.), Judith Butler in Conversation: Analyzing the Texts and Talk of Everyday Life. Routledge.
     
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  29.  24
    Dressing in Imaginary Communities: Clothing, Gender and the Body in Utopian Texts from Thomas More to Feminist Science Fiction.Peter Corrigan - 1996 - Body and Society 2 (3):89-106.
  30. Dressed in Myth: Mythology, Eschatology, and Performance on Late Antique Egyptian Textiles.Troels Myrup Kristensen - forthcoming - Millennium.
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  31. All dressed up.Walker Neil - 2001 - Oxford Journal of Legal Studies 21 (3).
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  32.  12
    Insular dress in early Medieval Ireland.Maria A. Fitzgerald - 1997 - Bulletin of the John Rylands Library 79 (3):251-262.
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  33.  17
    Dressed for Success?Svetlana Kochkina - 2018 - Logos 29 (1):28-37.
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  34.  20
    Dress right, dress: The Boy Scout uniform as a folk costume.Jay Mechling - 1987 - Semiotica 64 (3-4):319-334.
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  35.  21
    Deviant Dress.Elizabeth Wilson - 1990 - Feminist Review 35 (1):67-74.
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  36.  32
    Aesthetic Dressing Education: An Exploration into the New Aesthetic Education Resources from the Perspective of Daily Life Aesthetics.L. I. Xue-yin - 2011 - Journal of Aesthetic Education (Misc) 2:003.
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  37.  87
    Accounting Window Dressing and Template Regulation: A Case Study of the Australian Credit Union Industry.David Hillier, Allan Hodgson, Peta Stevenson-Clarke & Suntharee Lhaopadchan - 2008 - Journal of Business Ethics 83 (3):579-593.
    This article documents the response of cooperative institutions that were required to adhere to new capital adequacy regulations traditionally geared for profit-maximising organisations. Using data from the Australian credit union industry, we demonstrate that the cooperative philosophy and internal corporate governance structure of cooperatives will lead management to increase capital adequacy ratios through the application of accounting window dressing techniques. This is opposite to the intended purpose of template regulation aimed at efficiently increasing operating margins and lowering risk. Our results (...)
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  38.  60
    From dressed electrons to quasiparticles: The emergence of emergent entities in quantum field theory.Alexander S. Blum & Christian Joas - 2016 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part B: Studies in History and Philosophy of Modern Physics 53:1-8.
  39.  13
    Ministerial dress for worship in Southern Africa Presbyterianism.Graham A. Duncan - 2006 - HTS Theological Studies 62 (3).
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  40.  43
    Dressed for Adventure: Working Women and Silent Movie Serials in the 1910s.Nan Enstad - 1995 - Feminist Studies 21 (1):67.
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  41.  15
    Not “Dressed Like a Philosopher”: Tactful Statesmanship in Utopia and the Epigrams.L. Joseph Hebert Jr - 2021 - Moreana 58 (1):31-52.
    This paper argues that the mode of statesmanship recommended in Utopia provides the framework for the Epigrams. While Utopia demonstrates the need for artful indirection by exposing the vices of a man too proud to adopt it, the Epigrams exhibit More's preparation for and practice of a tactfully philosophic statesmanship.
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  42.  24
    Dressing after Dressing: Sadra’s Interpretation of Change.Muhammad Kamal - 2013 - Open Journal of Philosophy 3 (1):55-62.
    This paper deals with the doctrine of transubstantial change advocated by Mulla Sadra in which substances as well as accidents are thought to be in constant and gradual change. Against Aristotle’s doctrine of accidental change, Mulla Sadra argues that no stable ground can bring about change and since substance is renewable it cannot carry identity of a changing existent. Here we investigate whether identity is possible or not. If it is possible then what becomes a ground for establishing identity of (...)
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  43.  96
    Dress Rehearsals, Previews, and Encores: A New Account of Mental Representation.Nancy Salay - 2013 - Theoria 80 (1):84-97.
    One of the central debates in cognitive science is the dispute over the role of representation in cognition: on computational/representational accounts, representations are theoretically central; on dynamic systems approaches in which cognition is investigated as a particular sort of physical process, representations play either no role, or, at best, a derivative one. But these two perspectives lead to a deeply unsatisfying theoretical divide: accounts situated in the representational camp are plagued by the inscrutable problem of intentionality, while those hedging towards (...)
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  44. Dress Rehearsal for Life:: Using Drama to Teach Philosophy to Inner-City High School Student.Sharon Kaye - 2006 - Analytic Teaching and Philosophical Praxis 26 (1):1-7.
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  45.  14
    Vedānta in Muslim Dress: Revisited and Reimagined.Rachelle Syed - 2019 - Journal of Dharma Studies 2 (1):83-94.
    In this paper, I revisit Dr. R. C. Zaehner’s claim, found in “Vedanta in Muslim Dress” in “Hindu and Muslim Mysticism,” that an early Sufi mystic, Abū Yazīd al-Bisṭamī (d. 874), was strongly influenced by a mysterious teacher called Abū ‘Alī al-Sindī, who Zaehner claimed was a practitioner of Advaita Vedanta and taught al-Bisṭamī “ultimate truths” that appear to be gleaned directly from the Upaniṣads. I revisit Zaehner’s original claims and examine his conclusions in light of history and theology (...)
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  46. Vice Dressed as Virtue.Paul Russell - 2020 - Aeon.
    Cruelty and morality seem like polar opposites – until they join forces. Beware those who persecute in the name of principle... -/- Following in the steps of Michel de Montaigne, the distinguished political philosopher Judith Shklar has argued that cruelty should be considered the supreme evil and that we should put it first among the vices. The essence of cruelty is to wilfully and needlessly inflict pain and suffering on another creature – be it an animal or a human being. (...)
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  47.  6
    Dressing down criminals, deviants and other undesirabless.Dietmar Neufeld - 2014 - HTS Theological Studies 70 (1).
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  48.  22
    Dress For Stress: Wearable Technology and the Social Body.Susan Elizabeth Ryan - 2008 - Nexus 10:50.
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  49.  47
    Is This a Dress Rehearsal?Bruno Latour - 2021 - Critical Inquiry 47 (S2):S25-S27.
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  50.  33
    A kerosene summer dress.Graydon Wetzler - 2018 - Technoetic Arts 16 (3):247-258.
    This article combines situational analysis with situationists dérive to weave a seemingly disjointed series of historical tableaux, materialities, marginalia, combustion and corporeal techniques in embryology, chemistry, geology, synthetics and magic. The double locus structuring this constellation is Hilde Proescholdt (1898–1924), a gifted German experimental biologist; and Abraham Gesner (1797–1864), Canadian physician, geologist and inventor of kerosene. Following Adele Clark’s SA research programme, I attend to situational maps recurring the experimental repertoires Gesner and Proescholdt with the material, social and artefactual historicities (...)
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