Results for ' minor cinema'

983 found
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  1. Cristina Johnston (2010) French Minority Cinema.Jehanne-Marie Gavarini - 2012 - Film-Philosophy 16 (1):287-291.
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  2.  42
    Silence as Elective Mutism in Minor Cinema.Tanya Shilina-Conte - 2021 - Film-Philosophy 25 (2):130-150.
    This article advances mutism as a creative mode and conceptual tool to treat silence in cinema. Whereas mutism can be a productive concept for the study of auditory and visual absence in a broader...
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  3.  12
    Sensations and cinema: Reframing the real in democracy and education.Andrew Gibbons & Andrew Denton - forthcoming - Educational Philosophy and Theory.
    In the film Sans Soliel, Chris Marker challenges received wisdoms with regard cinematic production of real worlds and real people. In Marker’s techniques, Jacques Rancière observes an intensely political, highly accessible, art form that leads to a theorisation of cinema for its democratic and educational functions. In this paper we take up Rancière’s interest in the democratic and educational functions of cinema through a reading of three films: Sans Soliel, Minority Report, and After Yang. Marker’s essayist cinema (...)
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  4.  53
    An unthinkable cinema: Deleuze’s mutant politics of film.Timothy Deane-Freeman - 2023 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 49 (8):930-949.
    In this paper, I defend a conception of Deleuze’s two volumes dedicated to film – Cinema I: The Movement-Image, and Cinema II: The Time-Image – as protracted expressions of his political philosophy. In this context, I will elaborate the difficult and entwined political claims Deleuze makes on behalf of cinema: that it is capable of engendering a tentative ‘belief in the world’, such as is the necessary correlate of political action; that it captures the contemporary political fact (...)
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  5.  24
    Edward R. Branigan, Point of View in The Cinema: A Theory of Narration and Subjectivity in Classical Film.Frank P. Tomasulo - 1987 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 45 (3):309-311.
    This book review describes and analyzes the basic ideas in Edward Branigan's book POINT OF VIEW IN THE CINEMA. -/- The review points out the importance of the topic, as well as the various kinds of POV shots used in film "language." -/- Although a few (relatively minor) challenges are raised, for the most part this review proclaims Branigan's encyclopedic treatment of POV to be EXTREMELY valuable to cinema scholars and students alike. So much so that I (...)
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  6.  39
    Sympathy for the Other: Female Solidarity and Postcolonial Subjectivity in Francophone Cinema.Kathleen Scott & Stefanie Van de Peer - 2016 - Film-Philosophy 20 (1):168-194.
    In this article we explore how female sympathy and solidarity can be forged between transnational subjects and spectators. In particular, we place cinematic depictions of minority female suffering in the contexts of current feminist and postcolonial praxes. The aim is to demonstrate the ways in which world cinema can produce a transnational feminist solidarity through forms and narratives that reflect the experiences of women as gendered postcolonial subjects. Amongst the female and feminist theorists drawn upon, central to our understanding (...)
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  7.  48
    Hope and Indignation in Fortress Europe: Immigration and Neoliberal Globalization in Contemporary French Cinema.Will Higbee - 2014 - Substance 43 (1):26-43.
    Over the past twenty years, in France, as elsewhere in Europe, cinema has produced an increasing number of films that engage with the thematics of immigration (both legal and illegal) and represent the living and working conditions of first-generation immigrants. In France, such films have also tended to focus on questions of citizenship and nationality as they pertain to the French-born descendants of immigrants, whose presence within the nation demands a reconsideration of previously fixed notions of community, origins and (...)
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  8.  22
    Félix Guattari: a critical introduction.Gary Genosko - 2009 - New York, NY: Distributed in the United States of America exclusively by Palgrave Macmillan.
    This book offers a detailed look at Guattari's working methods in transdisciplinary experimentation from the time of his youth to his final years.His youthful adventures in the post-war Youth Hostels movement, decisive contact with institutional pedgagogy and the mentor figures of Fernand Oury and his brother Jean, give rise to an extraordinary penchant for organizational innovation in his life at Clinique de La Borde in Cour-Cheverny, France, and collective forms of expression manifested in publishing ventures and diverse collaborative research formations.Guattari's (...)
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  9.  30
    Framing and Staging Madness in the Ethico-aesthetic Paradigm: How Witold Gombrowicz's Operetka Expresses Nicolas Philibert's La moindre des choses.Benjamin Bandosz - 2021 - Deleuze and Guattari Studies 15 (3):411-431.
    Nicolas Philibert's 1997 documentary, La moindre des choses, depicts the daily lives of residents and staff at the private psychiatric clinic La Borde, and their production of Witold Gombrowicz's play Operetka. This paper will analyse the aesthetic and ethical implications of La Borde's production of Gombrowicz's play by mapping the documentary, text and production's collective expressions. The film's capacities to reconfigure audience subjectivities through a filmic and intensive entanglement will be explored at length by framing the documentary's cinematography in Félix (...)
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  10.  22
    Potentialities of Post-Media: Networks of Resistance and Subjugation in Félix Guattari's A Love of UIQ.Benjamin Bandosz - 2021 - Deleuze and Guattari Studies 15 (1):117-139.
    Félix Guattari's theoretical and practical interests in cinema culminated in the film project A Love of UIQ. While critics have concentrated on the sci-fi screenplay's elements of minor cinema, its themes of mass media, emerging computer technologies and informatic-communication networks particularly express Guattari's concept of post-media. The screenplay is an aesthetic meditation on the potentialities of post-media, a concept that anticipates the practical and theoretical issues surrounding the age of the Internet. A Love of UIQ voices Guattari's (...)
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  11.  2
    Black screens, white frames: Gilles Deleuze and the filmmaking machine.Tanya Shilina-Conte - 2024 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    This chapter delineates the theory of the black or white screen as a force of deterritorialization in minor, or modern political cinema. In the previous chapter I relied on the molar and the molecular for the description of deterritorializations in corporeal and cerebral modern cinema, but here I shift emphasis to the major and the minor. These latter concepts help us to better understand the connection between thought, body, and social milieu. Various impossibilities in the social (...)
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  12.  92
    Project for a Film by Kafka.Félix Guattari - 2009 - Deleuze and Guatarri Studies 3 (2):150-161.
    This short document, appearing for the first time in English translation, concerns the prospects of a made-for-television cultural mini-series inspired by select episodes in Kafka's works. A window is opened onto Guattari's curatorial ambitions, cinematic projects, and theory of minor cinema, bringing into focus how he translated theoretical preoccupations into the cultural sector with reference to diverse semiotic media.
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  13.  28
    La parole errante des corps.Pascal Houba - 2003 - Multitudes 1 (1):135-143.
    In this paper we review certain cinematographic practices which, by inscribing a becoming minor into the production and reception of films, attest to a resistance to normalisation. We pay special attention to the ways in which problems of representing the minor and transmitting their experiences have been addressed in the works of Dardenne and in Pasolini’s poetic cinema. Each of these filmmakers have developed a true « minor cinema » where the body, by taking over (...)
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  14.  37
    A Counter-narrative of Argentine Mourning.Cecilia Sosa - 2009 - Theory, Culture and Society 26 (7-8):250-262.
    This article suggests an oblique reading of The Headless Woman (2008), the latest film by Lucrecia Martel, a founder member of the so-called New Argentine Cinema and one of the major stylists of contemporary cinema. Unlike the many memorial films that surround the trauma of the dis- appeared in Argentina, The Headless Woman ‘countersigns’ the genre, proposing a hallucinatory experience of immersion within the affects of guilt, complicity and denial unleashed by the last dictatorship (1976—83). By presenting the (...)
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  15.  7
    Queer imaginings: on writing and cinematic friendship.David A. Gerstner - 2023 - Detroit: Wayne State University Press.
    How do we identify the "queer auteur" and their queer imaginings? Is it possible to account for such a figure when the very terms "queer" and "auteur" invoke aesthetic surprises and disorientations, disconcerting ironies and paradoxes, and biographical deceits and ambiguities? David A. Gerstner traces a history of ideas that spotlight an ever-shifting terrain associated with auteur theory and, in particular, queer-auteur theory. Engaging with the likes of Oscar Wilde, Walter Benjamin, James Baldwin, Jean Louis Baudry, Linda Nochlin, Jane Gallop, (...)
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  16. Pure immanence: essays on a life.Gilles Deleuze - 2001 - Cambridge: the MIT Press. Edited by Anne Boyman.
    The essays in this book present a complex theme at the heart of the philosophy of Gilles Deleuze, what in his last writing he called simply "a life." They capture a problem that runs throughout his work--his long search for a new and superior empiricism. Announced in his first book, on David Hume, then taking off with his early studies of Nietzsche and Bergson, the problem of an "empiricist conversion" became central to Deleuze's work, in particular to his aesthetics and (...)
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  17.  10
    Walter Benjamin's antifascist education: from riddles to radio.Tyson E. Lewis - 2020 - Albany: State University of New York Press.
    Walter Benjamin's Antifascist Education is the first comprehensive analysis of educational themes across the entirety of the critical theorist's diverse writings. Starting with Benjamin's early reflections on teaching and learning, Tyson E. Lewis argues that the aesthetic and cultural forms to which Benjamin so often turned-namely, radio broadcasts, children's theatrical productions, collections, cityscapes, public cinemas, and word games-swell with educational potentialities. What emerges from Lewis's reading is a constellational curriculum composed of minor practices such as poor teaching, absentminded learning, (...)
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  18.  69
    Dialogues Ii.Gilles Deleuze & Claire Parnet - 1987 - New York: Cambridge University Press. Edited by Claire Parnet & Gilles Deleuze.
    French journalist Claire Parnet's famous dialogues with Gilles Deleuze offer an intimate portrait of the philosopher's life and thought. Conversational in tone, their engaging discussions delve deeply into Deleuze's philosophical background and development, the major concepts that shaped his work, and the essence of some of his famous relationships, especially his long collaboration with the philosopher Félix Guattari. Deleuze reconsiders Spinoza, empiricism, and the stoics alongside literature, psychoanalysis, and politics. He returns to the notions of minor literature, deterritorialization, the (...)
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  19.  9
    Pasolini, Fassbinder and Europe: Between Utopia and Nihilism.Fabio Vighi & Alexis Nouss (eds.) - 2010 - Cambridge Scholars Press.
    The present collection of essays brings into dialogue Pier Paolo Pasolini (1922-1975) and Rainer Werner Fassbinder (1945-1982) by comparing their cultural and intellectual legacy. Pasolini and Fassbinder are amongst the last radical filmmakers to have emerged in Europe. Born in Italy and Germany, they inherited a traumatic social and political past which is reflected in their works through a number of similarly articulated and unresolved tensions: high and popular cultures, theatre, literature and cinema, ideology and narration, major and (...) codes of expression. The essays in this book examine the uncompromising character of Pasolini's and Fassbinder's films. Constantly oscillating between utopia and nihilism, these works invite us to reconsider subjective and collective questions which from today's perspective seem lost forever. (shrink)
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  20.  46
    American Dionysia.Steven Johnston - 2009 - Contemporary Political Theory 8 (3):255-275.
    Pluralism's renaissance, thanks to William Connolly, Chantal Mouffe and others, has established its position as the distinctive voice of late modern democracy. It thus calls for an explicit theory of tragedy to address the antagonisms and enmities it reflects and fosters. Treating Machiavelli, Rousseau, Nietzsche, Weber and Camus as members of a minor tradition of thought, I articulate a political conception of tragedy that flows not from the failures of politics but, ironically, from politics at its best. A tragic (...)
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  21.  22
    On Film.Stephen Mulhall - 2001 - Routledge.
    In this significantly expanded new edition of his acclaimed exploration of the four Alien movies, Stephen Mulhall adds several new chapters on Steven Spielberg’s Mission: Impossible trilogy and Minority Report . The first part of the book discusses the four Alien movies. Mulhall argues that the sexual significance of the aliens themselves, and of Ripley’s resistance to them, takes us deep into the question of what it is to be human. At the heart of the book is a highly original (...)
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  22.  22
    Fabuler la fin du monde: La puissance critique des fictions d'apocalypse by Jean-Paul Engélibert (review).Cyril Camus - 2023 - Utopian Studies 34 (1):163-168.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:Fabuler la fin du monde: La puissance critique des fictions d’apocalypse by Jean-Paul EngélibertCyril CamusJean-Paul Engélibert. Fabuler la fin du monde: La puissance critique des fictions d’apocalypse [Fabulating the end of the world: The critical power of apocalypse fiction]. Paris: Éditions La Découverte, 2019. 239 pp. Print. 20€. ISBN 978-2-348-03719-1.Jean-Paul Engélibert is a well-established expert on apocalyptic and postapocalyptic fiction. His exploration of the genre thus far includes (...)
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  23.  12
    Performing difference: representations of "the other" in film and theater.Jonathan C. Friedman (ed.) - 2009 - Lanham, Maryland: University Press of America.
    Performing Difference is a compilation of seventeen essays from some of the leading scholars in history, criticism, film, and theater studies. Each author examines the portrayal of groups and individuals that have been traditionally marginalized or excluded from dominant historical narratives. As a meeting point of several fields of study, this book is organized around three meta-themes: race, gender, and genocide. Included are analyses of films and theatrical productions from the United States, as well as essays on cinema from (...)
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  24.  21
    In Search of a New Image of Thought: Gilles Deleuze and Philosophical Expressionism.Gregg Lambert - 2012 - Univ of Minnesota Press.
    Gregg Lambert demonstrates that since the publication of _Proust and Signs_ in 1964 Gilles Deleuze’s search for a new means of philosophical expression became a central theme of all of his oeuvre, including those written with psychoanalyst Félix Guattari. Lambert, like Deleuze, calls this “the image of thought.” Lambert’s exploration begins with Deleuze’s earliest exposition of the Proustian image of thought and then follows the “tangled history” of the image that runs through subsequent works, such as _Kafka: Toward a (...) Literature_, _The Rhizome_, and several later writings from the 1980s collected in _Essays Critical and Clinical._ Lambert shows how this topic underlies Deleuze’s studies of modern cinema, where the image of thought is predominant in the analysis of the cinematic image—particularly in _The Time-Image_. Lambert finds it to be the fundamental concern of the brain proposed by Deleuze in the conclusion of _What Is Philosophy? _By connecting the various appearances of the image of thought that permeate Deleuze’s entire corpus, Lambert reveals how thinking first assumes an image, how the images of thought become identified with the problem of expression early in the works, and how this issue turns into a primary motive for the more experimental works of philosophy written with Guattari. The study traces a distinctly modern relationship between philosophy and non-philosophy that has developed into a hallmark of the term “Deleuzian.” However, Lambert argues, this aspect of the philosopher’s vision has not been fully appreciated in terms of its significance for philosophy: “not only ‘for today’ but, to quote Nietzsche, meaning also ‘for tomorrow, and for the day after tomorrow.’”. (shrink)
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  25. Deleuze et les modes de vie mineurs.Vanessa Brito - 2009 - Filozofski Vestnik.
    This article proposes to examine the relation between art and the experience of alterity through the typology of modes of existence which Deleuze extracts from literature and cinema. Through the figures of slavery, automatism, petrification, and exhaustion which characterize this typology, it suggests that these experiences of alterity define "minor" modes of existence and thought which are opposed to that volitional autonomy which, for Kant, defines our maturity. The hypothesis examined here is that the notion of the (...) marks a turning point from which the emancipatory vocation of the Enlightenment is replaced by an idea of resistance – understood here, according to Deleuze and Lyotard, as an ethical category designating an experience of the alterity constitutive of the self. From this common point, the article finally seeks to identify what separates the ethics of Deleuze from that of Lyotard, analyzing how Deleuze's typology fits neither a logic of freedom nor that of the gift, making itself unavailable for morality. (shrink)
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  26. External realism about cinematic motion.Trevor Ponech - 2006 - British Journal of Aesthetics 46 (4):349-368.
    Cinematic motion is, I argue, a genuine and intrinsic property of some cinematic works and not just a matter of how things look to us. It is an event—an item's change of position—happening prior and external to our sensory responses to movies. I therefore defend against common-sense illusionism a minority opinion within cinema studies: that movie viewing normally occasions veridical perceptions of a kind of objective displacement. I also dispute another version of anti-illusionist realism about cinematic motion, the implication (...)
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  27.  26
    Preface.Judith Gardiner & Neha Vora - 2020 - Feminist Studies 46 (1):8-13.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:preface At a time when access to safe abortions is being curtailed in the United States under the pretext of a response to the COVID-19 pandemic, this Feminist Studies issue focuses on abortion and women’s embodiment. The essays by Melissa Oliver-Powell, Rachel Alpha Johnston Hurst, and Jennifer L. Holland each contribute new approaches to the stillvexed topic of abortion, positioning movements for abortion access in relation to historical and (...)
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  28.  4
    La realtà virtuale come spazio di un’ekphrasis digitale.Damiano Cantone - 2024 - Studi di Estetica 28.
    The essay aims to examine the concept of digital ekphrasis in virtual reality environments. The emergence of immersive narrative worlds, both in videogames and artistic expression, requires a reflection on the relationships between traditional narrative forms (literature and painting, as well as photography and cinema) and the possibilities that technological development brings to the evolution of artistic and expressive languages. Starting from the analysis of Alejandro González Iñárritu’s virtual reality installation "Carne y Arena", the essay questions the continuity/discontinuity relationship (...)
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  29. Of Amphibolies and Amphibiologies.Garin Dowd - 2025 - Angelaki 30 (1):92-109.
    Following the lead of Michèle Le Doeuff in generalising the figure of the amphiboly in her reading of Kant’s maritime digressions in the course of his Critical opus, my essay departs from this basis to look both to philosophy and literature (with minor digressions into photography and cinema) in order to examine images of the human species in acts of immersion, traversal and exit from the sea, as well as installation on land (and on the island in particular) (...)
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  30. Open Wounds: Body and Image in Jean-Luc Nancy and Claire Denis.Douglas Morrey - 2008 - Film-Philosophy 12 (1):10-31.
    Body and image are crucial to the elaboration of both Jean-Luc Nancy’s philosophy andClaire Denis’s work in cinema. Nancy’s short book about the body, Corpus ,though it may initially have appeared as a minor work in his œuvre, has since been shown,and notably since the intervention of Jacques Derrida, as the cornerstone of much ofNancy’s late thought. As Derrida demonstrates, Nancy’s interest in the body turnsaround the crucial trope of touch which comes to stand, in his philosophy, as (...)
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  31.  66
    So Far So Good..Sanjay Sharma & Ashwani Sharma - 2000 - Theory, Culture and Society 17 (3):103-116.
    Representations of urban youth and its cultures of display have become an increasing focus of attention for contemporary cinema. The film La Haine (1995) received critical acclaim for its raw depiction of `ghetto life' for alienated `minority' youth in France. In this article, we use this text as a way of exploring the cultural politics of such filmic practices. La Haine's aesthetic strategies of an affective `hyper-realism' and postmodern authenticity are scrutinized for their racialized politics of representation. The discussion (...)
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  32.  71
    Creativity and the Sciences.William S. Minor - 1979 - Dialectics and Humanism 6 (1):107-109.
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  33.  8
    Sri Aurobindo, the perfect and the good.Robert Neil Minor - 1978 - Calcutta: Minerva.
    Study on the thought and activities of a mystic philosopher of India.
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  34.  17
    Philip II and Macedonian Imperialism.Minor M. Markle & John R. Ellis - 1979 - American Journal of Philology 100 (2):327.
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  35.  61
    Radhakrishnan as advocate of the class/caste system as a universal religio-social system.Robert N. Minor - 1997 - International Journal of Hindu Studies 1 (2):386-400.
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  36.  12
    The Book on Adler. The Religious Confusion of the Present Age Illustrated by Magister Adler as a Phenomenon. A Mimical Monograph.Petrus Minor - 2000 - In Søren Kierkegaard (ed.), The Essential Kierkegaard. Princeton University Press. pp. 411-423.
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  37.  8
    Discutiendo con el enemigo: A propósito de algunos licántropos de la irracionalidad discursiva en materia de libertad de expresión.Minor E. Salas - 2015 - Isonomía. Revista de Teoría y Filosofía Del Derecho 42:83-109.
    Discutir con los amigos es fácil. Es más difícil discutir con quien no comparte nuestros valores íntimos y preciados, con quien ofende nuestras creencias, deshonra nuestra fe y esperanza o se ríe de nuestras opiniones. ¿Cómo se ha de actuar en estos casos? ¿Con la espada y la ira en la mano, la indiferencia y el silencio, o el argumento y la palabra? ¿Y si no se puede ya razonar? ¿Cuando uno topa con el límite insalvable de la impotencia de (...)
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  38.  42
    Creativity within Institutions.William S. Minor - 1977 - Dialectics and Humanism 4 (3):65-71.
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  39.  16
    Moving Through and Moving Forward.Suzanne Minor - 2018 - Narrative Inquiry in Bioethics 8 (1):E10-E13.
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  40.  34
    The Honganji: Guardian of the state (1868-1945).Minor L. Rogers & Ann T. Rogers - 1990 - Japanese Journal of Religious Studies 17 (1):3-28.
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  41. Signals for the cessation of inescapable shock prevent later escape deficits in rats.Tr Minor & Nk Dess - 1988 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 26 (6):509-509.
  42.  6
    Charles Hartshorne and Henry Nelson Wieman.William Sherman Minor (ed.) - 1969 - Lanham, MD: University Press of America.
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  43.  25
    Room temperature dislocation plasticity in silicon.A. M. Minor §, E. T. Lilleodden, M. Jin, E. A. Stach, D. C. Chrzan & J. W. Morris - 2005 - Philosophical Magazine 85 (2-3):323-330.
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  44. Blurry Humanism: A Reply to Michael Lynch.Chris Calvert-Minor - 2014 - Human Studies 37 (1):147-152.
    Humanism is blurry. It can have some clarity, but it is mainly blurry. To say anything otherwise is to fool oneself. Yes, we can construct reasonable humanistic theories that attempt to organize our understanding, such as methodologicalhumanism where one unifies discourses or practices according to human subjects or substantivehumanism that touts the importance of humanity via some shared attribute or substance. But to suggest that one can delineate and define the full salience of humanity, whether great or small, in the (...)
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  45.  99
    Teaching Philosophy in Second Life.Chris Calvert-Minor - 2011 - Teaching Philosophy 34 (1):1-16.
    Second Life is a free, three-dimensional, multi-user, online virtual world program created in 2003 by Linden Research Inc. In this paper, I recount the Introduction to Philosophy course I taught in Second Life for the University of Wisconsin-Whitewater and address five areas of interest: (1) traditional vs. non-traditional learning environments, (2) communication, (3) illustrative props, (4) student feedback, and (5) and potential concerns. My conclusion is that philosophy courses can be taught online in Second Life effectively and that philosophy instructors (...)
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  46.  78
    Minds Online: Teaching Effectively with Technology, by Michelle D. Miller.Chris Calvert-Minor - 2015 - Teaching Philosophy 38 (3):321-325.
  47.  56
    Rational Agreement and the Validity of Moral Norms.Chris Calvert-Minor - 2008 - Southwest Philosophy Review 24 (1):101-108.
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  48.  9
    The Inescapability of Theorizing Practices within Epistemology.Chris Calvert-Minor - 2012 - Kritike 6 (1).
  49.  34
    Social and self-perceptions of institutionalized and noninstitutionalized juveniles.Kevin I. Minor, Sharon K. Karr & Stephen F. Davis - 1984 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 22 (6):557-559.
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  50.  27
    The Kantian element in Lewis' theory of knowledge.Minor W. Boyer - 1958 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 19 (1):95-103.
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