Results for ' visitor discourse'

955 found
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  1.  13
    Visitors’ discursive responses to hegemonic and alternative museum narratives: a case study of Le Modèle Noir.Laura Hodsdon - 2022 - Critical Discourse Studies 19 (4):401-417.
    ABSTRACT Recent reflection on the role of museums and galleries has focused on their socially situated nature; and that as a social construct, co-produced with its audiences, heritage is in part discursively constituted. This has included acknowledgement that the inherited discourse is hegemonic and exclusive of divergent narratives, leading to moves to create alternatives to contest it, which include temporary exhibitions. These provide a potentially democratic space for discursive incursions freed from the constraints of the permanent museum. But they (...)
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  2. Noesis and Logos in Plato's Statesman, with a Focus on the Visitor's Jokes at 266a-d.Mitchell Miller - 2017 - In John Sallis (ed.), Plato's Statesman: Dialectic, Myth, and Politics. Albany, NY: Suny Series in Contemporary Company. pp. 107-136.
    In his “Noesis and Logos in the Eleatic Trilogy, with a Focus on the Visitor’s Jokes at Statesman 266a-d,” Mitchell Miller explores the interplay of intuition and discourse in the Statesman. He prepares by considering the orienting provocations provided by Socrates’ refutations of the proposed definition of knowledge — namely, “true judgment and a logos” — in the closing pages of the Theaetetus, by the Eleatic Visitor’s obscure schematization at Sophist 253d-e of the kinds of eidetic field (...)
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  3.  23
    Stigmas of disease and poverty: A Historical a priori of Modern Discourse.С. И Бояркина - 2023 - Siberian Journal of Philosophy 20 (3):57-72.
    The article dwells on the history of the formation of multiple stigmas of sick/poor people. The author describes medical and status characteristics that predetermine attitudes towards potential or real carriers of infectious diseases and poverty. Historical examples of the stigmatization of certain social groups in the era of the greatest epidemiological trouble until the middle of the 19th century are described.A content analysis of the discourse is carried out. It was based on the materials of a modern online publication (...)
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  4.  3
    The Assemblage of Interreligious Dialogue and Tourism.Taufiqurrohim Taufiqurrohim - 2022 - Epistemé: Jurnal Pengembangan Ilmu Keislaman 17 (1):97-113.
    The touristic place provides discourses that are worth examining as to which how the management of the site, its internal contestation and development, as well as experiences of its visitors. Examining a heritage of the ancient Majapahit kingdom in Java, this article discusses the assemblage of tourism and religious sites and the extent the site serves as a reservoir for interreligious dialog in contemporary Indonesia. It tries to point out how interreligious dialogue is at work in this site and how (...)
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  5.  12
    `I was here!': addressivity structures and inscribing practices as indexical resources.Chaim Noy - 2009 - Discourse Studies 11 (4):421-440.
    The article examines how practices of inscription and structures of addressivity at a symbolic site provide implicit indexical means for establishing subjectivities and agencies. By examining a visitor book located in a national commemoration site in Jerusalem, Israel, the article first argues that inscribing practices themselves can function as implicit indexical mechanisms. In ritualized environments, inscribing assumes the function of a non-referential indexical because discourse is materially engraved unto a surround. These environments are also characterized by prescribed addressivity (...)
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  6.  89
    Rhetoric, Grief, and the Imagination in Early Modern England.Stephen Pender - 2010 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 43 (1):54-85.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Rhetoric, Grief, and the Imagination in Early Modern EnglandStephen PenderIn 1633, the Northampton physician James Hart warned that excessive grief "will to some procure irrecoverable Consumptions," dry the brain and bone marrow, hinder digestion, interrupt rest, and "by consequent prove a cause of many dangerous diseases." The risk was grave: "Galen himself maketh answer that one may dye of these passions, and to this doe all Physicians assent; and (...)
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  7.  43
    South Africa’s Blue Dress.Eliza Garnsey - 2019 - Angelaki 24 (4):38-51.
    Inside the Constitutional Court of South Africa hangs Judith Mason’s artwork, entitled The Man Who Sang and the Woman Who Kept Silent, more commonly known as The Blue Dress. Mason created the artwork to commemorate Phila Ndwandwe and Harold Sefola after hearing testimony from the perpetrators of their deaths at the South African Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC). In this article I explore how The Blue Dress contributes to the reimagining of human rights culture in South Africa in three key (...)
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  8.  9
    The City-State Foundations of Western Thought.Victorino Tejera - 1993 - Upa.
    First published in 1984, this revised edition is designed to meet the needs of students and teachers of classical political philosophy. The two chief differences between the present revised edition and the first are the addition of a section on Solon's ethics in Chapter II, and the more frontal approach taken to the discourse of the visitor from Elea in Plato's Politicusóan approach which allows the reader to capture better and trace more easily his systematic equivocation between "the (...)
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  9.  56
    Introduction.Jens Andermann & Silke Arnold-de Simine - 2012 - Theory, Culture and Society 29 (1):3-13.
    Over the last decades, in response to feminist, postmodern and postcolonial critiques of the modern museum, objects, collections and processes of museaIization have been radically re-signified and re-posited in the cultural arena. The new museums emerging from this shift have redefined their functions in and for communities not simply by changing their narratives but by renegotiating the processes of narration and the museal codes of communication with the public. They define themselves now not as disciplinary spaces of academic history but (...)
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  10.  21
    How binding and bonding communicate interpersonal meanings in a children’s museum to address Jordan’s energy and water challenges.Ahmad El-Sharif - 2023 - Semiotica 2023 (250):43-66.
    Museums’ structures, spaces, and exhibits are understood as semiotic resources that make spatial texts that communicate a discourse defined by the authorities of the museum or its curators. The current study follows a social-semiotic approach in analyzing the spatial discourse of the Children’s Museum in Amman. It demonstrates that interpersonal meanings are semiotically communicated to children visitors in the Museum by firstly establishing a “comfort-zone” and secondly by aligning children visitors into groups with shared qualities, attitudes, and dispositions (...)
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  11.  36
    Austerity or Xenophobia? The Causes and Costs of the “Hostile Environment” in the NHS.Arianne Shahvisi - 2019 - Health Care Analysis 27 (3):202-219.
    During the “age of austerity” the UK government has progressively limited free health services for “overseas visitors” on the grounds of fairness and frugality. This is despite the fact that the cost of the additional bureaucracy required by the new system and the public health consequences are expected to exceed the sums saved. In this article I explore the interaction between the discourses of austerity and xenophobia as they relate to migrants’ access to healthcare. By examining the available data and (...)
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  12.  10
    Saying Amen to the Light of Dawn: Nietzsche on Praise, Prayer, and Affirmation.Hans Ruin - 2019 - Nietzsche Studien 48 (1):99-116.
    This article addresses the role and meaning of prayer as well as the language of piety and praise in Nietzsche’s writings, notably in Zarathustra. This essay was first presented as a talk in German at the 2017 Nietzsche colloquium in Sils Maria, the theme of which was “Zarathustra und Dionysos”. In preparing it for a publication in English, the argument has been reworked and expanded and references have been added, while partly preserving the tone and structure of the oral delivery. (...)
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  13.  35
    “Authentically Disney, distinctly Chinese” and faintly American: The emotional branding of Disneyland in Shanghai.Ming Cheung & William McCarthy - 2019 - Semiotica 2019 (226):107-133.
    Since the 1980s Disney has opened a new overseas theme park every decade. After finding success in Tokyo in 1983, subsequent parks in Paris and Hong Kong have struggled to profit financially and connect culturally with locals. For Shanghai in 2016, Disney utilized a new discourse for the parkʼs development and configuration termed “authentically Disney, distinctly Chinese.” In this paper, Disneyʼs emotional branding strategy for Shanghai Disneyland is analyzed using a framework of five antecedents for creating affective attachment to (...)
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  14.  43
    Dramatic frame and philosophic idea in Plato.William A. Johnson - 1998 - American Journal of Philology 119 (4):577-598.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Dramatic Frame and Philosophic Idea in PlatoWilliam A. JohnsonIn a minority of plato's dialogues the central philosophic discourse is presented indirectly, refracted through the lens of a dramatic frame of more or less complexity.1 Scholars typically divorce the question of the dramatic frame from the philosophy of the dialogues: the frame is often simply set to one side by analytic philosophers, and tends to be considered in terms (...)
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  15.  32
    The Fuzzy Metrics of Money: The Finances of Travel and the Reception of Curiosities in Early Modern Europe.Dániel Margócsy - 2013 - Annals of Science 70 (3):381-404.
    Summary This article argues that commerce and the language of finance had an important influence over the interpretation of curiosities in the early modern period. It traces how learned travellers in the years around 1700 were constantly reminded to watch their purses and to limit their expenses while on the road. As a result, monetary matters also influenced their appreciation of artificialia and naturalia. They judged and compared the aesthetic value of curiosities by mentioning their price. Money offered an easy, (...)
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  16.  86
    Cracks in the Mirror: (Un)covering the Moral Terrains of Environmental Justice at Ulu r u-Kata Tju t a National Park.Gordon Waitt & Robert Melchior Figueroa - 2008 - Ethics, Place and Environment 11 (3):327-349.
    The authors' aim is to provide a more complete picture of a non-anthropocentric relational ethics by addressing the failure to account for environmental justice. They argue that environmental ethics is always more than how discourses are layered over place, by situating moral agency through the body's affective repertoire of being-in-the-world. Empirical evidence for their argument is drawn from self-reflexive accounts of young Americans travelling to Ulu r u-Kata Tju t a National Park, Northern Territory, Australia as part of a study-group. (...)
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  17.  7
    Educational resources of the museum "Losev's House" and their use in teaching philosophy.Якушкина Н.В Саенко Н.Р. - 2024 - Philosophy and Culture (Russian Journal) 6:227-235.
    The subject of the article, which is based on the concept and practical methodology of using the space of the museum exposition as an educational one, is the activities of the Moscow Memorial Museum "Losev's House". Particular attention is paid to the analysis of such educational resources of a new type offered by the Losev House as the Scientific Library, Online Lecture and Study Day at the Museum; within the framework of each of these forms, its general educational potential and (...)
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  18.  13
    Persuading consumers: The use of conditional constructions in British hotel websites.Carmen Gregori-Signes & Miguel Fuster-Márquez - 2018 - Discourse and Communication 12 (6):587-607.
    Hotel websites display textual and non-textual strategies with the aim of turning online visitors into customers. This article focuses on two related textual aspects: how consumers are discursively construed and how conditional constructions are used in order to persuade and convince consumers of the adequacy of the hotel. The framework adopted for the analysis combines Stern’s notion of ‘implied consumer’ with a corpus-driven approach. The corpus data comprises 114 British hotel websites and totals half a million words. This is a (...)
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  19.  13
    First Philosophy in the Border Zone.Viggo Rossvaer - 2016 - Santalka: Filosofija, Komunikacija 24 (2):95-107.
    The article will be devoted to such problems as a idea of subsidiarity, a cosmopolitan right and a visitor figure in context and interpretation of ancient and modern philosophy. The article deals with the concept of subsidiarity which is taken as a point of departure for the discipline of borderology, an academic study with Kantian roots. Borderology, according to the principle of subsidiarity, can present as a new field of investigation which invites philosophers and social scientists to replace a (...)
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  20.  42
    Philosophy and the Art of Writing. [REVIEW]Botond Csuka - 2022 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 80 (4):523-527.
    Authors, especially “advocates for virtue,” writes Samuel Johnson in one of his Rambler essays, might consider following the example of monarchs, who, hiding themselves from the public, “avoid the conversation of mankind […], for men would not more patiently submit to be taught, than commanded, by one known to have the same follies and weaknesses with themselves.” It is easy to see, continues Dr. Johnson, that writing well is easier than living well: teaching navigation on land is not the same (...)
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  21.  24
    ‘Same, same but different’: representations of Chinese mainland and Hong Kong people in the press in post-1997 Hong Kong.Yuting Lin, Meilin Chen & John Flowerdew - 2022 - Critical Discourse Studies 19 (4):364-383.
    ABSTRACT After Hong Kong’s return to Chinese Sovereignty in 1997, the terms ‘mainlander’ and ‘Hongkonger’ have been widely used by English-language media in Hong Kong to differentiate between people from the Chinese mainland and Hong Kong. This study examines representations of Chinese mainlanders and Hongkongers in a 17.4-million-token corpus containing 30,279 articles published between 1998 and 2019 by the South China Morning Post, a leading English-language newspaper in Hong Kong. By comparing the collocational behaviour of the noun lemmas mainlander and (...)
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  22.  13
    ‘My Holocaust experience was great!’: Entitlements for participation in museum media.Chaim Noy - 2016 - Discourse and Communication 10 (3):274-290.
    This interdisciplinary study brings together research on audiences’ participation in the media, and an up-close exploration of communicative entitlement of and for such participation. Viewing visitor books as situated, public media, the study asks two related questions: how museums and institutions that employ this medium frame participation of ‘ordinary’ people in the public sphere, and how, in return, visitors variously articulate their participation. The article first examines the context in which visitor books mediate participation, and how museums frame (...)
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  23. Philosophical Studies Vol. 98 No. 1 (Mar. 2000)" Erratum: Unmentionables and Ineffables: An Interpretation of Some Fregean Metaphysical and Semantical Discourse"(pp. 113). [REVIEW]Semantical Discourse - unknown - Philosophical Studies 97 (1):53 - 97.
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  24. Première séance.Demonstration Discourse, E. Poznanski, M. Bunge, T. Kotarbinski & J. Horovitz - 1968 - Logique Et Analyse 11:35.
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  25. Maria Bittner.Polysynthetic Discourse - 2007 - In Chris Barker & Pauline I. Jacobson (eds.), Direct compositionality. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 14--363.
     
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  26. Helen Reece.Feminist Anti-Violence Discourse - 2009 - In Shelley Day Sclater (ed.), Regulating autonomy: sex, reproduction and family. Portland, Or.: Hart.
     
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  27. Dan W. Brock.Public Moral Discourse - 1995 - In Ruth Ellen Bulger, Elizabeth Meyer Bobby & Harvey V. Fineberg (eds.), Society's choices: social and ethical decision making in biomedicine. Washington, D.C.: National Academy Press.
  28. John C. McCarthy.A. T. Discourse - 2008 - In Tobias Hoffmann (ed.), Weakness of Will from Plato to the Present. Catholic University of America Press. pp. 49--175.
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  29. Mary Ann G. Cutter.Local Bioethical Discourse: Implications - 2002 - In Julia Lai Po-Wah Tao (ed.), Cross-cultural perspectives on the (im) possibility of global bioethics. Boston: Kluwer Academic.
     
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  30. Felix Martinez-bonati.On Fictional Discourse - 1996 - In Calin Andrei Mihailescu & Walid Hamarneh (eds.), Fiction updated: theories of fictionality, narratology, and poetics. Buffalo: University of Toronto Press.
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  31.  12
    In 1998, I spent three months in Tunisia studying Arabic and taking a much-needed holiday from my Ph. D. studies. An Australian woman of mixed heritage (including Cherokee Indian), my multilingualism, physical smallness, black hair and eyes, and yellow-toned skin allow me to blend in, or at least to defy categorisation, in a range of cultures. As a woman travel-ling alone in that region, I attracted an inordinate amount of attention but was also, perhaps due to my liminal status as an anomaly, privy to some insightful confessions and revelations from Tunisians and Algerians I met there. [REVIEW]A. Nineteenth-Century Discourse & That Haunts Contemporary Tourism - 2009 - In Olga Gershenson Barbara Penner (ed.), Ladies and Gents: Public Toilets and Gender. Temple University Press.
  32. Anaphora and discourse structure.Bonnie Webber - manuscript
    We argue in this article that many common adverbial phrases generally taken to signal a discourse relation between syntactically connected units within discourse structure instead work anaphor- ically to contribute relational meaning, with only indirect dependence on discourse structure. This allows a simpler discourse structure to provide scaffolding for compositional semantics and reveals multiple ways in which the relational meaning conveyed by adverbial connectives can interact with that associated with discourse structure. We conclude by sketching (...)
     
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  33. An Introduction to Discourse Analysis: Theory and Method.[author unknown] - 2011
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  34. Discourse and logical form: pronouns, attention and coherence.Una Stojnić, Matthew Stone & Ernie Lepore - 2017 - Linguistics and Philosophy 40 (5):519-547.
    Traditionally, pronouns are treated as ambiguous between bound and demonstrative uses. Bound uses are non-referential and function as bound variables, and demonstrative uses are referential and take as a semantic value their referent, an object picked out jointly by linguistic meaning and a further cue—an accompanying demonstration, an appropriate and adequately transparent speaker’s intention, or both. In this paper, we challenge tradition and argue that both demonstrative and bound pronouns are dependent on, and co-vary with, antecedent expressions. Moreover, the semantic (...)
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  35. Abbey, Ruth (2004) Charles Taylor. New York: Cambridge University Press, $20.00, 220 pp. Aquino, Frederick D.(2004) Communities of Informed Judgment: New-man's Illative Sense and Accounts of Rationality. Washington: The Catholic University of America Press, $54.95, 182 pp. [REVIEW]Charles Hartshorne & Western Discourses - 2004 - International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 56:179-180.
  36.  43
    Discourse on Method ; And, Meditations on First Philosophy.René Descartes (ed.) - 1993 - Hackett Publishing Company.
    Contains English translations of Descartes' 1637 treatise Discourse on the Method for Conducting One's Reason Well and for Searching for Truth in the Sciences and a subsequent development of the ideas contained in it, Meditations on First Philosophy, first published in 1641. Includes a selected bibliography. Annotation copyrighted by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR.
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  37. Discourse on Method, Optics, Geometry, and Meteorology.René Descartes - 1965 - New York: Hackett Publishing Company.
    This volume preserves the format in which Discourse on Method was originally published: as a preface to Descartes's writings on optics, geometry, and meteorology. In his introduction, Olscamp discusses the value of reading the Discourse alongside these three works, which sheds new light on Descartes’s method. Includes an updated bibliography.
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  38.  25
    Heterologies: Discourse on the Other.Michel de Certeau - 1986 - Univ of Minnesota Press.
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  39. Functional syntax: anaphora, discourse, and empathy.Susumu Kuno - 1987 - Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
    I CATEGORIES AND PRINCIPLES ii Introductory Remarks The value of linguistics as a cognitive science lies largely in its potential for providing insights ...
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  40.  33
    Discourse, beliefs, and intentions: semantic defaults and propositional attitude ascription.Katarzyna Jaszczolt - 1999 - New York: Elsevier.
    This book is about beliefs, language, communication and cognition. It deals with the fundamental issue of the interpretation of the speaker's utterance expressing a belief and reporting on beliefs of other people in the form of oratio obliqua. The main aim of the book is to present a new account of the problem of interpreting utterances expressing beliefs and belief reports in terms of an approach called Default Semantics.
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  41. Moral Discourse and Descriptive Properties.Brad Majors - 2005 - Philosophical Quarterly 55 (220):475 - 494.
    I discuss a strategy for grounding ethical naturalism propounded by Frank Jackson and more recently by Allan Gibbard: that the undisputed supervenience of the moral upon the natural (or descriptive) entails that moral properties are natural (or descriptive) properties. I show that this strategy falls foul of certain indubitable constraints governing natural kinds; and I then rebut some objections. The upshot is that no viable strategy for supporting ethical naturalism is to be found along these lines. This result has additional (...)
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  42.  53
    The Discourse of Kingship in Classical Greece.Carol Atack - 2019 - Abingdon: Routledge.
    This book examines how ancient authors explored ideas of kingship as a political role fundamental to the construction of civic unity, the use of kingship stories to explain the past and present unity of the polis and the distinctive function or status attributed to kings in such accounts. -/- It explores the notion of kingship offered by historians such as Herodotus, as well as dramatists writing for the Athenian stage, paying particular attention to dramatic depictions of the unique capabilities of (...)
  43. Discourse ethics and the political conception of human rights.Kenneth Baynes - 2009 - Ethics and Global Politics 2 (1).
    This article examines two recent alternatives to the traditional conception of human rights as natural rights: the account of human rights found in discourse ethics and the ‘political conception’ of human rights influenced by the work of Rawls. I argue that both accounts have distinct merits and that they are not as opposed to one another as is sometimes supposed. At the same time, the discourse ethics account must confront a deep ambiguity in its own approach: are rights (...)
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  44.  45
    Towards a (Semi-)Discourse of the Semi-Living; The Undecidability of a Life Exposed to Death.Adele Senior - 2007 - Technoetic Arts 5 (2):97-112.
    This paper responds to Are the Semi-Living semi-good or semi-evil? (Technoetic Arts, 2003) in which artists/authors Zurr and Catts state that there is not, as yet, an existing discourse that deals with the Semi-Living a new life form created for the purpose of artistic engagement using the tools of tissue engineering and stem cell technology. As a means to reflect on what a discourse on the Semi-Living might include and exclude and to create the potential to say something (...)
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  45. Patterns and Meanings in Discourse: Theory and Practice in Corpus-Assisted Discourse Studies (CADS).[author unknown] - 2013
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  46.  38
    Developing Capabilities: A Feminist Discourse Ethics Approach.Chad Kleist - unknown
    This dissertation attempts to preserve the central tenets of a global moral theory called “the capabilities approach” as defended by Martha Nussbaum, but to do so in a way that better realizes its own goals of identifying gender injustices and gaining cross-cultural support by providing an alternative defense of it. Capabilities assess an individual’s well-being based on what she is able to do (actions) and who she is able to be (states of existence). Nussbaum grounds her theory in the intuitive (...)
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  47.  39
    Who gets involved with what? A discourse analysis of gender and caregiving in everyday family life with depression.Jeppe Oute & Lotte Huniche - 2017 - Outlines. Critical Practice Studies 18 (1):05-27.
    The recent process of deinstitutionalization of the psychiatric treatment system, in both Denmark and other European countries, has relied heavily on the involvement in treatment and recovery of cohabitant relatives of diagnosed people. However, political objectives regarding depression and involvement rely on a limited body of knowledge about people’s ways of managing illness-related problems in everyday life. Drawing on a discursive notion of gender laid out by Raewyn Connell, the aim of the article is to elucidate how the involvement of (...)
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  48.  56
    Puzzles of Discourse inBeing and Time: Minding Gaps in Understanding.Roxana Baiasu - 2009 - International Journal of Philosophical Studies 17 (5):681-706.
    This paper takes issue with Heidegger's claim that discourse and understanding are equally basic in the constitution of our making sense of the world. I argue that Heidegger cannot consistently establish this claim, and that discourse can be thought of as being more basic than understanding. The proposed line of thinking has the advantage of shedding light on both the finitude and the normativity of our making sense of the world. Thus, by setting up an exchange with the (...)
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  49.  26
    Linguistic Recursion and Danish Discourse Particles: Language in Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder.Patrick Blackburn, Torben Braüner & Irina Polyanskaya - 2021 - In Maxime Amblard, Michel Musiol & Manuel Rebuschi (eds.), (In)Coherence of Discourse: Formal and Conceptual Issues of Language. Dordrecht: Springer Verlag. pp. 21-42.
    In a study involving 62 Danish children with autism spectrum disorder, we obtained results showing that the mastery of linguistic recursion is a significant predictor of success in second-order false belief tasks. The same study also showed that the mastery of linguistic recursion was not significantly correlated with success in a task involving three heavily used Danish discourse particles. This calls for further explanation, as the reasoning involved in both types of tasks seems similar. In this paper, we discuss (...)
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  50. Business Discourse.[author unknown] - 2013
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