Results for 'Experimental theater'

971 found
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  1.  8
    Theatre as a Transcultural Event: Notes on European Identity.Heinz-Uwe Haus - 2024 - The European Legacy 29 (5):524-532.
    The subject of intercultural exchange is complex and demands that we keep the basic issues that shape our views of the world in mind. And one of these basic issues is what we mean by “European identity.” The ideological concerns over the norms of identity became necessarily entangled in the post-1989 interests and agendas of Europe’s various nations. So the great challenge for us as academics as well as for the policymakers in Brussels and Strasburg is to focus on these (...)
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  2.  26
    Prague's experimental stage: Laboratory of theatre and semiotics.Veronika Ambros - 2008 - Semiotica 2008 (168):45-65.
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  3.  2
    The marionette theatre: Decentering the all too human architect.Jesse Rafeiro - forthcoming - Educational Philosophy and Theory.
    This paper presents a philosophical reflection on a first-year design studio, conducted as an experimental deviation from traditional ‘all too human’ models of architectural education. The pedagogical approach ventures into broader ethical concerns surrounding the nonhuman and the art of building. In the studio, familiar human standpoints were decentered through the art of storytelling, drawing insight from discourses in posthuman education and nonhuman narratology which were interweaved into the design and performance of a marionette theatre. Throughout the term, the (...)
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  4. “Black Box” Theatre: Second-Order Cybernetics and Naturalism in Rehearsal and Performance.T. Scholte - 2016 - Constructivist Foundations 11 (3):598-610.
    Context: The thoroughly second-order cybernetic underpinnings of naturalist theatre have gone almost entirely unremarked in the literature of both theatre studies and cybernetics itself. As a result, rich opportunities for the two fields to draw mutual benefit and break new ground through both theoretical and empirical investigations of these underpinnings have, thus far, gone untapped. Problem: The field of cybernetics continues to remain academically marginalized for, among other things, its alleged lack of experimental rigor. At the same time, the (...)
     
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  5.  12
    Theater Without a Script—Improvisation and the Experimental Stage of the Early Mid-Twentieth Century in the United States.Magdalena Szuster - 2019 - Text Matters - a Journal of Literature, Theory and Culture 9 (9):374-392.
    It was in the mid-twentieth century that the independent theatrical form based entirely on improvisation, known now as improvisational/improvised theatre, impro or improv, came into existence and took shape. Viola Spolin, the intellectual and the logician behind the improvisational movement, first used her improvised games as a WPA worker running theater classes for underprivileged youth in Chicago in 1939. But it was not until 1955 that her son, Paul Sills, together with a college theater group, the Compass Players, (...)
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  6. II. Fragile communities. Composing futures. Activism and ecology in contemporary music / Pia Palme ; On the fragilities of music theatre. A conversation / Elisabeth Schimana, Susanne Kogler, Pia Palme, Irene Lehmann ; How feminism matters. An exploration of listening / Christina Fischer-Lessiak ; Listening is a browser. On the fragility of listening online / Margarethe Maierhofer-Lischka ; Regarding listening. On the theatricality of experimental listening situations / Irene Lehmann ; Hannah Arendt and the 'fragility of sounds.' Aesthetics and politics in the 21st century / Susanne Kogler ; An infinite echo-system: Reflecting on the 'fragility of sounds'. [REVIEW]Suvani Suri - 2022 - In Irene Lehmann, Pia Palme, Elisabeth Schimana, Susanne Kogler, Christina Lessiak, Margarethe Maierhofer-Lischka, Suvani Suri, Flora Könemann, Veza Fernández, Paola Bianchi, Liza Lim, Electric Indigo, Germán Toro, Chikako Morishita, Juliet Fraser, Molly McDolan, Malik Sharif & Chaya Czernowin (eds.), Sounding fragilities: an anthology. Hofheim: Wolke.
     
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  7.  8
    Hopes for Great Happenings : Alternatives in Education and Theatre.Albert Hunt - 2013 - Routledge.
    When Albert Hunt joined the staff of the Regional College of Art, Bradford, in 1965, he found himself working mostly with ‘non-academic’ students on a fascinating range of games, projects and theatre events outside the main stream of exam-oriented education. In this title, first published in 1976, Albert Hunt describes this experience, and explains how he himself evolved from a conventional grammar school teacher to a radical and experimental educator. In particular, Hunt describes the evolution of new working relationships (...)
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  8. Opening the Black Box of Minds: Theatre as a Laboratory of System Unknowns.L. F. Christy Jr - 2016 - Constructivist Foundations 11 (3):616-618.
    Open peer commentary on the article ““Black Box” Theatre: Second-Order Cybernetics and Naturalism in Rehearsal and Performance” by Tom Scholte. Upshot: What von Foerster accomplished in raising the specter of second-order cybernetics now requires experimental design and the heavy lifting of theory to complete his quest for new ways of thinking. Scholte’s “black box theatre” points to research into non-trivial systems as a formal means of grasping living systems.
     
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  9. Consciousness, Dreams, and Inference: The Cartesian Theatre Revisited.J. Allan Hobson & Karl J. Friston - 2014 - Journal of Consciousness Studies 21 (1-2):6-32.
    This paper considers the Cartesian theatre as a metaphor for the virtual reality models that the brain uses to make inferences about the world. This treatment derives from our attempts to understand dreaming and waking consciousness in terms of free energy minimization. The idea here is that the Cartesian theatre is not observed by an internal audience but furnishes a theatre in which fictive narratives and fantasies can be rehearsed and tested against sensory evidence. We suppose the brain is driven (...)
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  10.  16
    Theater, Childhood, Education.Roberto Farnè - 2021 - ENCYCLOPAIDEIA 25 (61):67-79.
    Children love theater without knowing that they “do theater”, without someone teaching them to “play a part”: representing roles and situations is a spontaneous and natural playful dimension. We can call this “animation”, a characteristic feature of childhood: in the proper sense it means “giving life” by impersonating roles or creating scenarios with toys. Theater becomes a pedagogical device when it recognizes and enhances these assumptions by acting on two levels: on the one hand, making theater (...)
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  11.  23
    A Theater-Based Device for Training Teachers on the Nature of Science.Énery Melo & Manuel Bächtold - 2018 - Science & Education 27 (9-10):963-986.
    This article presents and discusses an innovative pedagogical device designed for training pre-service teachers on the nature of science. We endorse an approach according to which aspects of the nature of science should be explicitly discussed in order to be understood by learners. We identified quantum physics, and more precisely the principles of uncertainty and complementarity, as a rich topic suitable for such a discussion. Our training device consists in preparing and staging a new type of theater, the “scientific (...)
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  12.  1
    The Avant-Garde and Experimental Film in Socialist Romania.Andrei Rus - 2025 - History of Communism in Europe 15:111-139.
    Although socialist Romanian cinematography focused on commer­cial and artistic feature films, hundreds of short films were produced every year on the fringes of the industry, in specialised animation and documentary studios, in amateur cine-clubs, by students at the National Institute of Film and Theatre in Bucharest, and by other amateurs (some of them visual artists) who owned a personal camera. Starting from an analysis of the context that allowed for such practices to flourish in a state whose official policies did (...)
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  13. Author’s Response: “Playing With Dynamics”: Procedures and Possibilities for a Theatre of Cybernetics.T. Scholte - 2016 - Constructivist Foundations 11 (3):623-629.
    Upshot: Operational concepts underpinning a proposed cybersemiotic theatrical laboratory are further refined while questions regarding its experimental orientation remain.
     
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  14.  7
    Actors and Onlookers: Theater and Twentieth-century Scientific Views of Nature.Natalie Crohn Schmitt - 1990 - Northwestern University Press.
    Looks at the scientific basis for theories of drama, and explains how Cage's ideas have affected modern theater.
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  15. Scrutinizing the art of theater.Aaron Meskin - 2009 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 43 (3):pp. 51-66.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Scrutinizing the Art of TheaterAaron Meskin (bio)IntroductionIn his 1992 address to the American Society for Aesthetics, Peter Kivy suggested that philosophers of art might do best by giving up on “grand theorizing” (that is, pursuing the definition of art).1 In its place he proposed that they pursue the “careful and imaginative philosophical scrutiny of the individual arts and their individual problems.”2 Of course John Passmore and others had said (...)
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  16.  57
    Introduction: Symposium on James Hamilton’s The Art of Theater.Sherri Irvin - 2009 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 43 (3):1-3.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:IntroductionSherri Irvin, Guest Editor (bio)The idea for this special issue of the Journal of Aesthetic Education had its origins in the December 2007 event “The Art of Performance: Symposium in Honor of Jim Hamilton,” organized by Sandra Lapointe and Marcelo Sabatés and hosted by the Department of Philosophy at Kansas State University with the kind support of President Jon Wefald and the dean of the Faculty of Arts and (...)
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  17.  15
    Teenagers Tell Better Stories After Improvisational Theater Courses.Manon Blonde, Frédérique Mortelier, Béatrice Bourdin & Mathieu Hainselin - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    Improvisational theater is a booming theatrical practice, applying in many fields. Its effects on cognitive and behavioral processes are beginning to be demonstrated, despite scientific publications that are still rare, particularly about language. This study aimed to evaluate the effects of improv on adolescent narrative skills. Twenty-seven middle school students were recruited and divided into two groups: an IMPRO group, composed of novice and intermediate improvisers, and a CONTROL group, composed of middle school students doing theater. The evaluation (...)
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  18.  14
    A. N. Ostrovsky - the creator of the Russian National Theater. To the 200th anniversary of the artist. Part II: Stage experimentation. [REVIEW]V. V. Ilyin - 2023 - Liberal Arts in Russia 12 (3):133-150.
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  19.  13
    Portrait of Giacinta Pezzana, Actress of Emancipationism.Laura Mariani - 2004 - European Journal of Women's Studies 11 (3):365-379.
    This portrait proceeds from the hypothesis that an actress should be studied as a distinct subject and that, in this sense, Giacinta Pezzana is representative because of her artistic choices and feminism, resting on friendship among women. In this article the author proposes a theoretical biography in nuce, which identifies the contexts and the problematical issues of Pezzana’s history, in the interweaving of the public and personal spheres, favouring the use of epistolary sources. Her lifetime witnessed the coexistence of the (...)
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  20.  9
    The current stage of interaction between the theater schools of Russia and China in the context of the dialogue of cultures.Oleg Valerievich Veledinsky - 2022 - Философия И Культура 4:25-40.
    The article discusses the current topic of international interuniversity exchanges in the field of theater education. The subject of the study is the interaction of theater schools in Russia and China within the framework of the experimental Russian–Chinese theater and educational project of the Central Academy of Drama and the Russian State Institute of Performing Arts. The project has been implemented since 2015. According to the terms of the project, Russian and Chinese teachers of acting and (...)
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  21.  36
    The end of reading, the beginning of virtual fiction?Adrian Page - 2004 - Technoetic Arts 2 (1):33-43.
    Could it be that what we now call reading may eventually be superseded by virtual reality (VR)? This article asks whether the growing ability within new technologies to place the reader of literature in the position of the chief character in a literary narrative might give rise to an experience which is more rewarding and informative. Brechtian dramatic theory suggests that a form of engagement with narrative which presents dilemmas directly to the ‘reader’ can lead to deeper insights. The issue (...)
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  22.  19
    Ghost of Revolution.Nikita Lin - 2022 - NanoEthics 16 (3):323-330.
    A modest piece of experimental writing, Ghost of Revolution is intended as a methodological tool to question the form and function (tactics) of self-critique at the interface between art and science. Half fictional, half real, the “story” revolves around a speculative, biological connection between a mother and her son in an age of genetic manipulation. The speculation adopts a mode of writing that deviates from conventional story-telling in the sense that the characters are no longer leading roles in a (...)
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  23.  67
    Replies to criticisms.James R. Hamilton - 2009 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 43 (3):pp. 80-106.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Replies to CriticismsJames R. HamiltonI am grateful to Noël Carroll, David Davies, Sherri Irvin, Aaron Meskin, and Paul Thom for stimulating discussions of The Art of Theater over the past year, culminating in these carefully crafted critical comments on various aspects of the book.1 I especially appreciate the efforts of Sherri Irvin, who edited this special issue and without whose encouragement, enthusiasm, and careful editing this would not (...)
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  24.  10
    An Openness to Experiment: Ruy Duarte de Carvalho's Anthropological Field Photography in Rural Southern Angola and its Archival Reusages.Ines Ponte - 2020 - Kronos 46 (1):243-265.
    This article explores the afterlives of the photographic production by Ruy Duarte de Carvalho (1941-2010), a Portuguese-born Angolan anthropologist who amidst the country's long-lasting civil war (1975-2002) engaged with the Ovakuvale trans-humant shepherds dwelling in the semi-arid region of southern Angola. Through the 1990s, Carvalho used analogue photographic cameras to document his field-work among the Ovakuvale, and afterwards engaged in various experiments with the medium for ethnographic purposes. Departing from the current assemblage of Carvalho's personal archive that remains after he (...)
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  25.  16
    La fugace vita dei fotogrammi.Vittorio Fagone - 2015 - Rivista di Estetica:27-32.
    Game has a central role in Nespolo’s art. Irony and caricature are the main stylistic features decisive for his film. Nespolo’s experimental cinema absorbs the avant-gardist idea of film as a creative game stricty related with life, the analytical approach toward visual image typical of Bauhaus’ searches and the autonomy of “cinematographic eye” as a linguistic expression. Nespolo’s film produced between 1966 and 1977 can be grouped in four series: first, explorations and analysis of cinematographic image; second, surrealistic and (...)
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  26.  34
    The Anti-ŒDipus Papers.Felix Guattari - 2006 - Semiotext(E).
    Notes and journal entries document Guattari and Deleuze's collaboration on their 1972 book Anti-Oedipus. "The unconscious is not a theatre, but a factory," wrote Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari in Anti-Oedipus, instigating one of the most daring intellectual adventures of the last half-century. Together, the well-known philosopher and the activist-psychiatrist were updating both psychoanalysis and Marxism in light of a more radical and "constructivist" vision of capitalism: "Capitalism is the exterior limit of all societies because it has no exterior limit (...)
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  27.  35
    Medicine and Science in a New Medical-surgical Context: The Royal College of Surgery of Barcelona (1760–1843). [REVIEW]Núria Pérez-Pérez - 2010 - Medicine Studies 2 (1):37-48.
    Taking the Royal College of Barcelona (1760–1843) as a case study, this paper shows the development of modern surgery in Spain initiated by the Bourbon Monarchy when they founded new kinds of institutions as academic activities to spread scientific knowledge. Antoni Gimbernat was the most famous internationally recognised Spanish surgeon. He was trained as a surgeon at the Royal College of Surgery in Cadiz and was later appointed Professor of Anatomy at the College of Barcelona. He then became Royal Surgeon (...)
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  28.  28
    Extra Ear: Ear on the Arm Blender. Stelarc - 2006 - Diacritics 36 (2):117-119.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Extra Ear:Ear on the Arm BlenderStelarc Click for larger view View full resolutionFigure 1.Blender. Teknikunst—Meat Market, Melbourne 2005. Photograph: Stelarc. Collaborator Nina Sellars stands with the Blender during an installation photograph. Text credit: K. Conden and A. Douglas. Click for larger view View full resolutionFigure 2.Blender (3D Model). Teknikunst—Meat Market, Melbourne 2005. Image: Adam Fiannaca. The installation itself stands at just over 1.6 meters high and is anthropomorphic in (...)
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  29.  17
    Escenarios liminales fuera del aula.Josefa-María Zárraga Llorens - 2022 - Human Review. International Humanities Review / Revista Internacional de Humanidades 11 (5):1-11.
    Este trabajo describe la experiencia docente sobre el trabajo de campo experimental que se lleva a cabo desde la asignatura Nuevos Espacios Escenográficos del Máster de Producción Artística que se imparte en la Universitat Politècnica de València. La asignatura se fundamenta en las nuevas actitudes escénicas contemporáneas y el concepto de teatro expandido, siendo este el motivo de realizar la practica fuera del aula y colaborar entre instituciones para encontrar un espacio multidisciplinar donde desarrollar la propuesta que debe integrar (...)
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  30.  26
    Kaila and Reichenbach as Protagonists of ‘Naturphilosophie’.Arto Siitonen - 2010 - Vienna Circle Institute Yearbook 14:135-152.
    Eino Kaila brought new ideas to Finnish philosophy and psychology. He studied at the University of Helsinki in 1908–10 and made study visits, first to Paris in 1911, where he listened to Henri Bergson's lectures, and also to Berlin in 1914. Kaila's dissertation, Über die Motivation und Entscheidung, appeared in 1916. He worked as a critic of theatre and literature and as a dramatist in the Finnish National Theatre, before being nominated professor of philosophy in 1921 to the newly founded (...)
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  31.  14
    Cinematic vitalism: film theory and the question of life.Inga Pollmann - 2018 - Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press.
    This book draws new connections between twentieth-century German and French film theory and practice and vitalist conceptions of life from biology and philosophy. Inga Pollmann shows how the links between the two created a modernist, experimental, and cinematic strand of vitalism in and around the movie theatre. Articulated by film theorists, filmmakers, biologists and philosophers, this cinematic vitalism maps out connections among human beings, milieus, and technologies that continue to structure our understanding of film.
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  32.  63
    Integration research for shaping sustainable regional landscapes.David Brunckhorst - 2005 - Journal of Research Practice 1 (2):Article M7.
    Ecological and social systems are complex and entwined. Complex social-ecological systems interact in a multitude of ways at many spatial scales across time. Their interactions can contribute both positive and negative consequences in terms of sustainability and the context in which they exist affecting future landscape change. Non-metropolitan landscapes are the major theatre of interactions where large-scale alteration occurs precipitated by local to global forces of economic, social, and environmental change. Such regional landscape effects are critical also to local natural (...)
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  33.  32
    How to dance, robot?Eric Mullis - forthcoming - AI and Society:1-8.
    Informed by scholarship in dance studies, this essay examines the popular phenomenon of the dancing robot. It begins with an analysis of social robotics experiments that use techniques of contemporary experimental theater to frame human–robot interactions. With elements of theater history in mind, it becomes evident that such experimental designs fruitfully destabilize common understandings of social robots, theatrical performance, and dance movement. This sets up a discussion of a co-creative approach to developing robot choreography which utilizes (...)
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  34.  48
    The Anti-ŒDipus Papers.Stéphane Nadaud & Kélina Gotman (eds.) - 2006 - Semiotext(E).
    "The unconscious is not a theatre, but a factory," wrote Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari in Anti-Oedipus, instigating one of the most daring intellectual adventures of the last half-century. Together, the well-known philosopher and the activist-psychiatrist were updating both psychoanalysis and Marxism in light of a more radical and "constructivist" vision of capitalism: "Capitalism is the exterior limit of all societies because it has no exterior limit itself. It works well as long as it keeps breaking down."Few people at the (...)
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  35. The Cracked Share.Hangjun Lee & Chulki Hong - 2012 - Continent 2 (1):2-5.
    continent. 2.1 (2012): 2–5 To begin with, as we understand from a remote place like Seoul, there have been two different conceptions of materiality in the Western experimental ?lm history: materiality of cinema and of ?lm. The former has been represented by the practitioners of the so-called the “Expanded Cinema” and the latter by the tradition of the “Hand-made” ?lm. Whereas for the Expanded Cinema, the materiality or the “medium-speci?city” includes not only the ?lm material but also the entire (...)
     
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  36.  34
    Negotiating Reality: Sam Shepard’s States of Shock, or “A Vaudeville Nightmare”.Paulina Mirowska - 2017 - Text Matters - a Journal of Literature, Theory and Culture 7 (7):368-385.
    In the course of a career that spans half a century, from the Vietnam era to the America of Barack Obama, Sam Shepard has often been labelled as a “quintessentially American” playwright. According to Leslie Wade, “[d]rawing from the disparate image banks of rock and roll, detective fiction, B-movies, and Wild West adventure shows,” Shepard’s texts “function as a storehouse of images, icons, and idioms that denote American culture and an American sensibility”. The article addresses Shepard’s work in the 1990s, (...)
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  37.  17
    The Russian avant-garde and radical modernism: an introductory reader.Denis G. Ioffe & Frederick H. White (eds.) - 2012 - Brighton, MA: Academic Studies Press.
    A remarkable volume, the Russian avant-garde and radical modernism brings together the most significant movements and figures in Russian experimental art, cinema and literature of the early twentieth century (both pre-Soviet and Soviet) and presents them in commentary by leading scholars in the field" -- p. [4] of cover.
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  38.  23
    Social mobility and scientific change: Stephen Gray's contribution to electrical research.Michael Ben-Chaim - 1990 - British Journal for the History of Science 23 (1):3-24.
    The concept of electrical conductivity, or, as initially coined by Stephen Gray (1666–1736), ‘electrical communication’, has always been assigned an important role in the history of electrical research. Some thirty-five years after Gray's ‘electrical communication’ acquired wide attention, Priestley employed the concept of conductivity to define physical reality, thus giving a privileged position to the science he himself endeavoured to cultivate. As he argued in the introduction toThe History and Present State of Electricity(1767), ‘the electrical fluid is no local, or (...)
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  39.  16
    Individual Differences in Mental Accounting.Stephan Muehlbacher & Erich Kirchler - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10:492282.
    Individual differences in mental accounting have rarely been studied, and empirical evidence regarding the relation between mental accounting and personality characteristics is scarce. The present paper reports three studies applying a Likert-type scale to assess the extent individuals engage in mental accounting practices. In each study, the five items of the measure loaded on a single dimension and had acceptable reliability, with a Cronbach’s α between.72 and.77. Study 1 (N = 165) regards the mental processing of prior losses in the (...)
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  40.  52
    Movements of discovery: the pragmatics of practice-based research. [REVIEW]Tom Paulus - 2013 - Foundations of Science 18 (1):179-183.
    This commentary to Vanhoutte and Wynants’s paper “Performing phenomenology: negotiating presence in intermedial theatre” tries to ascertain whether the dialectics between the real and the virtual in CREW’s artistic and technological experiments, which the authors call a ‘strategy,’ implies an a-priori relation that is hard to reconcile to the ethos of discovering through doing proposed by postphenomenological research, and to an ‘empirical turn’ based in case studies and descriptive concreteness suggested by a ‘pragmatic phenomenology.’ I propose that the shift from (...)
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  41.  9
    Awangarda i krytyka: kraje Europy Środkowej i Wschodniej.Jakub Kornhauser, Małgorzata Szumna & Michalina Kmiecik (eds.) - 2015 - Kraków: Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Jagiellońskiego.
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  42.  13
    The avant-garde: race, religion, war.Mike Sell - 2011 - New York: Seagull Books.
    The Avant-Garde: Race Religion War tells an unprecedented story of radical cultural production in the modern era. Rejecting the idea that the avant-garde is only about art and insisting that it is much more than a European phenomenon, Mike Sell redefines the historical, geographical, ideological, disciplinary and theoretical boundaries of avant-garde studies.
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  43.  52
    The reception of Hayden white.Richard T. Vann - 1998 - History and Theory 37 (2):143–161.
    Evaluation of the influence of Hayden White on the theory of history is made difficult by his preference for the essay form, valued for its experimental character, and by the need to find comparable data. A quantitative study of citations of his work in English and foreign-language journals, 1973–1993, reveals that although historians were prominent among early readers of Metahistory, few historical journals reviewed White's two subsequent collections of essays and few historians-except in Germany-cited them. Those historians who did (...)
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  44. Audience and Autopoiesis.B. Clarke & D. Chansky - 2016 - Constructivist Foundations 11 (3):610-612.
    Open peer commentary on the article ““Black Box” Theatre: Second-Order Cybernetics and Naturalism in Rehearsal and Performance” by Tom Scholte. Upshot: Scholte’s approach to theater as a black box to be probed indicates that the vocabulary of second-order cybernetics provides an analytical repertoire adequate to the complexity of theatrical phenomena, from the construction of the play in rehearsal to the delivery of the play in performance. While it was hard to discern the precise details in some of Scholte’s (...) protocols, we found his larger discussion to be provocative and effective in mapping the recursivities of theatrical processes. (shrink)
     
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  45.  55
    Contemporary Poetry, Alternate Routes.Jerome J. McGann - 1987 - Critical Inquiry 13 (3):624-647.
    What is the significance of that loose collective enterprise, sprung up in the aftermath of the sixties, known as L=A=N=G=U=A=G=E Writing? To answer this question I will be taking, initially, a somewhat oblique route. And I shall assume an agreement on several important social and political matters: first, that the United States, following the Second World War, assumed definitive leadership of a capitalist empire; second, that its position of leadership generated a network of internal social contradictions which persist to this (...)
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  46.  38
    Makrolab.Brian Holmes & Marko Peljhan - 2004 - Multitudes 1 (1):113-122.
    Two short articles recount the concept and program of Makrolab. The idea of a mobile stage that could be used not only for representation but for work with reality came in a flash to the Slovene artist Marko Peljhan one sunny day in 1994 on the island of « Krk, » off the coast of Croatia which was then embroiled in war. The goal was to pursue an artistic experimentation in direct contact with the latest technical developments, beyond the failing (...)
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  47.  14
    Speculating Daguerre: Art and Enterprise in the Work of L. J. M. Daguerre.Stephen C. Pinson - 2012 - University of Chicago Press.
    Louis Jacques Mandé Daguerre was a true nineteenth-century visionary—a painter, printmaker, set designer, entrepreneur, inventor, and pioneer of photography. Though he was widely celebrated beyond his own lifetime for his invention of the daguerreotype, it was his origins as a theatrical designer and purveyor of visual entertainment that paved the way for Daguerre's emergence as one of the world's most iconic imagemakers. In Speculating Daguerre, Stephen C. Pinson reinterprets the story of the man and his time, painting a vivid picture (...)
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  48. Kierkegaard's Concepts: Psychological Experiment.Martijn Boven - 2015 - In Steven M. Emmanuel, William McDonal & Jon Stewart (eds.), Kierkegaard's Concepts. Tome V: Objectivity to Sacrifice. Ashgate. pp. 159-165.
    For Kierkegaard the ‘psychological experiment’ is a literary strategy. It enables him to dramatize an existential conflict in an experimental mode. Kierkegaard’s aim is to study the source of movement that animates the existing individual (this is the psychological part). However, he is not interested in the representation of historical individuals in actual situations, but in the construction of fictional characters that are placed in hypothetical situations; this allows him to set the categories in motion “in order to observe (...)
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  49. Platonos Kai Xenophontos Symposia. Ploutarchou Symposion Hepta Sophon. Loukianou Symposion E Lapithai. Plato, Xenophon, Plutarch, Lucian & Sheldonian Theatre - 1711 - Ek Theatrou En Oxonia, Etei.
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    M. Tullii Ciceronis de officiis libri tres: Cato major ; Laelius ; Paradoxa ; Somnium Scipionis.Marcus Tullius Cicero, Thomas Tooly, Sheldonian Theatre & Wilmot - 1710 - E Theatro Sheldoniano. Prostant Venales Apud Sam. Wilmot ....
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