Results for 'Travel in literature'

933 found
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  1.  31
    Gilles Deleuze: Travels in Literature. By Mary Bryden and Deleuze's Way: Essays in Transverse Ethics and Aesthetics. By Ronald Bogue.Vincent Lloyd - 2010 - Heythrop Journal 51 (1):166-167.
  2. Travels in four dimensions: the enigmas of space and time.Robin Le Poidevin - 2003 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    Space and time are the most fundamental features of our experience of the world, and yet they are also the most perplexing. Does time really flow, or is that simply an illusion? Did time have a beginning? What does it mean to say that time has a direction? Does space have boundaries, or is it infinite? Is change really possible? Could space and time exist in the absence of any objects or events? What, in the end, are space and time? (...)
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  3.  38
    Paralyses: Literature, Travel, and Ethnography in French Modernity.John Culbert - 2010 - University of Nebraska Press.
    Introduction -- The muse of paralysis -- Horizon of conquest: Eugene Fromentin's Algerian narratives -- Slow progress: Jean Paulhan and Madagascar -- Frustration: Michel Leiris -- Atopia: Roland Barthes -- The wake of Ulysses.
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  4. The Imagination in the Travel Literature of Xavier de Maistre and its Philosophical Significance.Guy Bennett-Hunter - 2014 - In Garth Lean, Russell Staiff & Emma Waterton (eds.), Travel and Imagination. Ashgate. pp. 75-88.
    In this chapter, I present some philosophical reflections on the theme of the imagination. The main inspiration for these reflections comes from two writers, both of whom are mentioned in Alain de Botton’s (2003) The Art of Travel: Joris-Karl Huysmans and Xavier de Maistre. De Botton uses both of these writers in his book as ‘guides’, people whose work prompts his own ruminations, Huysmans in the first chapter and de Maistre in the last. Speculatively, I infer from this structure (...)
     
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  5.  10
    Travels in the Americas: Notes and Impressions of a New World. [REVIEW]William M. Hawley - 2024 - The European Legacy 29 (5):579-581.
    Albert Camus’s journals of his travels to North America (1946) and South America (1949) offer his astute perspectives on literature, the arts, and Western politics in the aftermath of World War II....
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  6.  72
    Apocalypse Pretty Soon: Travels in End-Time America, by Alex Heard; and Apocalypses: Prophecies, Cults and Millennial Beliefs Throughout the Ages, by Eugen Weber.Philip Jenkins - 2000 - The Chesterton Review 26 (3):365-369.
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  7.  31
    Representations of China by Western Travellers in the Blogsphere.Stefano Calzati - 2016 - Cultura 13 (2):153-172.
    This article adopts a transmedial perspective in order to investigate narrative similarities and differences between print and online travel writing. Texts, which are contemporary and Western-authored, are written either in English, French and Italian and they all focus on China as the travel destination. Drawing upon Gérard Genette and Mieke Bal's studies on the narrative discourse, it is contended that travel books and travel blogs, despite sharing basic generic features, present substantial differences. In the former, readers (...)
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  8.  42
    The Sign of the Cross: Travels in Catholic Europe, by Golm Tóibín.Philip Jenkins - 1996 - The Chesterton Review 22 (3):359-362.
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  9.  14
    Travel Books In Turkish Literature.Baki ASİLTÜRK - 2009 - Journal of Turkish Studies 4:911-995.
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  10.  15
    Geography of Boredom. On Bogomil Raynov's Travelling in Everyday Life.Nadezhda Stoyanova - 2020 - Labyrinth: An International Journal for Philosophy, Value Theory and Sociocultural Hermeneutics 22 (2):177-195.
    Thе aim of the paper is to present the problem of boredom in Bogomil Raynov’s fourth book Travelling in Everyday Life. The interpretation of boredom in the novel is seen as based on the idea of a mismatch between expectation and experience. The expectation of the individual turns out to be modeled by the mass commercialization of the 20th century. The "cultural industry" replaces the sublime ideas of the romantic poetics with superfluous clichés, which deny the world its unpredictability, its (...)
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  11.  23
    Travel and “Homing In” in Contemporary Ethnic American Short Stories.Jadwiga Maszewska - 2012 - Text Matters - a Journal of Literature, Theory and Culture 2 (2):239-249.
    In American ethnic literature of the last three decades of the 20th century, recurrent themes of mobility, travel, and “homing in” are emblematic of the search for identity. In this essay, which discusses three short stories, Alice Walker’s “Everyday Use,” Louise Erdrich’s “The World’s Greatest Fishermen,” and Daniel Chacon’s “The Biggest City in the World,” I attempt to demonstrate that as a consequence of technological development, with travel becoming increasingly accessible to ethnic Americans, their search for identity (...)
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  12.  28
    Travel Literature, the New World, and Locke on Species.Patrick J. Connolly - 2013 - Society and Politics 7 (1):103-116.
    This paper examines the way in which Locke's deep and longstanding interest in the non-European world contributed to his views on species and their classification. The evidence for Locke's curiosity about the non-European world, especially his fascination with seventeenth-century travel literature, is presented and evaluated. I claim that this personal interest of Locke's almost certainly influenced the metaphysical and epistemological positions he develops in the Essay. I look to Locke's theory of species taxonomy for proof of this. I (...)
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  13.  29
    Polynesia and polygenism: the scientific use of travel literature in the early 19th century.Michael C. Carhart - 2009 - History of the Human Sciences 22 (2):58-86.
    Christoph Meiners (1747—1810) was one of 18th-century Europe's most important readers of global travel literature, and he has been credited as a founder of the disciplines of ethnology and anthropology. This article examines a part of his final work, Untersuchungen über die Verschiedenheiten der Menschennaturen [Inquiries on the differences of human natures], published posthumously in the 1810s. Here Meiners developed an elaborate argument, based on empirical evidence, that the different races of men emerged indigenously at different times and (...)
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  14. Curiosity and the Aesthetics of Travel Writing 1770-1840: From an Antique Land.Nigel Leask - 2002 - Oxford University Press.
    The first book of its kind to study the Romantic obsession with the 'antique lands' of Ethiopia, Egypt, India, and Mexico, Curiosity and the Aesthetics of Travel Writing is an important contribution to the recent wave of interest in exotic travel writing. Drawing generously on both original texts and modern scholarship in literature, history, geography, and anthropology, it focuses on the unstable discourse of 'curiosity' to offer an important reformulation of the relations between literature, aesthetics, and (...)
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  15.  10
    Travel and education - (c.) fron bildung und reisen in der römischen kaiserzeit. Pepaideumenoi und mobilität zwischen dem 1. und 4. jh. N. Chr. (Untersuchungen zur antiken literatur und geschichte 146.) Pp. X + 452, figs, colour maps. Cased, £100. Berlin and boston: De gruyter, 2021. Isbn: 978-3-11-069871-8. [REVIEW]Alexander Free - 2021 - The Classical Review 71 (2):507-509.
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  16.  15
    From Indifference to Obsession: Russian Claim to Kyiv History in Travel Literature of the 18th–early 19th Century.Kateryna Dysa - 2023 - Kyiv-Mohyla Humanities Journal 10:192-213.
    In this article, I discuss a relatively recent development of Russian interest in Kyiv as a place with symbolic and historical significance for Russian history, which makes it a desirable target in an ongoing war. I trace the changing attitude of Russian travelers towards Kyiv’s history from the mid-eighteenth to the early nineteenth century. Earlier generations of visitors came to Kyiv primarily to visit holy places, with no knowledge of the city’s historical significance, and because it was a more affordable (...)
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  17.  27
    America in an Arab Mirror: Images of America in Arab Travel Literature, 1668 to 9/11 and Beyond.Robert Bideleux - 2014 - The European Legacy 19 (5):642-643.
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  18. Time Travel.Nicholas J. J. Smith - 2012 - In Ed Zalta (ed.), Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Stanford, CA: Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
    There is an extensive literature on time travel in both philosophy and physics. Part of the great interest of the topic stems from the fact that reasons have been given both for thinking that time travel is physically possible—and for thinking that it is logically impossible! This entry deals primarily with philosophical issues; issues related to the physics of time travel are covered in the separate entries on time travel and modern physics and time machines. (...)
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  19.  25
    The Counterhuman Imaginary: Earthquakes, Lapdogs, and Traveling Coinage in Eighteenth-Century Literature.Laura Brown - 2023 - Cornell University Press.
    The Counterhuman Imaginary proposes that alongside the historical, social, and institutional structures of human reality that seem to be the sole subject of the literary text, an other-than-human world is everywhere in evidence. Laura Brown finds that within eighteenth-century British literature, the human cultural imaginary can be seen, equally, as a counterhuman imaginary—an alternative realm whose scope and terms exceed human understanding or order. Through close readings of works by Daniel Defoe, Jonathan Swift, and Alexander Pope, along with lapdog (...)
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  20.  28
    Writing Mexico: Travel and Intercultural Encounter in Contemporary American Literature.Elisabeth Mermann-Jozwiak - 2009 - Symploke 17 (1-2):95-114.
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  21.  15
    Mediterranean Travels: Writing Self and Other From the Ancient World to Contemporary Society.Patrick Crowley, Noreen Humble & Silvia M. Ross (eds.) - 2011 - Legenda/ Modern Humanities Research Association and Maney Publishing.
    Written by leading scholars in the field, this collection analyses the notion of travel writing as a genre, while tracing significant examples of Mediterranean travel writing that return us to Ancient Greece, to Medieval pilgrimages, to Venetians diplomatic missions, to an Egyptian's account of Paris in the nineteenth century, to French artistic journeys in North Africa and to contemporary narratives of privileged resettlement, death and dislocation.
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  22.  6
    Mediated education in early modern travel stories: How travel stories contribute to children’s empirical learning.Feike Dietz - 2019 - Science in Context 32 (2):193-212.
    ArgumentLinking up with recent studies on the experience of space and place in modern youth literature, this article analyzes how the “journey” as a narrative line and motif transformed Dutch early modern travel books for children from classical teaching instruments into explorative knowledge places. In the popular seventeenth-century Glorious and Fortunate Journey to the Holy Land, young readers were invited to travel within the book, which was presented as a place that covers material pages to observe as (...)
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  23. The persistent time traveller: contemporary issues in the metaphysics of time and persistence.Paul Richard Daniels - 2014 - Dissertation, Monash University
    The main theme of this thesis is time travel; time travel cases—both from relativistic physics and science fiction—provide or highlight deep problems for certain positions in contemporary debates about the metaphysical nature of time and of how material objects persist through time. This thesis explores the implications of these discussions; more specifically, I draw attention to some of the interesting things we can learn about presentism and endurantism from discussions of time travel cases that have been raised (...)
     
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  24.  17
    Symbolic interpretation of sea songs and shanties in sea travel writing.Pilar Garcés García - 2022 - Human Review. International Humanities Review / Revista Internacional de Humanidades 11 (1):1-8.
    Travel writing is characterized by a narrative discourse that describes landscapes, transforms adventure into a mythical journey and reveals the fears of humankind. The sea gathers momentum when the protagonists overcome the fear of death. However, the significance of the tune of sea songs has not been adequately highlighted, being relegated as side special effects that embellish the narration. The aim of this paper is to analyze the symbolical element of the songs to foreground its function in sea (...) writing in the English and American fiction from the 18th to the 21st century accounts, and their symbolic implication. (shrink)
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  25. Time Travel: The Popular Philosophy of Narrative.David Wittenberg - 2013 - Fordham University Press.
    Introduction: Time travel and the mechanics of narrative -- Macrological fictions: evolutionary utopia and time travel (1887-1905) -- Historical interval I: the first time travel story -- Relativity, psychology, paradox: Wertenbaker to Heinlein (1923-1941) -- Historical interval II: three phases of time travel--the time machine -- The big time: multiple worlds, narrative viewpoint, and superspace -- Paradox and paratext: picturing narrative theory -- Theoretical interval: the primacy of the visual in time travel narrative -- Viewpoint-over-histories: (...)
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  26. Tourists, Archaeologists, and Goddesses The Palace of Knossos in mid 20th century travel literature.Dale Whitmore - 2004 - Nexus 17 (1):1.
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  27. A narrative literature review of the effectiveness of interventions to reduce light vehicle travel.Edgar Pacheco & Vivienne Ivory - 2023 - Research Report 707 - Waka Kotahi Nz Transport Agency.
    The transport sector is one of the largest sources of greenhouse gas emissions in New Zealand. To address this issue, the government is planning a set of actions to be implemented in the next 15 years. One of these actions deals with transport emissions and targets for a reduction in light vehicle travel. However, to achieve this goal, there is a need for both an updated assessment of effective interventions and an analysis of their relevance and applicability to the (...)
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  28.  15
    The Slave Trade and Abolition in Travel Literature.William Heffernan - 1973 - Journal of the History of Ideas 34 (2):185.
  29. A travel guide to palestine. Walter Benjamin in Israel.Vivian Liska & Tamara Eisenberg - 2008 - Naharaim - Zeitschrift Für Deutsch-Jüdische Literatur Und Kulturgeschichte 2 (2).
  30.  30
    Mental Time Travel and Time Reference Difficulties in Alzheimer’s Disease: Are They Related? A Systematic Review.Evodie Schaffner, Mélanie Sandoz, Cristina Grisot, Noémie Auclair-Ouellet & Marion Fossard - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13:858001.
    Mental time travel and language enable us to go back and forth in time and to organize and express our personal experiences through time reference. People with Alzheimer’s disease have both mental time travel and time reference impairments, which can greatly impact their daily communication. Currently, little is known about the potential relationship between time conceptualization (i.e., mental time travel) and time reference difficulties in this disease. A systematic review of the literature was performed to determine (...)
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  31.  43
    Writing between the lines, reading between the lines: The transformation of the European tradition in Soviet literature of travel.Marina Balina - 1996 - The European Legacy 1 (4):1641-1646.
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  32.  35
    "The great ocean of knowledge": the influence of travel literature on the work of John Locke.Ann Talbot - 2010 - Boston: Brill.
    This book explores the way in which, working within the investigative tradition associated with the Royal Society, the philosopher John Locke (1632-1704) used ...
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  33.  34
    Locke, Pyrard, and Coconuts: Travel Literature, Evidence, and Natural History.Patrick Connolly - 2018 - In James A. T. Lancaster & Richard Raiswell (eds.), Evidence in the Age of the New Sciences. Cham: Springer. pp. 103-122.
    Locke had a lifelong love of travel literature. He was also a proponent of the construction of natural histories. Many commentators have noted that there is a close link between these two interests. They suggest that data gleaned from travel literature was used in the construction of natural histories. This paper uses Locke’s reading of François Pyrard’s Voyage to argue that the relationship between the two genres was closer than has been realized. Specifically, it is argued (...)
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  34.  17
    Eskişehir in the Last 30 Years of the Ottoman Empire with the Narration of the Travelers (1892-1922).Aysel Yılmaz & Duygu Yetgin - 2018 - Akademik İncelemeler Dergisi 13 (2):159-182.
    Many Turkish, German, Austrian, British, Swedish, French, Hungarian, and Australian travelers, military and political officers, spies, consuls, meerschaum merchants, naturalists, historians, geographers, geologists, archaeologists, and missionaries have stayed in and mentioned Eskişehir in their travelogues. Thus, it could be suggested that Eskişehir, which has recently been associated with tourism, had actually become acquainted with tourism with the arrival of BerlinBaghdad Railroad. The purpose of this study is to reveal the socio-cultural and socio-economic structure of the city through the analysis of (...)
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  35.  28
    Constructing Literature in the Roman Republic: Poetry and Its Reception (review).Joseph Farrell - 2007 - American Journal of Philology 128 (2):283-286.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:Constructing Literature in the Roman Republic: Poetry and Its ReceptionJoseph FarrellSander M. Goldberg. Constructing Literature in the Roman Republic: Poetry and Its Reception. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2005. xii + 249 pp. Cloth, $70.Just what forces in the earlier centuries of the Roman Republic gave shape to the literature of the late Republic and early Principate is an old question that has received new interest (...)
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  36.  14
    Discovering Travel Spatiotemporal Pattern Based on Sequential Events Similarity.Juanjuan Chen, Liying Huang, Chengliang Wang & Nijia Zheng - 2020 - Complexity 2020:1-10.
    Travel route preferences can strongly interact with the events that happened in networked traveling, and this coevolving phenomena are essential in providing theoretical foundations for travel route recommendation and predicting collective behaviour in social systems. While most literature puts the focus on route recommendation of individual scenic spots instead of city travel, we propose a novel approach named City Travel Route Recommendation based on Sequential Events Similarity by applying the coevolving spreading dynamics of the city (...)
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  37.  32
    The case as a travelling genre.Maria Böhmer - 2020 - History of the Human Sciences 33 (3-4):111-128.
    This contribution explores how Forrester’s work on cases has opened up an arena that might be called ‘the medical case as a travelling genre’. Although usually focused on the course of disease in an individual patient and authored mostly by one medical author, medical case histories have a social dimension: Once published, they often circulate in networks of scholars. Moreover, scholars of the history of literature have shown that numerous medical cases seem to travel easily beyond the context (...)
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  38. (1 other version)Time Travel and Modern Physics.Frank Arntzenius & Tim Maudlin - 2002 - Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 50:169-200.
    Time travel has been a staple of science fiction. With the advent of general relativity it has been entertained by serious physicists. But, especially in the philosophy literature, there have been arguments that time travel is inherently paradoxical. The most famous paradox is the grandfather paradox: you travel back in time and kill your grandfather, thereby preventing your own existence. To avoid inconsistency some circumstance will have to occur which makes you fail in this attempt to (...)
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  39. Time-Traveling Image: Gilles Deleuze on Science-Fiction Film.Joshua M. Hall - 2016 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 50 (4):31-44.
    The first section of this article focuses on the treatment of “time travel” in science-fiction literature and film as presented in the secondary literature in that field. The first anthology I will consider has a metaphysical focus, including (a) relating the time travel of science fiction to the banal time travel of all living beings, as we move inexorably toward the future; and (b) arguing for the filmstrip as the ultimate metaphor for time. The second (...)
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  40. Time travel and time machines.Chris Smeenk & Christian Wuthrich - 2011 - In Craig Callender (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy of Time. Oxford University Press. pp. 577-630.
    This paper is an enquiry into the logical, metaphysical, and physical possibility of time travel understood in the sense of the existence of closed worldlines that can be traced out by physical objects. We argue that none of the purported paradoxes rule out time travel either on grounds of logic or metaphysics. More relevantly, modern spacetime theories such as general relativity seem to permit models that feature closed worldlines. We discuss, in the context of Gödel's infamous argument for (...)
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  41.  6
    Ethics of description: the anthropological dispositif and French modern travel writing.Matt Reeck - 2024 - New York, NY: Routledge.
    Ethics of Description: The Anthropological Dispositif and French Modern Travel Writing follows the development of a minor tradition in French literature where metropolitan authors traveling abroad demonstrate their awareness of the ethical conundrums of representing world peoples. During the colonial-modern era, currents of anthropological thought and representational practice are identifiable throughout society, and across literature, the arts, and the sciences. Collectively, they can be theorized as belonging to a dispositif, the anthropological dispositif. The modernization of anthropology serves (...)
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  42.  23
    Joan‐Pau Rubiés. Travel and Ethnology in the Renaissance: South India through European Eyes, 1250–1625. xxii + 443 pp., illus., tables, bibl., index. Cambridge/New York: Cambridge University Press, 2001. $74.95. [REVIEW]William Burns - 2002 - Isis 93 (2):302-303.
    Travel and Ethnology in the Renaissance, based on a Cambridge dissertation, is a reaction to two related trends in recent writing about early modern European travel literature, both ultimately deriving from the “Orientalist” model presented in the work of Edward Said on the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. These are the trend that views travelers' accounts as more revelatory of European concerns than of the reality of the non‐European societies they wrote about and the trend that analyzes these (...)
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  43.  49
    Representations of Tropical Forests and Tropical Forest-Dwellers in Travel Accounts of National Geographic.Anja Nygren - 2006 - Environmental Values 15 (4):505-525.
    As one of the most widely read genres of literature, travel writing plays a crucial role in forming popular images and understandings of foreign places and foreign peoples. This essay examines the dominant images of rainforests and rainforest peoples portrayed in accounts of travels in tropical America published in National Geographic. Special attention is paid to the issues of how particular representations are privileged in this magazine's travel accounts and how these representations relate to questions of authority (...)
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  44.  32
    Traveller's Samples, The Fire in the Dust, At Swim Two Birds, & The Grand Wide Way. [REVIEW]Bryan M. O'Reilly - 1951 - Renascence 4 (1):115-121.
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  45. Review of 'The Great Ocean of Knowledge. The Influence of Travel Literature on the Work of John Locke' by Ann Talbot. [REVIEW]María G. Navarro - 2011 - Seventeenth-Century News 69 (3&4):162-164.
    The resercher Ann Talbot presents in this book one of the more complex and in-depth studies ever written about the influence of travel literature on the work of the British philospher John Locke (1632-1704). At the end of the 18th century the study of travel literature was an alternative to academic studies. The philosopher John Locke recommended with enthousiasm these books as a way to comprehend human understanding. Several members of the Royal Society like John Harris (...)
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  46.  8
    Solving the Traveling Salesman Problem: A Modified Metaheuristic Algorithm.Majid Yousefikhoshbakht - 2021 - Complexity 2021:1-13.
    The traveling salesman problem is one of the most important issues in combinatorial optimization problems that are used in many engineering sciences and has attracted the attention of many scientists and researchers. In this issue, a salesman starts to move from a desired node called warehouse and returns to the starting place after meeting n customers provided that each customer is only met once. The aim of this issue is to determine a cycle with a minimum cost for this salesman. (...)
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  47.  12
    The power of Lingua Franca: the presence of the “Other” in the travel writing genre.Maximiliano E. Korstanje - 2022 - Cultura 19 (2):73-85.
    Classic Edward Said´s term Orientalism was widely applied to those narratives and story-telling oriented to deride, subordinate and domesticate the “Non-Western Other”. Over centuries, Europe has developed an imperial matrix that is finely enrooted in an uncanny long-dormant paternalism where “the Other” was treated as a child to educate. The European expansion was ultimately feasible according to two combined factors. The knowledge productions by the hands of scientists occupied a great position in the entertainment of global readerships, and of course, (...)
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  48.  6
    Ethical Representation and Spiritual Reflections: The Portrayal of Poverty and China’s Image in Travel Writings Li Oder Im Neuen Osten.Qiao Chen & Yifan Hu - 2024 - European Journal for Philosophy of Religion 16 (1):428-440.
    This study examines the travel writings of the German author Alfons Paquet, specifically his book Li oder Im neuen Osten (1913), which documents his observations during three visits to East Asia in the late Qing Dynasty. The paper begins by contextualizing Paquet's journeys, considering personal, ideological, and social factors that influenced his perceptions and writings. The analysis then delves into Paquet’s portrayal of poverty, rural landscapes, warfare, and the cultural interactions between East and West as described in his (...) notes. Paquet’s reflections reveal a complex interplay of admiration and cultural superiority, where the depiction of an impoverished yet idyllic China serves both as a critique and an exoticization of the other. Despite occasionally succumbing to a sense of Western superiority, Paquet's writings also express a genuine desire for cultural exchange and mutual learning between the East and West. This suggests a pursuit not just of understanding ‘the other,’ but also of exploring potential spiritual and moral growth through cross-cultural engagement. The paper argues that Paquet’s travel writings offer a nuanced perspective on the ethical responsibilities of representing poverty and cultural difference. His work challenges readers to consider the spiritual implications of encountering and narrating the lives of the impoverished, urging a reflective engagement with the other that transcends mere cultural consumption. Ultimately, Paquet's travel notes prompt a reconsideration of how travel literature can influence and reflect our moral and spiritual landscapes, advocating for a more ethically engaged form of cultural interaction. (shrink)
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  49.  38
    Kantian Ethics in Gulliver’s Travels : Are the Houyhnhnms Role Models?Janelle Pötzsch - 2015 - Philosophy and Literature 39 (1):259-266.
    Are the houyhnhnms, the rational horses Gulliver meets in the fourth chapter of Jonathan Swift’s Gulliver’s Travels (1726), meant as role models for man? I think there are reasons to doubt this view. To illustrate this claim, I’ll compare Swift’s portrayal of the houyhnhnms with Immanuel Kant’s Groundwork to the Metaphysics of Morals (1785). There, Kant explicates that man is no ‘purely rational being’ but a ‘sensual rational being’. We’ll see that this characterization has tremendous consequences for the justification of (...)
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  50. Time travel without causal loops.Bradley Monton - 2009 - Philosophical Quarterly 59 (234):54-67.
    It has sometimes been suggested that backwards time travel always incurs causal loops. I show that this is mistaken, by describing worlds where backwards time travel occurs and yet no causal loops occur. Arguments that backwards time travel can occur without causal loops have been given before in the literature, but I show that those arguments are unconvincing.
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