722 results on 'passageway'
Search Results
2. Creating a movement space: the passageway in Noh and Greek theatres
- Author
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Noy, Kinneret
- Subjects
Greece -- Social aspects ,No -- Social aspects ,Theater -- Greece ,Public spaces -- Social aspects ,Arts, visual and performing - Abstract
Keir Elam's observation in 1980 that `the theatrical text is defined and perceived above all in spatial terms' reflected a growing attention to the significance of spatial organization and utilization in creative and perceptive processes in the theatre. In the last twenty years space has found its long-deserved status as a prominent feature of the theatrical experience and a key element in theatre studies. In this article Kinneret Noy focuses on a unique spatial component shared by two theatrical traditions--the Greek and the Japanese. By comparing and contrasting the function of the eisodos in the Greek theatre with that of the hashigakari in the Japanese Noh, she offers a fresh look at both forms. The spatial relation between the passageway and the main `stage' create what Mitsuo Inoue terms a `movement space'. Noy borrows this term from Japanese architecture to point the connection between theatrical space and dramatic techniques. After discussing the main characteristics of a `movement space' in the theatre she deals with the differences that exist between Noh and Greek theatres' spatial qualities, suggesting some connections between developments in the theatres and social and political changes. A graduate from the University of Pittsburgh (1997), Kinneret Noy studied with the Noh master Takabayshi Shinji in Kyoto, and currently teaches in the Theatre Department and East Asian Department of Haifa University and the Hebrew University in Jerusalem.
- Published
- 2002
3. Airborne infection in a fully air-conditioned hospital. II. Transport of gaseous and airborne particulate material along ventilated passageways.
- Author
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Lidwell OM
- Subjects
- Cross Infection prevention & control, Gases, Humans, Mathematics, Particle Size, Ventilation, Air Conditioning, Air Movements, Hospital Units, Models, Theoretical
- Abstract
A mathematical model is described for the transport of gaseous or airborne particulate material between rooms along ventilated passageways. Experimental observations in three hospitals lead to a value of about 0.06 m.2/sec. for the effective diffusion constant in air without any systematic directional flow. The 'constant' appears to increase if there is any directional flow along the passage, reaching about 0.12 m. 2/sec. at a flow velocity of 0.04 m./sec. Together with previously published methods the present formulae make it possible to calculate the expected average amounts of gaseous or particulate material that will be transported from room to room in ventilated buildings in which the ventilation and exchange airflows can be calculated. The actual amounts transported in occupied buildings, however, vary greatly from time to time.
- Published
- 1975
- Full Text
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4. The Many Lives of the First Emperor of China.
- Author
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Lewis, Mark Edward
- Subjects
EMPERORS ,STATE power ,ROMAN emperors ,ASSASSINATION attempts ,ROMAN law - Abstract
Like the First Emperor, Augustus created both the title and form of the emperor, and like the former he was both celebrated for his achievements and condemned for his cruelty and deceitfulness in climbing to power. Accounts mock the First Emperor's paranoia in hiding away behind covered passageways, but the emperor's invisibility was an ideal from the early Han. These additional approaches to examining Qin and the First Emperor are not offered as criticisms of Barbieri-Low, who has provided more than anyone could demand, but instead as further demonstrations of the validity of his argument that the First Emperor is indeed "good to think.". [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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5. An insect-proof doorway.
- Author
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Hocking, B.
- Published
- 1960
- Full Text
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6. AN ARCHITECTURAL ANALYSIS OF THE SEALAND BUILDING AT TELL KHAIBER, SOUTHERN IRAQ.
- Author
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Shepperson, Mary
- Subjects
EXECUTIVE function ,BOUNDARY disputes - Abstract
This paper analyses the architecture of the large fortified building excavated at Tell Khaiber in southern Iraq, the first known example of monumental architecture from the Sealand Kingdom. It examines the development of this highly unusual building, analyses the spatial properties and apparent functions of the structure, reviews possible architectural parallels, and considers what the architecture might reveal about Tell Khaiber's role in the context of the Sealand state. The outer form and organisation of the building indicate a fortified structure with a high priority afforded to defence. The interior of the Tell Khaiber building is divided between a smaller, earlier structure, enclosing conventionally arranged architecture with apparently executive and administrative functions, and a larger extension, densely packed with accommodation for a large number of personnel. When considered alongside textual sources on the Sealand state, which provide evidence about the geo-political context in which the Tell Khaiber building was constructed, it is possible to suggest the role such a building may have had in the development of the Sealand Kingdom. The form of the Tell Khaiber building may also be important in understanding the nature of the contested border between the Sealand Kingdom and its Babylonian neighbours. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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7. WESTMINSTER HALL'S LOST STUART DOOR PASSAGE REDISCOVERED.
- Author
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Hallam Smith, Elizabeth and Crook, John
- Abstract
In 2018 unpublished archaeological evidence was discovered recording a doorway and passageway concealed inside the Romanesque wall of Westminster Hall, near the south-east corner. Although commemorated by a bronze plaque in situ , their existence had largely been forgotten. Further investigations revealed an access panel in the 1951 cloakroom fittings in adjoining St Stephen's cloister: this was located, and the space accessed, seemingly for the first time since c 1952. The many features of interest found within included the doorcase and soffits of a great doorway and iron pintles for the doors; Purbeck flagstones on the floor; complex masonry and plaster from several different eras; graffiti by masons from the nineteenth and twentieth centuries; a still-functional Osram lightbulb dating from the early 1950s; and wooden joists supporting the masonry of the ceiling. Isotope dating of the timbers produced a date of 1659, and works accounts showed that the doorway and passageway were created in 1660–1, to form a ceremonial route for the coronation of Charles ii. Further archaeological and historical investigations have enabled the authors to establish a full chronology for the changing fabric and uses of the doorway and passageway from the seventeenth to the twenty-first century, and to trace the masons who walled in the space in 1851. They have also established why the brass plaque in Westminster Hall marking the space erroneously ascribes it with Tudor origins: that 'fake history' was created by an over-enthusiastic late-nineteenth century Clerk of the House of Commons. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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8. Welcome back to Junkspace! Performing infinity while confined in lockdown.
- Author
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Rodger, Johnny
- Subjects
STAY-at-home orders ,SUBWAY stations ,DOMESTIC space ,HOUSE brands ,INFINITY (Mathematics) ,RAILROAD terminals ,SUBWAY design & construction ,AIRPORT terminals - Abstract
For months we have been locked out of Junkspace. So, who's complaining? Confined to domestic spaces, #stayhome has given many of us a forced opportunity to rethink the type of spaces that are not only functional and useful, but that make us feel comfortable. Our own residential arena may have felt restrictive and even – for some – oppressive at times, but who would say that they truly missed their daily passage through the endlessly stale air of check-in desks, departure gates, and duty frees at the airport; the epic journeys through low ceiling corridors and passageways of railway terminals and subway stations; and the blinding hallucinatory proliferation of brands and franchises in malls...? [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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9. Artifices and Bodies in the Artworks of Tony Heaton.
- Author
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Zundel, Mike
- Subjects
MARBLE sculpture ,PEOPLE with disabilities ,BUSINESS ethics ,ART ,ARTIFICIAL legs ,STUDENT suspension ,SCULPTORS - Abstract
i points beyond itself as it stylizes the ambiguity inherent in all things that are made: their capacity to include I and i exclude, protect I and i harm, create I and i destroy. Heaton's I Zen Men i are lumped together; in one we can just about make out a thinker's pose, while the other merely slouches. i (2007, see Figure 1) by Southport- and London-based sculptor and performance artist Tony Heaton, we first encounter an uninviting fortress made from the same stone as St Paul's Cathedral, Buckingham Palace, and the Bank of England. The original blue (which, Heaton notes, became derogatively known as spaz blue) turns into lamé, a shimmering fabric, which is a play on the word I lame i , indicating the fickle balance between ability and disability. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2023
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10. Technology, Maturity, and Craft: Making Vinyl Records in the Digital Age.
- Author
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Holt, Robin and Wiedner, Rene
- Subjects
PHONOGRAPH records ,DIGITAL technology ,DIGITAL audio ,ELECTRONIC records ,DIGITAL media - Abstract
Drawing from Michel Foucault's reading of Immanuel Kant's essay "What is Enlightenment?," and specifically his definition of ascesis , we associate maturity with a capacity for, and interest in, forming the self. On the basis of an empirical study of making vinyl records following the successful commercialization of digital media, we identify micro-disciplinary techniques of self-forming that emerge as enthusiasts steadily learn the craft of vinyl record manufacturing. It is, we argue, through technology, rather than against it, that organizational immaturity can be resisted. Craftwork involves testing and transforming, rather than just acquiring, traditional skills. Maturity involves an ongoing struggle of selectively and reflectively engaging with technologies via attempts to be the subject of one's own subjection. The former contributes to the latter. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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11. Briefly.
- Subjects
BOTTLENOSE dolphin ,WILDLIFE conservation ,WILDLIFE reintroduction ,OCEAN mining ,MARINE biology ,WILD horses ,RAIN forests ,BEACHES - Abstract
The text provides a comprehensive overview of various topics related to primate conservation and the impact of climate change on different species. It covers the decline of endangered primate populations, efforts to protect and restore habitats, and the issue of illegal wildlife trafficking. The text also discusses the conservation efforts for other endangered species such as freshwater fish, migratory birds, vultures, and polar bears. Additionally, it highlights the discovery of new species and the need for conservation efforts to protect biodiversity. The text concludes with positive developments, including the recovery of the saiga antelope population and the discovery of green turtle nests in Cambodia. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2024
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12. ON THE TRAIL OF QUETZALCOATL/KUKULCAN: TRACING MYTHIC INTERACTION ROUTES AND NETWORKS IN THE MAYA LOWLANDS.
- Author
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Folan, William J., Bolles, David D., and Ek, Jerald D.
- Subjects
QUETZALCOATL (Aztec deity) ,ETHNOHISTORY ,UNDERGROUND areas ,SOCIAL dynamics - Abstract
This paper examines ethnohistoric accounts and oral histories accumulated during the last 50 years concerning the movements of the mythical personage of Quetzalcoatl/Kukulcan (Kukul Can) and the role of these narratives in political ideologies between the Epiclassic and Postclassic periods. These narratives outline the movements of Quetzalcoatl/Kukulcan by way of terrestrial, celestial, and subterranean routes that connected pilgrimage centers across the Maya lowlands in the peninsula of Yucatan. Ethnographic and ethnohistoric data presented in this paper describe linkages between important political, economic, and ritual centers that had roots in pan-Mesoamerican social dynamics originating as early as the Terminal Classic or Epiclassic period. Links between cities included not just the physical intersite connections evidenced by causeways that are so prominent in the archaeological record but also intangible, mythical, and symbolic connections embodied in mythical histories of subterranean passageways and celestial umbilical cords. These accounts and oral histories highlight the importance of migration and founding events in the establishment of new cities during the major political, economic, and social reorganizations that took place after the end of the Late Classic period. As a whole, these linkages comprised a political infrastructure connecting a network of cities within the highly integrated and international Postclassic Mesoamerican world. The indigenous histories outlined in this paper complement archaeological data, reflecting an increase in internationalism, economic integration, and the spread of new religious movements beginning in the Terminal or Epiclassic periods across Mesoamerica. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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13. Retrofitting the Mekong: Community-based environmental responses to Chinese transnational infrastructure in a Thai border town.
- Author
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Saiyarod, Panitda
- Subjects
ACTIVISM ,RAPIDS ,GREEN infrastructure ,RETROFITTING ,BELT & Road Initiative ,GREEN movement ,POWER (Social sciences) - Abstract
For decades, the Mekong River has been a site of ongoing tensions between China-backed infrastructure and communities relying on the mighty Mekong for their lives and livelihoods. In Thailand, tensions have escalated into actions against ecologically damaging hydropower dam development and the blasting of river rapids for Chinese navigation in a Thai border town. This article examines how Chinese transnational infrastructure has been reconfiguring power relationships among actors at multiple scales. Based on my fieldwork, I offer a narrative of the concerted efforts by one small community-based environmental group in northern Thailand, some of whose activism has prodded Chinese planners and project managers into responding to widespread criticism of ecological damage caused by its hydropower and riparian infrastructure and ignoring the needs of downstream local communities. The interactions between Chinese agencies and local NGOs will be discussed through the concept of a moral ecology of infrastructure, which contributes to transcending infrastructure and the environment, enabling a broadened understanding of human and nonhuman relations in more recent retrofitting of the dams and waterway projects. I argue that the reconfigured 'Green' Belt and Road Initiative is a contingent process in which multiple transnational actors claim decision-making power over the retrofitting and redevelopment of the Mekong's ecological infrastructure. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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14. When Is It Modernism? A Lesson from Indonesian Musik Kontemporer.
- Author
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MILLER, CHRISTOPHER J.
- Subjects
PERFORMING arts ,MODERNISM (Art) - Abstract
When is it modernism? This article poses this question to traditionally based Indonesian musik kontemporer , as an occasion to examine a distinctive instance of musical modernism, but most importantly to illuminate issues with the question itself. Taking it literally, I identify when musik kontemporer was most clearly modernist, recognizing that modernism, and its conception of history, itself has a history. Scrutinizing the question's more usual goal of drawing a distinction between that which is and is not modernist, I show how the case of Rahayu Supanggah – a musician with a deep and primary commitment to the traditional performing arts, whose work has been shaped by his adoption of modernist ways of thinking without being fully defined by them – defies a simple answer. Ultimately, the article is concerned with what is at stake when invoking modernism, and what this means for the larger project of understanding musical modernism as a global phenomenon. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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15. Performing Celebrity and Anna Renzi's Cross-Dressed Performance as Ergindo.
- Author
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Wier, Claudia Rene
- Subjects
FAME ,INTERSEX people ,HEAVEN ,CELEBRITIES ,HARMONY in music - Abstract
Quickly Ascending to Heaven, Hermaphrodite Beauty of the celestial magic, You descend to animate Angelic aura, alone in your clear, eternal beauty all other beauties stand before you. While ANNA's voice, In Deidamia converses, a musical passage dissolves in the aura, a most divine ray although enclosed within an earthly veil, it knows the harmony of heaven on earth. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Exploring the contribution of housing adaptations in supporting everyday life for people with dementia: a scoping review.
- Author
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Newton, Rita, Adams, Sue, Keady, John, and Tsekleves, Emmanuel
- Subjects
CINAHL database ,SOCIAL support ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,ACTIVITIES of daily living ,DEMENTIA patients ,ACCESS to information ,QUALITY assurance ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,RESEARCH funding ,PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation ,HOUSING ,LITERATURE reviews ,MEDLINE ,AMED (Information retrieval system) - Abstract
The primary aim of this scoping review was to explore the contribution of housing adaptations to supporting everyday life for people with dementia living at home in the community. The study adopted a scoping review methodology which was guided by the Joanna Briggs Institute Reviewers Manual. Four review questions were developed which subsequently informed the inclusion criteria and search terms. Eight databases were searched resulting in 2,339 records, with 13 papers being included in the review. Evidence from the review found that the most common adaptations were recommended and/or implemented to compensate for a person's physical limitations and for safety reasons, rather than adaptations to support activities of daily living for a person with dementia. Support to implement adaptations was provided by a range of professionals coupled with 'trial and error' approaches adopted by the person themselves, and these were seen as key enablers. Barriers to implementing and using adaptations were fourfold: (a) access to information, (b) knowing when to make changes, (c) carer resistance, and (d) the unsuitability of the home. It would appear that housing adaptations have a positive impact on both the person with dementia and the carer (where one is present), with some adaptations having a relatively sustained impact and being particularly effective if implemented early in the lived trajectory of dementia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Variations in hydraulic efficiency of the subglacial drainage landsystem control surging and streaming regimes of outlet glaciers.
- Author
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Ravier, Édouard, Lelandais, Thomas, Vérité, Jean, and Bourgeois, Olivier
- Subjects
SUBGLACIAL lakes ,GLACIERS ,DRAINAGE ,FLOW velocity ,WATER pressure ,MELTWATER - Abstract
Surging and streaming of glaciers are modulated by meltwater availability and pressure which controls mechanical coupling at their beds. Using laboratory-scale experimental modelling and palaeoglaciological mapping, we explore how subglacial drainage landsystems control meltwater drainage efficiency and ice flow velocities for terrestrial-based ice lobes resting on flat horizontal and permeable beds. Two end-members regimes, surging and streaming, appear in our experiments. The surge regime is characterised by a rapid increase of drainage efficiency through development of tunnel valleys and their tributaries, thus reducing the duration of ice flow speed-up events by lowering water pressures and increasing ice-bed coupling. Tunnel valleys connected to ice lobe margins, submarginal thrust moraines, reduced ice lobe extensions and ephemeral shear margins are the most distinctive characteristics of this regime. The stream regime is characterised by disconnected channels of smaller dimensions unable to evacuate all the meltwater: this prolonged drainage inefficiency leads to sustained high ice flow velocity and steady shear margins. Small and rectilinear meltwater channels devoid of tributaries, often disconnected from ice lobe margins, and lineation swarms are diagnostic of this regime. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Tributes, Tariffs, Taxes and Trade: The Changing Sources of Government Revenue.
- Author
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Tarschys, Daniel
- Subjects
REVENUE ,PUBLIC finance ,TARIFF ,INCOME ,MERCANTILE system ,ECONOMIC policy ,TAXATION ,ECONOMIC indicators ,PROFIT - Abstract
Government action presupposes extraction. Historically, four different sources of public revenue may be distinguished. Tributes, which are common in primitive and belligerent states, are van- able levies exacted at irregular intervals. Tariffs raised on the basis of the physical control of strategic passageways are important sources of income for mercantile states in the early stage of their development. Taxes play some role in semi-modern economies but evolve more fully as the financial mainstay of government in advanced industrial societies. In addition, many states draw large receipts from the profits of trade. The planned economies in the socialist bloc are trading states rather than tax states. The different logistic properties of these revenue sources affect the prospects for government growth at various stages of economic development. The expansion of the tax state is strongly linked to the proliferation of monetary flows in modern society. At the same time, some non-tax receipts such as user charges and other incomes from trade retain their importance, and the present 'crisis of the tax state' might possibly lead to a more composite structure of government revenue. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1988
- Full Text
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19. The Kök-Tash underground mausoleum in north-eastern Kyrgyzstan: the first-ever identified Qara Khitai elite tomb?
- Author
-
Biran, Michal, Shenkar, Michael, Tabaldiev, Kubatbek, Akmatov, Kunbolot, and Kolchenko, Valery
- Subjects
MAUSOLEUM (Halicarnassus) ,TOMBS ,MUSLIMS - Abstract
The Qara Khitai or Western Liao dynasty (1124–1218) is one of the most fascinating polities in medieval Eurasia, but also one of the least documented in terms of both literary sources and material culture. Founded by Khitan refugees who escaped from North China when the Jurchen Jin dynasty (1115–1234) vanquished the Khitan Liao dynasty (907–1125), the Qara Khitai soon established a multicultural empire in Central Asia, combining Khitan, Chinese, and Muslim elements. The Buddhist Qara Khitai ruled over their mostly Muslim population in rare harmony until the rise of Chinggis Khan (r. 1206–1227). Hitherto only a few objects—and not a single structure—have been associated with this powerful empire. We argue that the Kök-Tash mausoleum, excavated in 2017–2018 and originally interpreted as a unique subterranean Muslim mausoleum, is actually the first-ever identified Qara Khitai elite tomb. This unique tomb, located in the Kochkor valley of north-eastern Kyrgyzstan, about a day's ride from the Qara Khitai capital of Balāsāghūn, shares many similarities with the Liao tombs in North China, notably the typical Khitan mesh-wire burial suit. Yet it also uses local Central Asian materials and techniques, thereby manifesting how the Qara Khitai managed to retain their cultural identity in their new Central Asian and mostly Muslim environment. Moreover, identifying the Kök Tash mausoleum as a Qara Khitai tomb allows us to reassess several other unusual tombs excavated in the region in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries and to suggest attributing them, too, to the Qara Khitai. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Monumentality as traditional ecological knowledge in the northern Maya lowlands.
- Author
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Fisher, Chelsea
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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21. Interior Design: The Doll's House and the Working-Class Child.
- Author
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Flower, Chloe
- Abstract
This article explores the unexpected relationship that working-class children had with doll's houses in the late nineteenth century. Placing texts by children's author Frances Hodgson Burnett alongside historical material concerning the manufacture of doll's house furniture by students in London's Ragged Schools under the supervision of housing reformer Octavia Hill, I argue that both women understood the educational or formative value of the doll's house as deriving from the object's ability to teach lessons in temporality. I examine this object and its deployment in contemporary object lessons to show that the spatial divisions of these miniature homes operate in relation to both short- and long-term cycles of time. This article also demonstrates that apparently universal models of selfhood and development were in fact contingent on class structures (both authors, for instance, connect developmental abnormalities in poor children to the fact that they grow up in one-room homes). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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22. Grechaninov's Sister Beatrice and the Consecration of the Stage in Orthodox Russia.
- Author
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Salkowski, David
- Subjects
PHILOSOPHY of religion ,SISTERS ,CHURCH & state ,SACRED music ,BLASPHEMY ,CONTEMPT (Attitude) ,AESTHETICS - Abstract
When Alexander Grechaninov's opera Sister Beatrice on a text by Maurice Maeterlinck premiered in Moscow in 1912, it promised to bring together two conceptual worlds, those of symbolist aesthetics and the Russian Orthodox liturgy. Critics who hoped that Grechaninov's experience as a composer of sacred music would help bring alive the 'unheard music' of Maeterlinck's symbolist 'Miracle Play', however, were sorely disappointed. The opera drew scorn from critics for its overly concrete musical rhetoric, while conservative commentators levelled claims of blasphemy. In this article, I consider the two scenes depicting miracles in Sister Beatrice to demonstrate how it negotiated these competing perspectives, employing insights from religious philosophy as well as symbolist aesthetics. Drawing on new archival evidence, I also demonstrate how church and state censors co-participated with composers and critics debating whether and how the sacred might be displayed on stage and in sound. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. THE PETATE AND THE COSMIC ORDER: DISCOVERIES FROM A CLASSIC PERIOD RESIDENTIAL GRAVE IN MICHOACÁN, MEXICO.
- Author
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Darras, Véronique
- Subjects
ARCHAEOLOGICAL discoveries ,ARCHAEOLOGICAL excavations ,CONTEXTUAL analysis ,TOMBS ,ANDESITE ,SEPULCHRAL slabs - Abstract
This article explores the symbolism of the petate in light of an unprecedented archaeological discovery. Excavations carried out in a Classic context in northern Michoacán revealed the impression of a petate marking the location of a burial. In addition, the lower section of the burial pit was covered over with andesite slabs, including one with grid-like and spiral incisions. After a brief overview of the ancient and modern uses of the petate and relevant archaeological evidence, I present the data that allow the testing of different hypotheses, in particular the symbolization of power through the petate. Contextual analysis suggests that both the woven mat and the incised slab served as thresholds, if not barriers, between the world of the living and the underworld. I propose that the petate was placed over the grave to serve as a regulator, ensuring that entities were properly separated and that they remained in their respective places. As such, it was an object protecting the cosmic order. I further suggest that the petate may have acted as a temporal gate, guaranteeing the continuous exercise of authority and argue that it was, as a finished object, endowed with power. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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24. Towards a Burma-inclusive South Asian Studies: A Roundtable.
- Author
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Emmrich, Christoph, McQuade, Joseph, Aiyar, Sana, and d'Hubert, Thibaut
- Subjects
ASIAN studies ,COMMUNITIES ,AREA studies - Abstract
Burma, or Myanmar as it was renamed in 1989, is largely ignored within the discipline of South Asian Studies, despite its cultural, religious, economic, and strategic significance for the wider worlds of Asia. Burma is often studied either in isolation or alongside Southeast Asian countries such as Thailand, Vietnam, and Malaysia, despite its equally important historical and cultural connections to communities, states, and networks across what is now India, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, or Nepal. In this Roundtable, four scholars of South Asia discuss Burma's erasure within the discipline, the origins and limitations of traditional area studies frameworks, and the possibilities afforded by Burma's inclusion within a more expansive conception of South Asia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Disruption from above, the middle and below: Three terrains of governance.
- Author
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Chua, Charmaine
- Subjects
COINCIDENCE ,ORIGINALITY ,CREATIVE destruction ,TECHNOLOGICAL innovations ,POLYSEMY ,JARGON (Terminology) - Abstract
The term disruption has become a buzzword for our times, although there is little clarity over what the term means, how it is deployed, and towards what ends. In order to understand the analytical and political stakes that are embedded in the deployment of 'disruption' as a rationale for various sources of upheaval, in this article I argue that these three terrains of disruption should be understood as theories of governance, and term them 'disruption from above', 'disruption from the middle', and 'disruption from below'. Each terrain of disruption embodies different ethoses, actors, and goals: the first connoting elite-driven creative destruction and innovation; the second obfuscating the capitalist imperative that produces world-systemic upheavals; and the third seeking to expose the structures of violence and inequality built into such practices. I illustrate these three terrains through a structural account that traces the popularity of the disruption discourse from its origins to its material application; analyse an illustrative example of the assetisation of infrastructure and how it bureaucratises governance and shifts relations of power; and conclude by examining infrastructural forms of protest against such forms. I argue that the confusion over what disruption means, who exercises it, and upon whom is not a coincidence: rather, disruption's polysemy is structurally produced as a way to disguise ongoing capitalist crisis as a technical problem that market innovations can solve. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Sino-Western Cultural Exchange as Seen through the Archaeology of the First Emperor's Necropolis.
- Author
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Qingbo, Duan and Barbieri-Low, Anthony J.
- Subjects
CULTURAL relations ,STONE carving ,IRON metallurgy ,ANCIENT cemeteries ,POLITICAL culture ,TOMBS ,TRANSMISSION of texts - Abstract
Several cultural features found by archaeologists at the First Emperor of Qin's necropolis did not have roots in East Asian cultures but were inspired by cultural exchange with the civilizations of West Asia along the various "Silk Roads." Examples considered in this article include terracotta figures of soldiers and horses, long-pole acrobatics, terraced architecture for tombs, bronze chariots, bar-shaped bricks, and technology for casting and repairing bronze statuary. Within Qin culture more broadly, there are several other cultural features which were probably brought from West Asia, including iron metallurgy, gold-working, trough-form pan tiles for roofing, stone inscriptions and stone sculpture, elliptical cocoon-form flasks, and possibly the transmission of Zoroastrianism and Buddhism. Furthermore, non-material elements of political and economic culture from the Persian Empire and Hellenistic kingdoms were also brought eastward alongside these materials. They were part of a coherent system that inspired the political and cultural revolutions of the First Emperor. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. New sea spider species (Pycnogonida: Austrodecidae) from a submarine cave in Japan.
- Author
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Kakui, Keiichi and Fujita, Yoshihisa
- Abstract
We describe a new sea spider species, Pantopipetta hosodai sp. nov., based on one juvenile female collected from a submarine cave ('Akumanoyakata' Cave) in Shimojijima Island, Miyako Island Group, Ryukyu Islands, southwestern Japan. It was collected from the second slope zone of the cave, 80–100 m from the entrance, no light, low salinity and with rocky substrate. This is the first record globally of a Pantopipetta species from a submarine cave and anchialine environment. Pantopipetta hosodai sp. nov. resembles Pantopipetta auxiliata , Pantopipetta lenis and Pantopipetta oculata in having auxiliary claws, but differs from them in having a palp with three short distal articles, lateral processes without dorsodistal tubercles, coxae 1 and 3 of legs 1–3 each with one long dorsal tubercle and one dorsodistal tubercle bearing a seta on each femur. Features of the palp appear to delineate two species groups in Pantopipetta , i.e. (1) those having four small distal articles, and a small, basal palp article between the lateral cephalon process and longest palp article (eight-articulate palp) and (2) those having three small distal articles, and lacking the small basal article (six-articulate palp), but further detail examination of the described species is needed. We discuss the diagnostic characters separating Pantopipetta and Austrodecus and the generic affiliation of Austrodecus aconae. Few pycnogonids from marine or anchialine caves have been identified to species, and it is generally unknown whether cave-dwelling pycnogonids tend to be troglobites. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. The Fama of the Theatre of Pompey between Antiquity and Antiquarianism.
- Author
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Muecke, Frances
- Subjects
FIFTEENTH century ,SIXTEENTH century ,AMPHITHEATERS ,ANTIQUARIANS - Abstract
This article shows how, from the time of its construction up until late antiquity and beyond, written sources reflected and perpetuated the fama of Pompey's theatre. Such was its reputation as the Roman theatre par excellence that, even after its absorption into the fabric of medieval Rome, in the earlier fifteenth century Italian proto-antiquarians were prompted by what they had read to attempt to locate it. A key figure in the process of sifting and applying the ancient sources was Biondo Flavio (1392–1463). Roughly contemporary with the early stages of Alberti's De re aedificatoria , but probably preceding the blueprint of the Roman theatre in that work, Biondo's pioneering 'theatre-made-of-words' in his Roma instaurata presented a newly accurate understanding of its structure and use (clearly distinguishing it from the amphitheatre) which proved influential in inspiring further topographical and antiquarian interest and research in the early sixteenth century. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Protection and Response of a Tertiary Hospital in Shenzhen, China to the COVID-19 Outbreak: The Practice of the Comprehensive Response Mode.
- Author
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Hu, Benling, Yang, Le, Wei, Chan, and Luo, Min
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,TERTIARY care - Abstract
Objective: The aim of this study was to evaluate the management mode for the prevention and control of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) transmission used at a general hospital in Shenzhen, China, with the aim to maintain the normal operation of the hospital. Methods: From January 2, 2020, to April 23, 2020, Hong Kong–Shenzhen Hospital, a tertiary hospital in Shenzhen, has operated a special response protocol named comprehensive pandemic prevention and control model, which mainly includes 6 aspects: (1) human resource management; (2) equipment management; (3) logistics management; (4) cleaning, disinfection, and process reengineering; (5) environment layout; (6) and training and assessment. The detail of every aspect was described, and its efficiency was evaluated. Results: A total of 198,802 patients were received. Of those, 10,821 were hospitalized; 26,767 were received by the emergency department and fever clinics; 288 patients were admitted for observation with fever; and 324 were admitted as suspected cases for isolation. Under the protocol of comprehensive pandemic prevention and control model, no case of hospital-acquired infection with COVID-19 occurred among the inpatients or staff. Conclusion: The present comprehensive response model may be useful in large public health emergencies to ensure appropriate management and protect the health and life of individuals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. THE IMPACT OF ARCHAEOLOGICAL RECORDING ON THE STUDY OF METAL ARTEFACTS. MYCENAE 1939: A CASE STUDY.
- Author
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Aulsebrook, Stephanie
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Wandering maidens in the Acropolis Propylaia: some considerations on the spatial setting of the cults of the Charites, Artemis and Hermes, their administration and related cult images.
- Author
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Graml, Constanze
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Extraordinary Back-to-Back Human and Animal Figures in the Art of Western Arnhem Land, Australia: One of the World's Largest Assemblages.
- Author
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Taçon, Paul S.C., May, Sally K., Goldhahn, Joakim, Taylor, Luke, Brady, Liam M., Ressel, Alex, Jalandoni, Andrea, Wesley, Daryl, and Maralngurra, Gabriel
- Subjects
ROCK art (Archaeology) ,BARK painting (Aboriginal Australian art) ,ANIMAL species ,SPECIES diversity - Abstract
Depictions of mythical beings appear in many different forms of art world-wide, including rock art of various ages. In this paper we explore a particular type of imagery, back-to-back figures, consisting of two human-like figures or animals of the same species next to each other and facing in opposite directions. Some human-like doubles were joined at the back rather than side-by-side, but also face opposite directions. In this paper, we report on new research on rock art, bark paintings and recent paintings on paper and chart a 9000-year history of making aesthetically, symbolically and spiritually powerful back-to-back figures in Arnhem Land, Northern Territory, Australia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Cottages for farm labouring families: plans, exhortations and realities (1825–50).
- Author
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Agnew, John
- Subjects
RURAL families ,COTTAGES ,FARM tenancy ,FAMILY planning ,FAMILY farms ,PRIZES (Contests & competitions) ,RURAL housing - Abstract
Loudon's 1825 Encyclopedia of Agriculture set out why and how 'comfortable' family cottages should be built for the farm labouring workforce. Over the next quarter-century, published 'prize essays' on cottage-design appeared alongside articles advocating 'high farming'. Low labourer wages and insecure farm tenancies handicapped investment in both, though a parliamentary inquiry showed improvement projects could enhance labourer employment. The 1834 'new' Poor Law – an 'administrative' law – restricted 'poor relief', but left many 'settlement' issues to continue as perceived obstacles to building cottages (the occupants might become a burden on the poor rates). This paper illustrates ideal contemporary cottage designs – relative to contrasting exposures of poor people's home lives. Landowners, patchily, promoted some cottage-building, but labouring families mostly remained poorly housed. Along with recent scholarship on families' work, income, possessions (often very few) and survival strategies, this work augments ideas of real housing conditions in rural areas. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. DOMESTIC COMEDY AND THE CLASSICAL GREEK HOUSE.
- Author
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Wright, Matthew
- Subjects
COMEDY ,CRITICS ,DOMESTIC space ,DWELLINGS - Abstract
Greek comedy, especially New Comedy, contains many incidental descriptions of domestic interiors. This article argues that such descriptions constitute a valuable and overlooked source of evidence for historians of the classical Greek house; they are also of interest to literary critics in that they contribute to the thematic and conceptual meaning of the plays. The article presents and discusses all the surviving comic evidence for houses, including many previously neglected comic fragments, as well as a key scene from Menander's Samia which is more detailed than any other surviving literary depiction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Stratigraphic architecture of the Cenozoic Dugong Supersequence: implications for the late post-breakup development of the Eucla Basin, southern Australian continental margin.
- Author
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STOKER, Martyn S., HOLFORD, Simon P., and TOTTERDELL, Jennifer M.
- Subjects
CONTINENTAL margins ,DUGONG ,CENOZOIC Era ,NEOGENE Period ,TURBIDITES ,MASS-wasting (Geology) ,CYCLOSTRATIGRAPHY ,ISOSTASY - Abstract
This study presents an appraisal of the Middle Eocene–Quaternary Dugong Supersequence of the Eucla Basin, offshore southern Australia. It combines details of the rock record with seismic-stratigraphical information, and the resulting stratigraphic framework provides constraints on the nature of the late post-breakup development of the southern Australian continental margin. It is well established that the onshore-to-mid-shelf succession comprises a predominantly aggrading-to-prograding unconformity-bounded succession of carbonate platform deposits; however, our analysis of the outer shelf–upper slope section challenges the widely held view that this shelf-margin wedge represents a distally steepened prograding carbonate ramp primarily modulated by global eustasy. Instead, our results show that the Middle Eocene–Quaternary succession is punctuated by a series of unconformities that reflect a persistent tectonic instability and differential vertical movements throughout the late post-breakup period, the genesis of which is most closely related to tectonic events. Moreover, the upper slope clinoform succession was constructed and shaped predominantly by alongslope processes, and four different contourite drift types are recognised based on their seismic-stratigraphic expression: elongate mounded drift (Quaternary); infill drift (Pliocene); plastered drift (Oligocene); and separated drift (Middle–Upper Eocene). The Quaternary drift – herein termed the 'Eyre Terrace Drift' – is a spectacular basin-scale deposit, over 500 m thick and traced for up to 200 km along the upper slope Eyre Terrace. Upslope-migrating sediment waves are associated with this drift. Key sedimentary attributes consistent with a contourite origin include fine-grained sediment, multi-scale gradational bed contacts and pervasive bioturbation. There is also evidence of episodic downslope mass-movement processes ranging from the large-scale Late Neogene Slide, which extends downslope for 15–20 km, to sporadic slumped beds and turbidites recovered in boreholes. The interaction of alongslope and downslope processes indicates a more dynamic sedimentary setting than previously assumed along the outer margin of the Eucla Basin. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Blindness, Excrement, and Abjection in the Theatre: ASTR Presidential Address, 30 October 2021.
- Author
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Carlson, Marla
- Subjects
FECES ,BLINDNESS ,ABJECTION ,AUDIOBOOKS ,SOCIAL distancing ,WINDOW blinds ,METAPHOR ,SMELL - Abstract
As most of my human contact became restricted to the Zoom screen in spring 2020, I discovered a serious limit to my capacity for looking. I also began finding it difficult to read. A ten-month headache taught me to stop taking ibuprofen and learn to manage tensions around my eyes and head as well as to shift roughly half of my reading to screenreaders and audio books. The need to restructure my own practices of seeing refocused my interest in theatre's engagement of the senses at the same time as the COVID-19 pandemic destroyed people's ability to smell, prompted them to hoard toilet paper, and created a U.S. boom in bidet purchases. These personal and cultural developments coincided with revived metaphors of blindness on the pandemic stage. This article begins with a brief discussion of The Blind, an "immersive audio/visual meditation journey" that Here Arts Center produced in 2021, and then centers on Blindness , the "socially distanced sound installation" produced by the Donmar Warehouse in 2020 followed by an international tour. I wonder at the reiteration of blindness as a tragic trope, seemingly unaffected by progress in disability rights, equity, and inclusion. I wonder at the appeal of wielding any contagious illness as metaphor during a global pandemic. My analysis turns particularly upon the relation between blindness and excrement in José Saramago's novel Blindness and the effect of cleansing the theatrical installation of any shit as well as the even more surprising choice to eliminate the voices of the blind characters. A detour through medieval French farces that link blindness and excrement reveals submerged tropes at play in these performative responses to fear of diminished capacity and diminished control—everything that individuals and societies cast out in order to maintain what we call health, whether literal or metaphorical. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Emplaced activism: what-if environmental education attuned to young people's entanglements with post-industrial landscapes?
- Author
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Ivinson, Gabrielle Mary and Renold, EJ
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Crafting granular stories with child-like embodied, affective and sensory encounters that attune to the world's differential becoming.
- Author
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Osgood, Jayne and Odegard, Nina
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. WESTERN HAN NOBLE BURIALS: A VIEW FROM ZHANG ANSHI'S 張安世 TOMB.
- Author
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Ruyue, He, Yuanru, Song, and Nylan, Michael
- Subjects
TOMBS ,FIGURINES ,RITES & ceremonies ,HORSES ,CEMETERIES ,EMPERORS ,BEREAVEMENT - Abstract
The family cemetery of Zhang Anshi was the first cemetery for nobles to be discovered in which the tomb occupants, dating, and gravesite orientation was so clear to investigators. As such, the site is of enormous historical significance. This essay introduces the entire site to readers and extrapolates aspects of the Western Han mourning regulations from the evidence presented by the jade suits, carriage and horse sets, tomb figurines, shrine, and layout. The essay also assesses scholarly debates concerning the degree to which Zhang Anshi's burial conforms to standards of late Western Han, and the relationship between Emperor Xuan's burial site and Duling with the site of Zhang Anshi's own tomb, questioning the traditional beliefs about "accompanying burials." [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Detection of maritime traffic anomalies using Satellite-AIS and multisensory satellite imageries: Application to the 2021 Suez Canal obstruction.
- Author
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Harun-Al-Rashid, Ahmed, Yang, Chan-Su, and Shin, Dae-Woon
- Subjects
TRAFFIC monitoring ,LANDSAT satellites ,SHIPBORNE automatic identification systems ,REMOTE-sensing images - Abstract
This study summarises the scenario of maritime traffic anomalies, like the increased congestion and U-turn of ships caused by the ship grounding in the Suez Canal in March 2021. Here, satellite automatic identification system based ship trajectories, and Sentinel-1 and Sentinel-2 images based ship positions are analysed after subdividing the study area into seas, lakes and canals. The results show that the blockage affected the maritime traffic for more than three weeks, waiting ship numbers increased from 5 to 122, and daily one to three ships made a U-turn between 23 and 31 March in the Gulf of Suez. Ship density also increased to more than double in Bitter Lakes with a minimum waiting time of 7 days. Hence, to avoid such prolonged waiting of ships, we propose a warning method based on the sharp speed decrease rate, U-turn and congestion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Zimbabwe Ruins in Botswana: Settlement Hierarchies, Political Boundaries and Symbolic Statements.
- Author
-
Huffman, Thomas N. and Main, Mike
- Subjects
CULTURAL identity ,HUMAN settlements - Abstract
At its peak in the sixteenth century, the Zimbabwe Culture encompassed an area the size of France. The greater Tuli area in east-central Botswana formed the western extent of this culture area. Here many dzimbahwe mark the residences of sacred leaders in the later Khami period (1400–1840 ad). These stone-walled headquarters formed a pyramid of political importance, with district chiefs (Level 4) and petty chiefs (Level 3) at the top and headmen (Level 2) and commoners (Level 1) at the base. Commoners and their headmen lived near arable land, while petty chiefs placed their administrative centres at the boundaries of their small chiefdoms. In death, sacred leaders rested in dzimbahwe on special hills, while ordinary villagers were buried in their homesteads. During the Khami period in Botswana, these various settlements were part of only one Level 4 district: Level 5 and Level 6 capitals were located elsewhere. After the collapse of the powerful Torwa state at Khami, decorative symbols changed from emphasizing the majesty of kingship (Khami) to the responsibilities of sacred leaders (Zinjanja), and then back again to kingship in the Rozvi state (Danangombe). The powerful Rozvi state did not extend to the Tuli area, probably because it was too dry. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. The Avdat in Late Antiquity Project : uncovering the Early Islamic phases of a Byzantine town in the Negev Highlands.
- Author
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Bucking, Scott, Fuks, Daniel, Dunseth, Zachary C., Schwimer, Lior, and Erickson-Gini, Tali
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Discovering ancient cave art using 3D photogrammetry: pre-contact Native American mud glyphs from 19th Unnamed Cave, Alabama.
- Author
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Simek, Jan F., Alvarez, Stephen, and Cressler, Alan
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. LUCRETIUS' DIDACTICS OF DISGUST.
- Author
-
McCarter, Stephanie
- Subjects
AVERSION ,DEAD ,DRINKING water ,TASTE ,STOMACH - Abstract
The plague that closes Lucretius' De Rerum Natura is a spectacle of disgust. Throats sweat with blood (6.47f.); tongues drip with gore (6.1149); breath reeks like rotten cadavers (6.1154f.); drinking water is contaminated when the sick dive into it (6.1174f.); black discharge pours from stomachs (6.1200); foul blood seeps from noses (6.1203); the sick slice off their own hands, feet, and genitals (6.1209f.); dead bodies are entombed by ulcers (6.1271). Again and again Lucretius hits upon domains that have been identified as key disgust elicitors. In Book 6, more than in any other book of the epic, we encounter what is taeter, 'disgusting'. This adjective appears nine times in the final book (22, 217, 787, 807, 976, 1154, 1200, 1205, and 1266) after showing up one time each in Books 1 (936), 3 (581), and 5 (1126); six times in Book 2 (400, 415, 476, 510, 705, 872); and five times in Book 4 (11, 124, 172, 685, 1176). The vast majority of these instances describe disgust working upon our senses of taste, smell, sight, and even hearing (OLD s.v. 1); that is, 'primary' or 'core' disgust. At 2.510f., for instance, Lucretius speaks of a substance that is taetrius... / naribus auribus atque oculis orisque sapori ('more disgusting to noses, ears, eyes, and the taste of the mouth'). But the word can also carry an ethical or moral nuance (OLD s.v. 2), suggesting 'secondary' disgust. At 5.1126, for example, the word describes Tartarus, into which thunderbolts 'scornfully' hurl sinners (contemptim in Tartara taetra). Here, Lucretius wants his reader to feel a sense of moral aversion to the idea of the Underworld, which throughout the epic he is at pains to prove is nothing but a poetic fiction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. THE MAUSOLEUM ARCHITECTURAL PROJECT: REINTERPRETING PALENQUE'S TEMPLE OF THE INSCRIPTIONS THROUGH 3D DATA-DRIVEN ARCHITECTURAL ANALYSIS.
- Author
-
Campiani, Arianna, Liendo Stuardo, Rodrigo, and Lercari, Nicola
- Subjects
INSCRIPTIONS ,OPTICAL radar ,LIDAR ,BUILDING design & construction ,TEMPLES ,FUNERAL industry - Abstract
The Temple of the Inscriptions at Palenque, Mexico, is an outstanding example of Classic Maya architecture erected in the seventh century as the funerary building for ruler K'inich Janab Pakal. For decades, scholars have speculated on its construction sequence and the potential existence of hidden rooms on either side of Pakal's mortuary chamber. This article aims to advance understanding of the Temple's architectural context in light of new 3D data. After reviewing the application of drone-based photogrammetry and terrestrial Light Detection and Ranging in the Maya area, we argue that these techniques are capable of enhancing the architectural analysis of the Temple of the Inscriptions and showing that this structure was part of a larger architectural project, encompassing the adjacent Temple XIII, and the connecting stepped building platform. Our findings demonstrate that the basal platforms for the Temple of the Inscriptions and Temple XIII were erected contemporaneously and that the design of their mortuary chambers follows a tripartite layout we identified in Palenque's elite funerary architecture and associated mortuary practices. We conclude that these three buildings were part of a mausoleum architectural project, the construction of which was initiated by Pakal to reshape Palenque's site-core and enshrine the ruling family's power and ancestors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Housing assessment in farms in the Northwest of Spain: main facility weaknesses and strengths.
- Author
-
Verdes, Sonia, Yáñez, Uxía, Trillo, Yolanda, Herradón, Pedro G., Peña, Ana I., Becerra, Juan J., and Quintela, Luis A.
- Subjects
FARMS ,FARM buildings ,HOUSING ,ANIMAL health ,ANIMAL herds ,ANIMAL welfare - Abstract
The aim of this research communication was to examine and report the current situation of dairy farms in the province of Lugo (Galicia, Spain) regarding facility problems. We assessed the facilities of 168 free-stall dairy farms, housing in total 9228 Holstein cows in milk. Housing factors related to the resting area, circulation area, feeding area, ventilation area and milking area, as well as animal-handling features, were evaluated. Distance measurements were performed using a laser metre or a roll metric tape. A survey was conducted to gather information about cleaning and preventive protocols. Our results showed that most farms do not comply with the objective for cubicle measurements, width of the crossovers, type of flooring and presence of a quarantine pen, which may have a negative impact on the health and productivity of the animals. Therefore, to maximise the profits of the farm, the recommendations given in this study may be useful as a guide when building a new farm or remodelling the existing ones. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. The Expression of Cultural Identity in Mosque Architecture in Brunei Darussalam.
- Author
-
Lopes, Rui Oliveira and Hasnan, Nuriskandar bin Mohd
- Subjects
CULTURAL identity ,MOSQUE design & construction - Abstract
The mosque connotes a place of prostration towards Allah. As a sacred space, mosque designs use great detail to respect specific ceremonial functions and some requirements outlined in the Quran, but accommodate diverse styles and construction materials that several traditional and cultural factors determine. As early as the seventh century, as Islam spread across the Mediterranean, North Africa, East Asia, and Southeast Asia, the mosque remained a quintessential Islamic building for local Muslim communities. Consequently, mosque architecture presents diverse styles and forms. It does not follow a normative design form besides having an essential hall to accommodate the congregation and visibly indicating the qibla. This paper explores mosque architecture designs in Brunei Darussalam to analyse expressions of cultural identity and constructions of a collective identity. Since the 1950s, mosque architecture in Brunei has distinguished itself by amalgamating designs that culturally significant historical exchanges within and beyond the Malay world dictated. The paper argues that specific governmental, social, cultural and economic contexts necessarily inform the built environment and, particularly, that of religious architecture, resulting in the development of autochthon styles. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Inaugurating the "White Passage": Art '76.
- Author
-
Hera
- Subjects
ART exhibitions ,ART museums ,SOUTHEAST Asian art - Abstract
Within an art exhibition, the disposition of space is fundamental in experiencing artworks. A study of the exhibition space as discourse enmeshes art within a framework of relationship and processes instead of viewing art as an isolated and autonomous object. This paper features the case study of Art '76, the inaugural exhibition of Singapore's first large-scale institution of art, the National Museum Art Gallery (NMAG). The NMAG's opening in 1976 had been much anticipated by artists and the art audience since the 1960s, it was also an important milestone in the National Museum of Singapore's process of modernisation and revitalisation. During Singapore's post-independent period, the National Museum began to redefine itself as a civic museum focussing on Singapore's history and culture, shifting away from its previous incarnation of a research-focused colonial institution, the Raffles Library and Museum. Singapore was not alone in exploring the role of modern art in nation-building, as neighbouring Southeast Asian countries such as Indonesia, Philippines, Malaysia and Thailand also began to moot for their own institution of modern art around the same period of time. Art '76 and the NMAG represent a case of distinct spatial typology that arose out of unique institutional and socio-political dynamic in post-independent Singapore. In analysing the legacy as well as the relationships and contentions that shaped the spatial articulation of Art '76, this paper studies existing visual and oral archive, as well as critically evaluating the concepts of space as a subject of historical study. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. THE LANGUAGE OF ROADS AND TRAVEL IN HOMER: HODOS AND KELEUTHOS.
- Author
-
Folit-Weinberg, Benjamin
- Subjects
ACT (Philosophy) ,ROAD maps ,LEXICON ,LANGUAGE & languages - Abstract
The aim of this article is to map the relationship between the main words that comprise the Homeric lexicon of roads, journeys, paths and travel. The central task is to explore the relationship between the words hodos and keleuthos ; along the way, the article will also address other terms that appear less frequently, such as atarp (it) os and poros. The article first teases out a difference in sense between keleuthos in the singular and in the plural. The discussion of keleuthos provides a key distinction, namely between 'object-concepts' and 'activity-concepts', that proves valuable in discussing different senses of the word hodos. Rather than differentiating the words keleuthos and hodos as others have suggested, however, this distinction should be used to differentiate domains of meaning within each word. The result will be what might be conceived of as a four-part grid, with the two words hodos and keleuthos split into two distinct parts along the 'activity-concept'/'object-concept' axis. Finally, concepts drawn from discussions of verbal aspect and philosophy of action are deployed heuristically to develop further the analysis of this semantic field. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. The decline and fall of an early modern slum: London's St Giles 'Rookery', c. 1550–1850.
- Author
-
Crymble, Adam
- Abstract
The Rookery of London's St Giles-in-the-Fields became the city's most notorious slum by the eighteenth century. This article asks why? Why there, why then and why for so long? Building on existing research about urban development and the failure of local government, by considering the geography, economics and legal influences acting upon the space and the people who interacted with it over the long durée, it becomes clear that the Rookery of St Giles-in-the-Fields was always high risk because of happenstance of geography, but that a lack of leadership from its owners and a system of urban upkeep that distributed responsibility too widely led to its longevity and the depth of its misfortune. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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