Search Results Heading

MBRLSearchResults

mbrl.module.common.modules.added.book.to.shelf
Title added to your shelf!
View what I already have on My Shelf.
Oops! Something went wrong.
Oops! Something went wrong.
While trying to add the title to your shelf something went wrong :( Kindly try again later!
Are you sure you want to remove the book from the shelf?
Oops! Something went wrong.
Oops! Something went wrong.
While trying to remove the title from your shelf something went wrong :( Kindly try again later!
    Done
    Filters
    Reset
  • Discipline
      Discipline
      Clear All
      Discipline
  • Is Peer Reviewed
      Is Peer Reviewed
      Clear All
      Is Peer Reviewed
  • Series Title
      Series Title
      Clear All
      Series Title
  • Reading Level
      Reading Level
      Clear All
      Reading Level
  • Year
      Year
      Clear All
      From:
      -
      To:
  • More Filters
      More Filters
      Clear All
      More Filters
      Content Type
    • Item Type
    • Is Full-Text Available
    • Subject
    • Country Of Publication
    • Publisher
    • Source
    • Donor
    • Language
    • Place of Publication
    • Contributors
    • Location
47,994 result(s) for "subjectivity"
Sort by:
Combining minds : how to think about composite subjectivity
\"Roelof's monograph is the first sustained, book-length defense of \"constitutive panpsychism,\" an increasingly prominent theory of consciousness that argues that consciousness is a general feature inherent in matter. Constitutive panpsychism holds that the consciousness of humans and other complex beings are constituted out of this basic consciousness in the same way that human bodies are constituted out of physical matter. Roelofs defends this view against the 'combination problem', which is widely recognised as the most serious objection to it\"-- Provided by publisher.
The Gods: Die Götter
How might music allow us to think Benjamin's \"God\" as intrinsic to the concepts of evil, misfortune, innocence, guilt, and pleasure? Here, Schubert's lieder are thought of as condemning the subject to Benjamin's destructive gods by offering the idea that fate is the ultimate fortune teller, divorced from morality.
Gender, Subjectivity and the Writer's Voice : Historicising the French Resistance, 1940-1970s
From 1940 until the 1970s, resisters sought to preserve the resistance for posterity and thus dominated the historicisation of the resistance: under the Occupation they published clandestine newspapers, and from the Liberation onwards, they wrote histories, essays, memoirs and both collected and gave testimonies. This thesis argues that the interrelation between genre, gender and subjectivity was a key dynamic in this process. It demonstrates that the choice of genre affected what was said about the resistance and by whom. Through an exploration of genre, this thesis argues that that men were more likely to foreground their subjectivity, whereas women were more likely to marginalise their own subject position. Women were nevertheless actively involved within this process of historicisation, and this thesis argues that the genre of history allowed women to embrace their marginal position and to use it as an asset. This thesis shows how the production of testimonial sources for the Commission d'Histoire de l'Occupation et de la Libération de la France (CHOLF) project, which began in 1944, provided a space in which women made an important contribution to historical understandings of the resistance as both interviewer and interviewee. The paradox of women writing about the resistance but not about their own resistance is a central theme of this thesis, which draws on archival and published sources to argue that by embracing and adapting the traditional 'female' roles of remembering and memorialising from the margins, women became key participants in the historicisation of the French resistance. It explores the tensions between the reliance on subjective experience and the claim to have written 'objective', 'scientific' and yet also 'authentic' accounts of resistance life. Tracing the discourses to the 1970s shows how women's resistance was increasingly understood as crucial to the resistance fight. Fundamentally, the thesis demonstrates that despite changes over time, women were central to the formation of the gendered narratives of resistance from the very beginning.
The Impact Agenda and the Production of Subjectivity
In what is often referred to as the 'impact agenda', governments and research funding agencies across the world have recently introduced audit systems and funding mechanisms that require academics to demonstrate the societal impact of their research. Grounded in an ethnography of a UK university, and informed by Deleuze and Guattari's assemblage theory, this thesis explores the role the impact agenda plays in the production of academic subjectivities. I demonstrate how the defining function of the impact agenda is the production of the 'impactful academic' - an enterprising subject who demonstrates their value through the effective and efficient pursuit of research impact. I argue that this function of the impact agenda effectuates neoliberalism's tendency to construct persons as competitive individuals. Moreover, I show how it entails mechanisms of power which operate at the level of language and subjective interpretation and at the level of pre-personal affects. While the workings of power are never far away, I also bring to light processes of subjectification that take us beyond constructions of the impactful academic. In doing so, I draw attention to a conception of subjectivity that is conceived in terms of collective agency and creativity and which breaks with the neoliberal notion of the competitive individual. I argue this alternative way to conceive subjectivity points to the potentials for converting the impact agenda and for creating an alternative that is based on the cultivation of collective joy. In offering this account I contribute to knowledge in two central ways. First, I offer an advancement on existing studies relating to the impact agenda. I go beyond much of the existing empirical literature which tends to lack the 'critical edge' of critical scholarship. At the same time, I go beyond much of the critical literature which tends to rest on limited empirical data. What I offer is an in-depth empirical account of the impact agenda that is attentive to the ways in which the workings of power are both reinscribed and circumvented and which presents an alternative that is grounded in an analysis of the potentials that lie latent and emergent in the present. Secondly, I contribute to debates surrounding critical policy studies' growing interest in the concept of assemblage. I illustrate the value of taking up a reading of assemblage that is anchored in the work of Deleuze and Guattari and puts to work the allied concepts of strata and abstract machine. I argue that such an approach offers a way to overcome the pitfalls of 'policy assemblage' literature which neglects questions of subjectivity and fails to grasp the wider forces at work in the arrangement of policy assemblages.
The universal subject of our time : (or: how I learned to stop worrying and love the machine)
\"The Subject itself is the Subject of the Machine. What does it mean to be human? We live in a technological age, where rapid advances in personal tech and the science of Artificial Intelligence are challenging us in ways never before imagined. A book in two parts, The Universal Subject of Our Time begins with an exploration of 20th Century post-modernism's undermining of subjectivity with thinkers such as Foucault, Derrida, Baudrillard and Althusser and continues with a description of the science wars, where physical realists challenged the post-modernists up to the 1990s when the intellectual conflict resulted in an uncompromising stand-off after the Sokal Hoax. In Part II the subject is resurrected by taking a look at arguments for machine intelligence and AI and also, from the perspective of physics, examines what subjectivity means, particularly in relation to black holes or black stars, and look to what lies ahead in the future, in terms of space exploration, Martian habitats and even the possibility of first contact with extra-terrestrials\"--Cover
Characteristics of Athletic Trainers that Influence Personal Subjectivity in Medical Disqualification From Sport Following Concussion Discussions
Context:Patients may be considering stopping sport participation due to concussions with limited evidence to guide this decision. Athletic trainers (ATs) may play a role in discussions about medical disqualification (MDQ), however their personal subjectivity may influence when to discuss MDQ following concussion, however this has not been examined.Objective:Determine if AT personal subjectivity for MDQ following concussion differed between gender, years of experience, or division.Design:Cross-sectional study.Setting:Online surveyPatients Or Other Participants:Five hundred and two AT participants (average age=35.3±10.8 years; females=235/502, 46.8%; males=175/502, 34.9%, prefer not to respond=4/502, 0.8%; and no response=88/502, 17.5%).Main Outcome Measures:Gender, years of experience, and division were independent variables, whereas social factors (three items), perceived athlete's potential for success (five items), and number of concussions sustained before MDQ is recommended (one item) were dependent variables. We calculated separate Mann-Whitney U's for gender with Kruskal Wallis tests for employment division and each individual item. We calculated Spearman' rho correlations to determine relationships between years of experience and items. We utilized a Bonferroni correction of 0.006 for multiple comparisons.Results:We observed few differences in personal subjectivity between gender, years of experience, and division. When we observed differences between genders and employment divisions, ATs perceived that factors would have no or less influence. ATs with more experience erceived that fewer number of concussions should be sustained before MDQ following concussion would be recommended (p<0.001).ConclusionThe personal subjectivity of ATs in our sample largely did not differ between genders, years of experience, or employment division. These results indicate that ATs are likely considering the patient holistically and with other factors to determine when sport participation is no longer recommended.
Darkness on Screen: Subjectivity-Inducing Mechanisms in Contemporary Estonian Art Film
The main purpose of the article is to bring more clarity to the concept of art film, shedding light on the mechanisms of subjective reception and evaluating the presence of subjectivity-inducing segments as the grounds for defining art film. The second aim is to take a fresh look at the littlediscussed Estonian art cinema, drawing on a framework of cognitive film studies in order to analyse its borders and characteristics. I will evaluate the use of darkness as a device for creating meaning, both independently of and combined with other visual or auditory devices. The dark screen, although not always a major factor in the creation of subjectivity, accompanies the core problem both directly and metaphorically: what happens to the viewer when external information is absent? I will look at the subjectivity- inducing devices in the films of two Estonian directors, Sulev Keedus and Veiko Õunpuu. For the theoretical background, I rely mostly on Torben Grodal’s idea about the subjective mode as a main characteristic of art film, and the disruption of character simulation as the basis for the film viewer’s subjectivity.