Home About us Contact | |||
Significant Work (significant + work)
Selected AbstractsAgency in the Discursive ConditionHISTORY AND THEORY, Issue 4 2001Elizabeth Deeds Ermarth This article claims that postmodernity necessarily, and perhaps opportunely, undermines the bases upon which political democracy traditionally has rested; and that therefore some significant work must be done in order to redefine, restore, or otherwise reconfigure democratic values and institutions for a changed cultural condition. This situation presents the opportunity to explore the new options, positive openings, and discursive opportunities that postmodernity presents for political practice; for this the problem of agency provides a focal issue. The practices of postmodernity, taken together, represent substantial challenges, not just to this or that cherished habit, but to modernity itself and all its corollaries, including its inventions of objectivity, of "the individual" (miserable treasure), and of all the related values (project, capital, consensus and, above all, neutrality) which still underwrite so much of what we do as citizens, consumers, and professionals not to mention as more private persons, parents, and partners. Fortunately, postmodernity does not demolish all our most cherished beliefs, values, and practices; but it does require recognition of how those beliefs, values, and practices actually function and of what alternatives they suppress. [source] Epistemological and theoretical challenges for studying power and politics in information systemsINFORMATION SYSTEMS JOURNAL, Issue 2 2007Leiser Silva Abstract., The study of the role of power in managing information systems (IS) still offers a major epistemological challenge to researchers in the field. Although significant work has been done, there is yet to emerge a research approach that permits a penetrating study of the phenomenon of power by virtue of adopting a Machiavellian stance. This paper proposes such an approach in the form of an interpretivist position combined with a theoretical framework whose origin lies in political science and the sociology of technology. In developing its philosophical argument, the paper compares three meta-theories that have been applied to study IS: Phenomenology, Critical Theory and Structuration Theory. All three are compared in terms of their epistemological position regarding the relationship between power and IS. We argue that, although enlightening, those meta-theories fail to unravel the hidden and strategic nature of power. The paper concludes by proposing a particular theoretical formulation that, rather than censoring power and politics, will provide the epistemological means for unravelling them. [source] Bronze Age painted plaster in Mycenaean Greece: a pilot study on the testing and application of micro-Raman spectroscopyJOURNAL OF RAMAN SPECTROSCOPY, Issue 8-9 2004Ann Brysbaert Abstract Since the first discoveries of Minoan and Mycenaean painted plaster around the end of the 19th and early 20th centuries, iconographic and, to a lesser extent, technological studies have gone hand in hand in order to understand how these prehistoric societies were able to produce some of the earliest and most significant works of art in Bronze Age Europe and the eastern Mediterranean. These paintings claim to be among the first to be executed in the buon fresco technique. Past technological studies employed wet chemical methods, x-ray diffraction (XRD), optical emission spectroscopy and a range of microscopic techniques based on cross-sections of samples in order to investigate these fragmentary paintings. Most of these methods required destructive sampling and this is now, rightly so, very much restricted. Consequently, other non-micro-destructive approaches are being tested at present. Micro-Raman spectroscopy (MRS) has proven more than once its potential for non-destructive analysis of works of art and in archaeology in the recent past. Its application to this early fragmentary material is presented here for the first time. Interesting results were the identification of both organic (indigo) and non-crystalline materials (limonite), which complements the knowledge obtained from traditionally used techniques. Although not without problems (high fluorescence prevented identification of Egyptian Blue), non-destructive MRS yielded results comparable to XRD and provided the first identification of indigo blue on this medium, and can hence be considered very useful in future sample-reducing strategies considering these scarce materials. Copyright © 2004 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] We were the Trojans: British national identities in 1633RENAISSANCE STUDIES, Issue 1 2002Lisa Hopkins In 1633, several significant works of literature were published for the first time. These included Spenser's A View of the Present State of Ireland, Jasper Fisher's Fvimus Troes, George Wither's Iwenilia, Charles Aleyn's The Battailes of Crescey and Poictiers, while John Ford's Perkins Warbeck, though not published until 1634, was probably first performed in 1633. In the same year, Charles I rode north to his Scottish coronation, calling forth the celebratory poem Scotland's Welcome by William Lithgow, and Ben Jonson also wrote The King's Entertainment at Welbeck to entertain the king when he broke his journey at the earl of Newcastle's great house, Welbeck Abbey in Nottinghamshire. The year also saw the appointment of Strafford as Lord Deputy in Ireland, Thomas Stafford's Pacata Hibernica, and Geoffrey Keating's History of Ireland, and the centenary of Henry VIII's first declaration of England as an empire in 1533. This essay argues that these events and publications are linked by their concern with questions of what it meant to be English, Scottish, Irish, or Anglo-Irish, with the occasion of Charles I's Scottish coronation, coupled with his growing political unpopularity, provoking a collective soul-searching on the subject of national identities. [source] |