12 research outputs found

    Edible Subjectivities: Meat in Science Fiction

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    This dissertation argues for the critical urgency of both challenging the constitution of subjectivity itself and disputing the a priori exclusion of other animals from attaining some kind of ethico-political subject-status. Deploying a Baradian performative posthumanist analysis attentive to patterns of difference, I engage the theoretical tools of ecofeminism, critical animal studies (CAS), and material ecocriticism to interrogate subjectivity by attending closely and critically to twentieth and twenty-first century Euro- American Anglophone science fiction (SF) stories about meat. Meat animal narratives open the subject to alternative modes of knowing that anthropocentric epistemologies foreclose, intervening against the structural exclusions imposed by various material- discursive apparatuses of domination that define, authorize and enact subjectivity as always and only human, over and against the figure of the animal. SF, a genre of alterity that has long been at the vanguard of literary engagements with nonhuman subjectivities, likewise works to subvert hegemonic notions of the subject as always- already human and complicate overdetermined configurations of the subject as an ontologically predetermined entity. Engaging SF narratives about human cattle dystopias, alien encounters, in vitro meat and alimentary xeno-symbiogenesis, I approach subjectivity as an emergent phenomenon born of the intra-action of differentially materialized agential entanglements, andcruciallytheir constitutive exclusions. Rejecting subject-object dualism as an unliveable onto-epistemological paradigm that excludes anything edible from relations of respectful use, I argue for the necessity of enacting subjectivities in terms of concrete practices of restraint and humility, with humans firmly situated as embodied animal beings, enmeshed with and accountable to a much larger community of more than human, more than animal and more than animate actants on a finite planet

    The Elms 1985

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    Buffalo State\u27s annual yearbook The Elms . Please refer to our copyright statement for more information. Note: Please bear in mind that the college has always been a part of the surrounding society, sharing in the attitudes and practices of the day. Thus these historical records may on occasion contain material that today would be considered offensive or inappropriate.https://digitalcommons.buffalostate.edu/theelms/1073/thumbnail.jp

    Animal geographies of cattle : bodies, spaces, ethics

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    EThOS - Electronic Theses Online ServiceGBUnited Kingdo

    Bowdoin Orient v.119, no.1-25 (1989-1990)

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    https://digitalcommons.bowdoin.edu/bowdoinorient-1990s/1000/thumbnail.jp

    Depression, Volition, and Death: The Effect of Depressive Disorders on the Autonomous Choice to Forgo Medical Treatment

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    Many contemporary models of medical ethics champion patient autonomy to counterbalance historically paternalistic decision-making processes. These models tend to suggest an autonomous agent free from cognitive bias and systematic distortion (e.g., Kantian or Cartesian rational agents). Evidence is emerging from the fields of cognitive psychology, cognitive science, and neuroscience that fundamentally challenge this cognitive model, demonstrating the dependence of cognition on deeper, avolitional structures (e.g., backstage cognition, cognitive heuristics and biases, automaticity, emotionally-valenced memory, etc.), and hence, shifting the cognitive model towards reductionistic and deterministic philosophies and psychologies. Medical ethics models must adapt their sense of autonomy in light of these findings if the term is to have any meaning - absent this necessary adaptation, medical ethics centers around a cognitive agent that does not actually exist. In contrast to the homuncular models championed (i.e., overly rationalistic and lacking an account of empirically-validated cognitive phenomena), a cognitive model of autonomy is proposed, along with useful psychometrics and a case metric to assist clinicians in assessing the possibility of compromised autonomy in patients electing to forgo medical treatment

    Alumni Gazette: The College of William and Mary

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    Title of gazette varies

    Investigating the Circular Economy and its Impact in the UK Manufacturing Sector

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    This PhD thesis investigates the circular economy and how it impacts UK manufacturing. The research explores the Automotive, IT firms and Government agencies – how they understand, construct, and operationalise a circular economy for achieving competitive advantage. It also assesses if the RBV’s VRIN framework is suitable for a firm participating in the circular economy. This research employs a critical realist qualitative comparative case study method. Primary data collection included semi-structured interviews with thirty-four interviewees drawn from thirty firms across the UK automotive, IT firms and government agencies. The study used secondary data collected from firms’ sustainability reports and waste management policy documents to triangulate interviewees responses. The key finding is that an augmented waste hierarchy is the most realistic description of a circular economy. There is a convergence between the automotive and IT industries with SMEs driving change. It also revealed theory- practice contradictions, giving rise to two types of a circular economy- a Standard Circular Economy and an Advanced Circular Economy. It draws a list of characteristics for finding each type for helping managers make informed decisions. The theory-practice contradictions resulted in an Intention-Practise-Outcome Model. It is about synchronising a firm’s organisational resources with circular economy strategic intent and practise. In turn, it helps firms deliver economic, environmental, and societal benefits—an avenue for future circular economy research. This PhD thesis also contributes theoretically to the RBV theory by finding that VRIN characteristics of resources are not yet proven suitable for a circular economy business. Identifying a circular economy as a dynamic capability identifies a new competitive advantage, which provides new directions in strategic management research. This research informs urban mining, natural capital policymaking, highlighting a need for connecting waste-hierarchy, Industry 4.0, and innovation policy. This research study contributes to the new developing circular economy scholarship and enhances business sustainability and strategic management knowledge domains

    Abstracts on Radio Direction Finding (1899 - 1995)

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    The files on this record represent the various databases that originally composed the CD-ROM issue of "Abstracts on Radio Direction Finding" database, which is now part of the Dudley Knox Library's Abstracts and Selected Full Text Documents on Radio Direction Finding (1899 - 1995) Collection. (See Calhoun record https://calhoun.nps.edu/handle/10945/57364 for further information on this collection and the bibliography). Due to issues of technological obsolescence preventing current and future audiences from accessing the bibliography, DKL exported and converted into the three files on this record the various databases contained in the CD-ROM. The contents of these files are: 1) RDFA_CompleteBibliography_xls.zip [RDFA_CompleteBibliography.xls: Metadata for the complete bibliography, in Excel 97-2003 Workbook format; RDFA_Glossary.xls: Glossary of terms, in Excel 97-2003 Workbookformat; RDFA_Biographies.xls: Biographies of leading figures, in Excel 97-2003 Workbook format]; 2) RDFA_CompleteBibliography_csv.zip [RDFA_CompleteBibliography.TXT: Metadata for the complete bibliography, in CSV format; RDFA_Glossary.TXT: Glossary of terms, in CSV format; RDFA_Biographies.TXT: Biographies of leading figures, in CSV format]; 3) RDFA_CompleteBibliography.pdf: A human readable display of the bibliographic data, as a means of double-checking any possible deviations due to conversion

    Metodología de implantación de modelos de gestión de la información dentro de los sistemas de planificación de recursos empresariales. Aplicación en la pequeña y mediana empresa

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    La Siguiente Generación de Sistemas de Fabricación (SGSF) trata de dar respuesta a los requerimientos de los nuevos modelos de empresas, en contextos de inteligencia, agilidad y adaptabilidad en un entono global y virtual. La Planificación de Recursos Empresariales (ERP) con soportes de gestión del producto (PDM) y el ciclo de vida del producto (PLM) proporciona soluciones de gestión empresarial sobre la base de un uso coherente de tecnologías de la información para la implantación en sistemas CIM (Computer-Integrated Manufacturing), con un alto grado de adaptabilidad a la estnictura organizativa deseada. En general, esta implementación se lleva desarrollando hace tiempo en grandes empresas, siendo menor (casi nula) su extensión a PYMEs. La presente Tesis Doctoral, define y desarrolla una nueva metodología de implementación pan la generación automática de la información en los procesos de negocio que se verifican en empresas con requerimientos adaptados a las necesidades de la SGSF, dentro de los sistemas de gestión de los recursos empresariales (ERP), atendiendo a la influencia del factor humano. La validez del modelo teórico de la metodología mencionada se ha comprobado al implementarlo en una empresa del tipo PYME, del sector de Ingeniería. Para el establecimiento del Estado del Arte de este tema se ha diseñado y aplicado una metodología específica basada en el ciclo de mejora continua de Shewhart/Deming, aplicando las herramientas de búsqueda y análisis bibliográfico disponibles en la red con acceso a las correspondientes bases de datos

    The Sioux Falls Argus-Leader: January 1, 1982 - December 31, 1992 Annual Index: Volume 2

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    The purpose of this index is to provide a practical guide to South Dakota news. Included are biographical articles about South Dakotans; news by local writers; all editorials; reports of committees, conventions, meetings, etc.; articles on local history, arts, business, and musical performances; features on education employment, population trends, and parks and recreation, etc. National and international items which are indexed in the New York Times Index and Readers\u27 Guide, to Periodical Literature are omitted unless the subject matter is relevant to South Dakota. Also omitted are items in the following general categories: national columns; birth, engagement, wedding and obituary announcements; daily sports news; public notices minutes of city and county commission meetings; and hospital and police records
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