14,775 research outputs found
Sketchy Lesbians: Carol as History and Fantasy
Rather than a forward-looking lesbian representation, Todd Haynes\u27s Carol, an adaptation by Phyllis Nagy of Patricia Highsmith\u27s 1952 novel, The Price of Salt, looks to images and affective investments of the past to explore lesbian representability, the historical discourses and aesthetic codes through which desire between women can be recognized. The collaboration brings together preoccupations from Haynes\u27s oeuvre and themes from Highsmith\u27s that question reception of the film in terms of a happy ending and future progress. Through evocative art direction, camerawork, and star performances, the film invites the viewer to share the perspective of Therese (Rooney Mara), a nearly blank character written as Highsmith\u27s stand-in, who is subsumed by desire for Carol (Cate Blanchett), a wealthy, discontented suburban wife and mother whom she meets by chance. The loversâ exclusivity, and even their persecution, are understood as elements of fantasy that ultimately shed light on queer history
The Cowl - v.57 - n.14 - Mar. 18, 1993
The Cowl - student newspaper of Providence College. Volume 57, Number 14 - March 18, 1993. 24 pages
Testing iPad in the field: use of a relational database in garbological research
Recording thousands of entries during field research poses a challenge to any field researcher. Contemporary handheld computers offer affordable solutions, which can resolve this challenge. In this paper, we test the iPad tablet computer and FileMaker Go database to conduct garbological research carried out in West Bohemia (Czech Republic). Garbological research based on the collection of data about human waste requires not only efficient tools for recording a vast number of individual garbage items on the spot but also integration of multiple analytical levels in a database. Our research was aimed at household waste to illuminate consumption patterns and mobility of humans and things in contemporary Central European settings. The iPad was used to collect textual and visual data and integrate these in a relational database. We describe our methodology and experience with this kind of technology. The iPad and FileMaker Go proved to be well suited to challenging field conditions in the landfill, data collection was efficient and reliable, the database was flexible because its basic features could be modified in the field, and one could even examine preliminary trends in the data using charts in FileMaker Go. The proposed hardware and software is less efficient for the collection of precise spatial data, preparation of accurate drawings, and for projects in remote areas without good access to an electrical grid
Spartan Daily, February 16, 1939
Volume 27, Issue 86https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/spartandaily/2876/thumbnail.jp
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