443 research outputs found

    The Perception of Coincidence: Artistic Symmetry in the Wandering Rocks Episode of James Joyce\u27s Ulysses

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    James Joyce\u27s Ulysses, the most influential novel of the twentieth century, has often been criticized for its fragmentation and complexity. Impenetrable to some readers, misunderstood by others, Ulysses bears within its eighteen episodes a symmetry of subject and form that at once clarifies and multiplies the meanings to be found there. Richard Ellmann calls Joyce\u27s theory of art the perception of coincidence, a theory best exemplified by Wandering Rocks, the central episode of Ulysses. The use of symmetrical coincidence in \u27\u27Wandering Rocks can be seen in two ways: 1)the internal structure of the episode, and 2)its location among the other episodes in the novel. The analysis of this episode\u27s internal structure takes three directions. The first involves tracing the three major journeys against which the rest of the action is laid. Father Conmee, the Elijah skiff, and William Mumble all navigate their ways through the labyrinthine Dublin of 1904, establishing a compass-like symmetry within the episode. A second form of symmetry is brought to the episode by its nineteen sections and the thirty-three co-incidents which intersperse them. These narrative threads connect disparate characters and scenes, weaving a pattern of narration that is web-like in its reader traps and in its overall congruency. The third feature of this episode\u27s balance involves the depiction of Leopold Bloom and Stephen Dedalus. Bloom stands immobile at the very center of the novel of which he is the hero, and Stephen appears in scenes neatly framing our modern Odysseus. The second topic of discussion here is the relationship Wandering Rocks bears to the other chapters in Ulysses. Wandering Rocks, the tenth episode of eighteen in the book, functions as a link between the first and second halves of the novel and also serves as a microcosm of the whole. One way in which Wandering Rocks fills these roles is in its narrative style. Many voices and phrases appear here that either recall or forecast elements in other parts of Ulysses. Thematically, too, Wandering Rocks occupies an important position among the other chapters. The actions and thoughts of the principal players in this episode, the thematic considerations offered in Joyce\u27s own schema for the novel, and the correlations between each section in Wandering Rocks and each episode in the novel further establish the notion of symmetrical coincidence and its special significance to us as readers of Ulysses

    Approaches to the synthesis of bruceantin

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    Applying seamful design in location-based mobile museum applications

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    The application of mobile computing is currently altering patterns of our behavior to a greater degree than perhaps any other invention. In combination with the introduction of power-efficient wireless communication technologies, such as Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE), designers are today increasingly empowered to shape the way we interact with our physical surroundings and thus build entirely new experiences. However, our evaluations of BLE and its abilities to facilitate mobile location-based experiences in public environments revealed a number of potential problems. Most notably, the position and orientation of the user in combination with various environmental factors, such as crowds of people traversing the space, were found to cause major fluctuations of the received BLE signal strength. These issues are rendering a seamless functioning of any location-based application practically impossible. Instead of achieving seamlessness by eliminating these technical issues, we thus choose to advocate the use of a seamful approach, that is, to reveal and exploit these problems and turn them into a part of the actual experience. In order to demonstrate the viability of this approach, we designed, implemented, and evaluated the Ghost Detector —an educational location-based museum game for children. By presenting a qualitative evaluation of this game and by motivating our design decisions, this article provides insight into some of the challenges and possible solutions connected to the process of developing location-based BLE-enabled experiences for public cultural spaces. This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from the Association for Computing Machinery via https://doi.org/10.1145/296272

    Mirror Energy Differences at Large Isospin Studied through Direct Two-Nucleon Knockout

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    The first spectroscopy of excited states in 52Ni (Tz=2) and 51Co (Tz=-3/2) has been obtained using the highly selective two-neutron knockout reaction. Mirror energy differences between isobaric analogue states in these nuclei and their mirror partners are interpreted in terms of isospin nonconserving effects. A comparison between large scale shell-model calculations and data provides the most compelling evidence to date that both electromagnetic and an additional isospin nonconserving interactions for J=2 couplings, of unknown origin, are required to obtain good agreement.Comment: Accepted for publication in Physical Review Letter

    In The Shadows: Conservative Epistemology and Ideological Value

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    This article intervenes in the debate about the nature of conservatism. Some contributors to this debate have claimed that this ideology can be defined as an adjectival disposition. They claim, that is, that a conservative possesses an attitude towards shared values rather than a distinct set of substantive values. The following discussion interrogates this account of conservatism and concludes that it can only be coherent if we ignore the epistemological limits of conservative thinking

    The 'Parekh Report' - national identities with nations and nationalism

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    ‘Multiculturalists’ often advocate national identities. Yet few study the ways in which ‘multiculturalists’ do so and in this article I will help to fill this gap. I will show that the Commission for Multi-Ethnic Britain’s report reflects a previously unnoticed way of thinking about the nature and worth of national identities that the Commission’s chair, and prominent political theorist, Bhikhu Parekh, had been developing since the 1970s. This way of thinking will be shown to avoid the questionable ways in which conservative and liberal nationalists discuss the nature and worth of national identities while offering an alternative way to do so. I will thus show that a report that was once criticised for the way it discussed national identities reflects how ‘multiculturalists’ think about national identities in a distinct and valuable way that has gone unrecognised

    Rethinking the social impacts of the arts

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    The paper presents a critical discussion of the current debate over the social impacts of the arts in the UK. It argues that the accepted understanding of the terms of the debate is rooted in a number of assumptions and beliefs that are rarely questioned. The paper goes on to present the interim findings of a three‐year research project, which aims to rethink the social impact of the arts, with a view to determining how these impacts might be better understood. The desirability of a historical approach is articulated, and a classification of the claims made within the Western intellectual tradition for what the arts “do” to people is presented and discussed

    Sound archaeology: terminology, Palaeolithic cave art and the soundscape

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    This article is focused on the ways that terminology describing the study of music and sound within archaeology has changed over time, and how this reflects developing methodologies, exploring the expectations and issues raised by the use of differing kinds of language to define and describe such work. It begins with a discussion of music archaeology, addressing the problems of using the term ‘music’ in an archaeological context. It continues with an examination of archaeoacoustics and acoustics, and an emphasis on sound rather than music. This leads on to a study of sound archaeology and soundscapes, pointing out that it is important to consider the complete acoustic ecology of an archaeological site, in order to identify its affordances, those possibilities offered by invariant acoustic properties. Using a case study from northern Spain, the paper suggests that all of these methodological approaches have merit, and that a project benefits from their integration

    Liberal Warfare: A Crusade Twice Removed

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    Since the 1990s, liberal warfare has attracted a good deal of debate and commentary, virtually all of which has been framed in the secular language of rights, sovereignty, power, and legitimacy. This article, in contrast, makes religion its central analytic category. Treating liberalism as a political religion, it argues that, insofar as liberal wars are fought primarily to uphold “universal” Western values, their motivation has something in common with medieval crusades. But, because that universalist ideal is vitiated by the self-interest of states, liberal wars in fact bear closer resemblance to anachronistic attempts to revive the crusading ideal in the late Middle Ages. Thus, they represent a distant, secularized echo of a pale imitation of the Crusades—or “a crusade twice removed.
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