132 research outputs found

    Eco-aesthetic dimensions: Herbert Marcuse, ecollogy and art

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    In his last book, The Aesthetic Dimension (1978), Marcuse argued that a concern for aesthetics is justified when political change is unlikely. But the relation between aesthetics and politics is oblique: “Art cannot change the world, but it can contribute to changing the consciousness 
 of the men and women who could change the world.” (p. 33). Marcuse also linked his critique of capitalism to environmentalism in the early 1970s: “the violation of the Earth is a vital aspect of the counterrevolution.” (Ecology and Revolution, in The New Left and the 1960s, Collected Papers 3, 2005, p. 173). This article revisits Marcuse’s ideas on aesthetics and ecology, and reviews two recent art projects which engage their audiences in ecological issues: The Jetty Project (2014) by Wolfgang Weileder—which used recycled material and community participation to construct a temporary monument within a wider conservation project on the Tyne, N-E England—and Fracking Futures by HeHe (Helen Evans and Heiko Hansen)—which turned the interior of the gallery at FACT, Liverpool, into what appeared to be a fracking site. The aim is not to evaluate the projects, nor to test the efficacy of Marcuse’s ideas, more to ask again whether art has a role in a shift of attitude which might contribute to dealing with the political and economic causes of climate change

    The effects of poetry-writing SANTEL on erotic body image in remission of cancer in women: a pilot study

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    International audienceAbstract Aim: Our pilot study aims to describe the effects ofa new specific and structured protocol focused on poetic/erotic writing (named SANTEL) on the (re)sexualization ofbody image in women, who have experienced cancer.Procedure: The protocol consists of four steps: to choose alist of erotic verses focused on the body parts, to fill a semistructuredpoetic text, to write sentences after target phraseson the body; and in the end, to write a free poem. Mrs V.suffered from breast cancer, and one breast was removed.She and her husband participated in this poetic writing protocol,separately. We analyzed the linguistic metaphors ofthe body by QSR Nvivo10 software.Results: Using this protocol, we showed discourse variationsof metaphors before and after the experience of writing.Patient V used “I feel like an alien” as a starting metaphorto describe her cancer experience and after poetic writingsessions, she used other bodily metaphors like “My body isa flower” and “My sensual and white flesh”.Conclusion: This poetic perspective promises a type of“perceptive-literary surgery”, characterized by a sensualinvestment process after remission: a poetic reconstructionof erotic body image.Les effets d'un protocole d'Ă©criture poĂ©tique SANTEL sur l'image Ă©rotique du corps dans le traitement du cancer fĂ©minin : Ă©tude pilote The effects of poetry-writing SANTEL on erotic body image in remission of cancer in women: a pilot study A. Santarpia · J. TellĂšne · M. Carrier RĂ©sumĂ© Objectif : Cette Ă©tude pilote de type qualitative et exploratoire vise Ă  dĂ©crire les effets d'un nouveau protocole d'Ă©criture poĂ©tico-Ă©rotique (nommĂ©e SANTEL) sur la rĂ©Ă©ro-tisation de l'image du corps chez une femme, ayant vĂ©cu un cancer. MatĂ©riel et mĂ©thodes : Il s'agit d'un protocole composĂ© de quatre Ă©tapes : une liste des phrases Ă  caractĂšres poĂ©tiques et Ă©rotiques Ă  choisir, un texte Ă  trous Ă  remplir, des amorces de phrases ciblĂ©es sur le corps et en fin un poĂšme libre. Madame V. a subi un cancer du sein nĂ©cessitant une ablation complĂšte. Madame V. et son conjoint exĂ©cutent le protocole d'Ă©criture sĂ©parĂ©ment. Nous montrons les variations discursives des mĂ©taphores utilisĂ©es avant et aprĂšs l'expĂ©rience de l'Ă©criture, Ă  travers le logiciel d'analyse qualitative QSR NVivo10. RĂ©sultats : Madame V. passera de la mĂ©taphore initiale « je me sens une extraterrestre » vers la plus attĂ©nuĂ©e « Non. Je me dis qu'extraterrestre c'Ă©tait peut-ĂȘtre un peu Ă©norme ». En plus, elle utilisera de nouvelles mĂ©taphores linguistiques du corps pour raconter son image du corps telles que « ce corps de chair blanche » et « une fleur qui s'ouvre dĂ©licatement ». Conclusion : Cet exercice spĂ©cifique d'Ă©criture promet un type de « chirurgie perceptive-littĂ©raire » dans le processus d'investissement sensuel et affectif aprĂšs la rĂ©mission, une reconstruction perceptive et poĂ©tique de l'image Ă©rotique du corps. Mots clĂ©s MĂ©taphores perceptives · Image du corps · Cancer fĂ©minin · Corps Ă©rotique · Écriture poĂ©tique · Chirurgie perceptive-littĂ©raire · Logiciel QSR NVivo10. Abstract Aim: Our pilot study aims to describe the effects of a new specific and structured protocol focused on poetic/ erotic writing (named SANTEL) on the (re)sexualization of body image in women, who have experienced cancer. Procedure: The protocol consists of four steps: to choose a list of erotic verses focused on the body parts, to fill a semi-structured poetic text, to write sentences after target phrases on the body; and in the end, to write a free poem. Mrs V. suffered from breast cancer, and one breast was removed. She and her husband participated in this poetic writing protocol , separately. We analyzed the linguistic metaphors of the body by QSR Nvivo10 software. Results: Using this protocol, we showed discourse variations of metaphors before and after the experience of writing. Patient V used " I feel like an alien " as a starting metaphor to describe her cancer experience and after poetic writing sessions, she used other bodily metaphors like " My body is a flower " and " My sensual and white flesh ". Conclusion: This poetic perspective promises a type of " perceptive-literary surgery " , characterized by a sensual investment process after remission: a poetic reconstruction of erotic body image. Keywords Bodily metaphors · Body image · Feminine cancer · Erotic body · Poetry writing · Perceptive-literary surgery · QSR Nvivo10 software

    The Football Supporter in a Cosmopolitan Epoch

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    Arguably, the later process of globalization served to reshape how socializations are fostered and maintained across time and space. Additionally, in the last fifteen years a new phenomenon that reinvigorated time and space compression has emerged: social media. Moreover, it is argued that the conjunction of those processes can be seen as taking place on a distinct Age - the Anthropocene or the cosmopolitan epoch. Arguably those processes have the capacity to alter the way individuals enact their football fandom In this light, this paper seeks to conceptualize one particular football support identity that takes into account this fragmented period. Based on an 18-month ethnographic research with supporters of one English Premier League, this paper conceptualizes the football fan in the Anthropocene as the cosmopolitan flĂąneur. I conclude by pointing out to some prospective avenues for future research based on a cosmopolitan imagination

    Crime, media and the will-to-representation: Reconsidering relationships in the new media age

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    This paper considers the ways in which the rise of new media might challenge commonplace criminological assumptions about the crime–media interface. Established debates around crime and media have long been based upon a fairly clear demarcation between production and consumption, between object and audience – the media generates and transmits representations of crime, and audiences engage with them. However, one of the most noticeable changes occurring in the wake of the development of new media is the proliferation of self-organised production by ‘ordinary people’ – everything ranging from self-authored web pages and ‘blogs’, to self-produced video created using hand-held camcorders, camera-phones and ‘webcams’. Today we see the spectacle of people them, send them and upload them to the Internet. This kind of ‘will to representation’ may be seen in itself as a new kind of causal inducement to law- and rule-breaking behaviour. It may be that, in the new media age, the terms of criminological questioning need to be sometimes reversed: instead of asking whether ‘media’ instigates crime or fear of crime, we must ask how the very possibility of bound up with the genesis of criminal behaviour.performing acts of crime and deviance in order to recordmediating oneself to an audience through self-representation might be bound up with the genesis of criminal behaviour

    Benjamin’s ‘flñneur’ and serial murder: An ultra-realist literary case study of Levi Bellfield

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    This article seeks to develop criminological theory with the application of a literary device known as the ‘flñneur’ – an individual described as a ‘stroller’ – to serial murderer Levi Bellfield. With this application of the ‘flñneur’ to the phenomenon of serial murder, this article provides a fresh theoretical ‘lens’, and specifically sheds light on how particular serial murderers operate and evade detection in modern society. The importance of modernity to the phenomenon of serial murder is also considered utilizing Ultra-Realist theory, resulting in both a micro and macro examination into how the modern urban landscape has subsequently created an environment in which the serial killer both operates and comes to fruition. This synthesis between the application of literary devices, criminological theory and socio-cultural concepts not only raises important and previously neglected questions pertaining to serial murder, but also assists in forming the more sinister relative of the flñneur: the ‘dark flñneur’

    Provoked by Charlie Hebdo: visual satire and management studies

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    Satire, especially in visual form, has long played a significant role in balancing the powers of those in control of societies, communities or organizations. Focussing on the cover of the 'survirors' issue', the first publication of the French satirical magazine 'Charlie Hebdo' following a deadly terror attack on its staff, we explore how incongruity, irony and caricature afford visual satire its potency to provoke readers to re- consider values and beliefs. Set in contrast with the seriousness of most management research, visual satire done well can resist fixed categorizations and binary oppositions to communicate and debate sophisticated knowledge claims. The mirror play of humor and tragedy in the cover of the 'surviror's issue' prompts us to reflect upon our own academic writing practice and the possibilities of incongruity, irony and caricature for management research. Atypically, we do not begin with a gap in knowledge, but commence with the tragedy
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