1,508 research outputs found

    Approaches to the use of iconography in historical reconstruction, and the curious case of Renaissance Welsh harp technique

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    It is an oft-repeated clichĆ© that ā€˜smart is sexy,ā€™ and while cynics may find plenty of reason to scoff at the thought, some solace can be taken in the economic success and increase in the social cachet of the ā€˜historically informed performanceā€™ (or HIP) movement. Countless millions of people over the last thirty years have been drawn to the world of medieval and renaissance music, many as a result of the exciting new sounds created through the thoughtful synthesis of artistic and intellectual sensibility demonstrated in historical reconstructions of early instruments and their playing techniques. In light of this economic and cultural success, it therefore seems fitting to take a step back and think about how individuals today arrive at a view of historical reality in the world of instrumental performance, especially when faced with images and artifacts which may be interpreted in many different ways. This research, as ā€˜an authentic expression of our contemporary cultural condition bringing new experiences and insights into our world,ā€™ 1 is immensely valuable. However, are we justified in going further and asserting that our modern reconstructive work sheds light on ā€˜the way things actually were,ā€™ or in other words, that it reveals objective historical truth? In the following pages I will take a closer look at the research methodology of historically informed performance and propose a refinement based on a probabilistic analysis of the data produced. While the areas of research which might benefit from such an inquiry are virtually unlimited, my specific focus for the purposes of this exercise is the harp technique in late medieval and early renaissance Wales. This is one branch of the musicological tree which remains relatively infrequently visited in early music circles, yet one which, as we will see, is richly rewarding when explored through the multifaceted methodology and interdisciplinary orientation of modern HIP research

    Investigation of three classes of composite materials for space vehicle application

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    Three classes of composite materials for space vehicle applicatio

    Should We Presume State Protection?

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    Professors Hathaway and Macklin debate the legality of the ā€œpresumption of state protectionā€ that the Supreme Court of Canada established as a matter of Canadian refugee law in the Ward decision. Professor Hathaway argues that this presumption should be rejected because it lacks a sound empirical basis and because it conflicts with the relatively low evidentiary threshold set by the Refugee Conventionā€™s ā€œwell-founded fearā€ standard. Professor Macklin contends that the Ward presumption does not in and of itself impose an unduly onerous burden on claimants, and that much of the damage wrought by the presumption comes instead from misinterpretation and misapplication of the Supreme Courtā€™s dictum by lower courts

    Should We Presume State Protection?

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    Professors Hathaway and Macklin debate the legality of the ā€œpresumption of state protectionā€ that the Supreme Court of Canada established as a matter of Canadian refugee law in the Ward decision. Professor Hathaway argues that this presumption should be rejected because it lacks a sound empirical basis and because it conflicts with the relatively low evidentiary threshold set by the Refugee Conventionā€™s ā€œwell-founded fearā€ standard. Professor Macklin contends that the Ward presumption does not in and of itself impose an unduly onerous burden on claimants, and that much of the damage wrought by the presumption comes instead from misinterpretation and misapplication of the Supreme Courtā€™s dictum by lower courts.Les professeurs Hathaway et Macklin reconsideĢ€rent la leĢgaliteĢ de la Ā«preĢsomption de la protection de lā€™EĢtatĀ» que La Cour supreĢ‚me du Canada avait promulgeĢ comme principe de droit canadien en matieĢ€re de reĢfugieĢs dans le jugement Ward. Le professeur Hathaway soutient que cette preĢsomption devrait eĢ‚tre rejeteĢe en raison de son manque de fondement empirique rigoureux ainsi que de son incompatibiliteĢ avec le niveau de preuve relative-ment faible impliqueĢ par la norme de Ā«crainte justifieĢeĀ» eĢtablie par la Convention relative au statut des reĢfugieĢs. La professeure Macklin estime que la preĢsomption Ward nā€™impose gueĢ€re en soi un fardeau excessivement lourd sur les demandeurs, et que la plupart des probleĢ€mes engendreĢs par la preĢsomption deĢcoulent des erreurs dā€™interpreĢtation ou dā€™application de la deĢcision de la Cour supreĢ‚me de la part des tribunaux infeĢrieurs

    Phylogenetic signal in phonotactics

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    Phylogenetic methods have broad potential in linguistics beyond tree inference. Here, we show how a phylogenetic approach opens the possibility of gaining historical insights from entirely new kinds of linguistic data ā€“ in this instance, statistical phonotactics. We extract phonotactic data from 112 Pama-Nyungan vocabularies and apply tests for phylogenetic signal, quantifying the degree to which the data reflect phylogenetic history. We test three datasets: (1) binary variables recording the presence or absence of biphones (two-segment sequences) in a lexicon (2) frequencies of transitions between segments, and (3) frequencies of transitions between natural sound classes. Australian languages have been characterized as having a high degree of phonotactic homogeneity. Nevertheless, we detect phylogenetic signal in all datasets. Phylogenetic signal is greater in finer-grained frequency data than in binary data, and greatest in natural-class-based data. These results demonstrate the viability of employing a new source of readily extractable data in historical and comparative linguistics.1. Introduction 1.1 Motivations 1.2 Phonotactics as a source of historical signal 2. Phylogenetic signal 3. Materials 3.1 Language sample 3.2 Wordlists 3.3 Reference phylogeny 4. Phylogenetic signal in binary phonotactic data 4.1 Results for binary phonotactic data 4.2 Robustness checks 5. Phylogenetic signal in continuous phonotactic data 5.1 Robustness checks 5.2 Forward transitions versus backward transitions 5.3 Normalization of character values 6. Phylogenetic signal in natural-class-based characters 6.1 Natural-class-based characters versus biphones 7. Discussion 7.1 Overall robustness 7.2 Limitations 8. Conclusio

    The Mesolithic-Neolithic transition in western Scotland and its European context

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    The transition is considered in terms of four related questions: (i) HOW did the shift from foraging to farming happen? (ii) WHY did it happen? (iii) WHEN did it happen? (iv) WHY did it happen WHEN it did? The adoption of farming coincided with a shift to a more continental-type climate with lower winter precipitation, which improved the prospects for cereal cultivation. It is sug- gested that this was a key factor in the transition from Mesolithic to Neolithic across north-west Eu- rope as a whole.Mezolitsko-neolitski prehod obravnavamo glede na Ŕtiri povezana vpraŔanja: (i) KAKO se je zgodil prehod iz lovstva-nabiralniŔtva v kmetovanje? (ii) ZAKAJ se je zgodil? (iii) KDAJ se je zgodil? (iv) ZAKAJ se je zgodil, KO se je zgodil? Do prevzema kmetovanja je priŔlo v času, ko so klimatske razmere postale bolj kontinentalne in zimske padavine manj obilne. To je izboljŔalo pogoje za gojenje žit. Menimo, da je bil to ključni dejavnik za prehod iz mezolitika v neolitik v celotni severozahodni Evropi
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