601 research outputs found
Decorum
Before women went to work in factories during World War 2, the domestic sphere was a woman’s place. Although we are now free to venture beyond the four walls of our homes, other barriers, in the form of beauty standards and internalized expectations of femininity, control us and keep us in our place. Decorum explores the tumultuous relationship that I and many women experience with our bodies as we navigate our beauty-obsessed culture. These ceramic sculptures use distorted, fragmented, and abstracted feminine forms to illustrate the ways we restrict and contort our bodies to achieve impossible beauty ideals. Imagery referencing clothing, cosmetics, diet, weight loss and domestic decor prompts us to consider our ideas of beauty, their origins, and their effects
Lying and Perjury in Medieval Practical Thought
This is a study of medieval thought about dilemmas involving lying, justified concealment and broken promises. It argues that a distinctive way of thinking about the ethics of lying and perjury, which reasoned through cases of conscience and practical situations, first appeared in an academic context in late twelfth century scholasticism, most notably in the Summa de Sacramentis et Animae Consiliis of Peter the Chanter. It was a tradition which continued in pastoral writings of the thirteenth century, the practical moral questions addressed by theologians in universities in the second half of the thirteenth century, and in the Summae de Casibus Conscientiae of the late Middle Ages. These various genres all participated in a casuistical thought about lying and deception which centred on deciding the best course of action in non-ideal situations and offered responses that acknowledged the need to adjust one’s actions to a unique set of circumstances. In the light of this discovery, the thesis investigates the origins of the casuistical concepts of equivocation and mental reservation. These teachings, which attracted satire in the Early Modern period, first appeared in late twelfth-century cases of conscience. It has been assumed that these ideas could only earn their keep by permitting Catholics to evade the morality of lying and perjury: the medieval tradition paints a different picture. In this period, equivocation and mental reservation were part of an effort to explain how to follow the rules in ambiguous and perplexing cases. Instead of talking around the rules, these concepts were developed in order to make the rules work in exceptional situations. In Chapter 6 I show that assumptions made about early modern casuistical thought do not work for its medieval equivalent. A subsidiary argument will be that equivocation and mental reservation were not inherently academic ideas. I argue in chapter 1 that sustained thought about these questions was evinced in medieval vernacular literature quite independently from the scholastic tradition. Casuistical thought about lying and perjury existed at a deeper level in the culture
Braid groups of imprimitive complex reflection groups
We obtain new presentations for the imprimitive complex reflection groups of
type and their braid groups for . Diagrams
for these presentations are proposed. The presentations have much in common
with Coxeter presentations of real reflection groups. They are positive and
homogeneous, and give rise to quasi-Garside structures. Diagram automorphisms
correspond to group automorphisms. The new presentation shows how the braid
group is a semidirect product of the braid group of affine type
and an infinite cyclic group. Elements of are
visualized as geometric braids on strings whose first string is pure and
whose winding number is a multiple of . We classify periodic elements, and
show that the roots are unique up to conjugacy and that the braid group
is strongly translation discrete.Comment: published versio
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