99 research outputs found
Agency in an African city : the various trajectories through time and space of the public market
Kinshasa, the former Léopoldville, developed in less than one century from a few pre-colonial settlements into a metropolis of almost ten million people. In the city, the marketplace has always been at the centre of contemporary debates on public space and, therefore, its various trajectories through time and space reveal much about the origins and forces that shaped the city.
Drawing on published material, archival documents from both Belgium and Congo, and fieldwork, this paper not only tells the history of one of Kinshasa’s most important places, it highlights the multiple and often intricate processes of agency between local and foreign actors that are at the core of Kinshasa’s urban identity. Through the micro-study of the marketplace different issues are touched upon such as the limits of colonial and postcolonial planning, the contestation and appropriation of colonial and post-colonial rule by local actors and the role
of intermediary population groups in the production of space of African cities.Department of Culture, Delegation of the Flemish Government in
South Africa, Embassy of Belgiumhttps://africanperspectivesconference.wordpress.com
Displacement & domesticity since 1945 : refugees, migrants and expats making homes : following the EAHN's sixth thematic conference (Brussels, 27-28 march 2019)
In the recent history of globalisation and mass human displacement, the practical and epistemological tools of architecture play a role in revealing the multi-faceted relationship between migration and home. The goal of the European Architectural History Network's sixth thematic conference was to illuminate and critically reflect on the conceptual role and socio-material expressions of domesticity employed in response to displacement in contemporary history, beginning with the year 1945. Many of the papers reflected a deep interest in the processes involved in thinking, building and preserving home as well as the growing importance of interdisciplinary and cross-cultural collaborations. Inspired by this, we seek to prompt ways, especially from within the architectural discipline and community, to conceive of alternative epistemological and heuristic frameworks for integrating interdisciplinary knowledge
Consumption patterns and living conditions inside Het Steen, the late medieval prison of Malines (Mechelen, Belgium)
Excavations at the Main Square (Grote Markt) of Malines (Mechelen, Belgium) have unearthed the building remains of a tower, arguably identifiable as the former town prison: Het Steen. When this assumption is followed, the contents of the fills of two cesspits dug out in the cellars of the building illustrate aspects of daily life within the early 14th-century prison. An integrated approach of all find categories, together with the historical context available, illuminates aspects of the material culture of the users of the cesspits, their consumption patterns and the living conditions within the building
Postcolonial manifestations of African spatiality in Europe : the invisible 'public' spaces of Ghent
The focus of this chapter is on everyday spaces of African migration in the mid-sized city of Ghent. One manifestation of African spatiality is discussed in-depth in relation to its (in)visibility and publicity: an African shop located in an ordinary terraced house. With no less than 12 activities taking place in the building, the shop is rather a “public” place than solely a space of commercial transactions, although this is not signaled in very visible ways. By analyzing the modest stylistic appropriations of the façade and the significant re-arrangements of the buildings’ interior spaces that challenge more conventional usages of spaces in Ghent’s ordinary houses, this chapter puts this African shop to the fore as emblematic of how the process of materialization of transnational lifestyles and connections is always a balancing act between the visibility necessary for functioning as a (semi-)pubic place and the invisibility required to circumvent hegemonic regulatory regimes
Properties of the H-alpha-emitting Circumstellar Regions of Be Stars
Long-baseline interferometric observations obtained with the Navy Prototype
Optical Interferometer of the H-alpha-emitting envelopes of the Be stars eta
Tauri and beta Canis Minoris are presented. For compatibility with the
previously published interferometric results in the literature of other Be
stars, circularly symmetric and elliptical Gaussian models were fitted to the
calibrated H-alpha observations. The models are sufficient in characterizing
the angular distribution of the H-alpha-emitting circumstellar material
associated with these Be stars. To study the correlations between the various
model parameters and the stellar properties, the model parameters for eta Tau
and beta CMi were combined with data for other Be stars from the literature.
After accounting for the different distances to the sources and stellar
continuum flux levels, it was possible to study the relationship between the
net H-alpha emission and the physical extent of the H-alpha-emitting
circumstellar region. A clear dependence of the net H-alpha emission on the
linear size of the emitting region is demonstrated and these results are
consistent with an optically thick line emission that is directly proportional
to the effective area of the emitting disk. Within the small sample of stars
considered in this analysis, no clear dependence on the spectral type or
stellar rotation is found, although the results do suggest that hotter stars
might have more extended H-alpha-emitting regions.Comment: 24 pages, 16 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
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COVID-19 Roundtable
The past year was an unprecedentedly challenging period to humanity. The very concept of a pandemic indicates a profound impact across different regions and societal strata, rendering the idea of unscathed human lives almost unimaginable. Still, this image of COVID-19 as a global threat menacing us all must not be allowed to efface the specificity of individual or communal struggles. This caveat is particularly relevant in the context of gender and diversity studies – the pertinence of which has been underscored countlessly over the past months, especially in policy recommendations to the COVID-19 pandemic. From the disproportionately severe measures aggravating isolation and destitution among the elderly to the coalescence of sanitary regulations and the BLM protests or the fire in the Moria refugee camp and the resulting urgency to address the wellbeing of displaced people: issues that relate intimately to notions of marginalization continually surface adjacent to the health crisis proper. Whether explicitly or implicitly, these circumstances call for gender and diversity scholars to commit their expertise to the benefit of those inordinately affected by COVID-19 and the array of responses it has evoked worldwide. At the same time, the conditions affecting these groups and individuals also affect research activities and advocacy work on gender and diversity, inhibiting the active commitment and scholarly involvement the situation demands. In this Spring 2021 General Issue, the Journal of Diversity and Gender Studies (DiGeSt) sought to explore the paradoxes, contradictions and tensions scholars in our field have faced and continue to face during the current COVID-19 crisis. Transcending a formally academic register, the roundtable includes personal, situated accounts that engage tensions between the pandemic and scholarly work in diversity and gender studies
Determining the Physical Properties of the B Stars II. Calibration of Synthetic Photometry
We present a new calibration of optical (UBV, Stromgren, uvby-beta, and
Geneva) and near IR (Johnson RIJHK and 2MASS) photometry for B and early A
stars derived from Kurucz (1991) Atlas model atmospheres. Our sample of stars
consists of 45 normal, nearby B and early A stars which have high quality, low
resolution IUE spectra and accurate Hipparcos parallaxes. The calibration is
unique because it relies only on the UV spectral energy distributions, the
absolute flux calibration of the V filter and the Hipparcos distances to
determine the appropriate model atmospheres for the program stars. These models
are then used to calibrate the synthetic photometry. We compare our results
with previous, well accepted results and provide a thorough discussion of the
random errors and systematic effects affecting the calibration. In particular,
we demonstrate the influence of vsini on surface gravities derived from fitting
model atmospheres. Finally, we discuss some of our intended applications of
this new calibration.Comment: 56 pages, 11 Figures, electronic tables not included. To appear in
AJ, March 200
Ages of A-type Vega-like stars from uvby Photometry
We have estimated the ages of a sample of A-type Vega-like stars by using
Str\"{o}mgren \emph{uvby$\beta} photometric data and theoretical evolutionary
tracks. We find that 13 percent of these A stars have been reported as
Vega-like stars in the literature and that the ages of this subset run the
gamut from very young (50~Myr) to old (1~Gyr), with no obvious age difference
compared to those of field A stars. We clearly show that the fractional IR
luminosity decreases with the ages of Vega-like stars.Comment: 4pages text, 3 tables, 3 figures, Accepted in Ap
Depth of reading vocabulary in hearing and hearing-impaired children
The main point of our study was to examine the vocabulary knowledge of pupils in grades 3–6, and in particular the relative reading vocabulary disadvantage of hearing-impaired pupils. The achievements of 394 pupils with normal hearing and 106 pupils with a hearing impairment were examined on two vocabulary assessment tasks: a lexical decision task and a use decision task. The target words in both tasks represent the vocabulary children should have at the end of primary school. The results showed that most hearing pupils reached this norm, whereas most hearing-impaired pupils did not. In addition, results showed that hearing-impaired pupils not only knew fewer words, but that they also knew them less well. This lack of deeper knowledge remained even when matching hearing and hearing-impaired children on minimal word knowledge. Additionally, comparison of the two tasks demonstrated the efficacy of the lexical decision task as a measure of lexical semantic knowledge
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