18 research outputs found

    Eating Paradise: Food as Coloniality and Leisure

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    Sandals Resorts’ Gourmet Discovery Dining programme continues the company’s practice of marketing difference by combining tourism with the commodification of food from non-Western cultures (Dodman and Rhiney 2008). The article draws on bell hooks’ (1992) concept of ‘eating the other’ and the analysis undertakes an interdisciplinary approach that combines visual analysis with Anibal Quijano’s (2007) concept of modernity/coloniality. The discussion explores the trends of global multiculturalism that have been adopted by Sandals in a hybridized cut and mix approach to selling a packaged ideal of the Caribbean. The visual techniques devised to create a culinary holiday package are overlaid onto a manufactured and homogenised or McDonaldized (Ritzer and Liska 1997) Caribbean that provides insight into the way in which global neoliberal multiculturalism is framed by ongoing colonial relations after formal colonial rule has ended in the Caribbean region

    Off-Label Biologic Regimens in Psoriasis: A Systematic Review of Efficacy and Safety of Dose Escalation, Reduction, and Interrupted Biologic Therapy

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    Objectives: While off-label dosing of biologic treatments may be necessary in selected psoriasis patients, no systematic review exists to date that synthesizes the efficacy and safety of these off-label dosing regimens. The aim of this systematic review is to evaluate efficacy and safety of off-label dosing regimens (dose escalation, dose reduction, and interrupted treatment) with etanercept, adalimumab, infliximab, ustekinumab, and alefacept for psoriasis treatment

    The lure of postwar London:networks of people, print and organisations

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    'Vernacular Voices: Black British Poetry'

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    ABSTRACT Black British poetry is the province of experimenting with voice and recording rhythms beyond the iambic pentameter. Not only in performance poetry and through the spoken word, but also on the page, black British poetry constitutes and preserves a sound archive of distinct linguistic varieties. In Slave Song (1984) and Coolie Odyssey (1988), David Dabydeen employs a form of Guyanese Creole in order to linguistically render and thus commemorate the experience of slaves and indentured labourers, respectively, with the earlier collection providing annotated translations into Standard English. James Berry, Louise Bennett, and Valerie Bloom adapt Jamaican Patois to celebrate Jamaican folk culture and at times to represent and record experiences and linguistic interactions in the postcolonial metropolis. Grace Nichols and John Agard use modified forms of Guyanese Creole, with Nichols frequently constructing gendered voices whilst Agard often celebrates linguistic playfulness. The borders between linguistic varieties are by no means absolute or static, as the emergence and marked growth of ‘London Jamaican’ (Mark Sebba) indicates. Asian British writer Daljit Nagra takes liberties with English for different reasons. Rather than having recourse to established Creole languages, and blending them with Standard English, his heteroglot poems frequently emulate ‘Punglish’, the English of migrants whose first language is Punjabi. Whilst it is the language prestige of London Jamaican that has been significantly enhanced since the 1990s, a fact not only confirmed by linguistic research but also by its transethnic uses both in the streets and on the page, Nagra’s substantial success and the mainstream attention he receives also indicate the clout of vernacular voices in poetry. They have the potential to connect with oral traditions and cultural memories, to record linguistic varieties, and to endow ‘street cred’ to authors and texts. In this chapter, these double-voiced poetic languages are also read as signs of resistance against residual monologic ideologies of Englishness. © Book proposal (02/2016): The Cambridge History of Black and Asian British Writing p. 27 of 4

    Implementasi Algoritma Fuzzy-MADM dalam Menentukan Pola Tanaman Pangan Kabupaten Jayapura, Papua

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    Tidak diizinkan karya tersebut diunggah ke dalam aplikasi Repositori Perpustakaan Universitas karena telah diseminarkan dalam Seminar Nasional Sistem Informasi Indonesia ITS 2013.Perubahan iklim dan cuaca secara ekstrim akibat pemanasan global membuat pola tanaman pangan menajdi tidak sesuai lagi, hal inisecara berkepanjangan dapat mengakibatkan gagal panen. Tulisan ini menggunakan algoritma Fuzzy Multi-Attribute Decision Making (FMADM) untuk menentukan kesesuaian tanaman pangan. Data yang digunakan adalah data geofisika yang dimiliki oleh Dinas Pertanian dan Badan Pusat Statistik. Hasil dari penelitian ini dapat digunakan pemerintah dan petani dalam menentukan polah tanaman pangan di wilayah kabupaten Jayapura, damerekomendasikan ubi kayu dan keladi sebagai tanaman pangan yang paling sesuai dengan kondisi iklim dan cuaca.Climate change and extreme weather due to global warming make an advanced crop pattern does not fit anymore, it inisecara prolonged can result in crop failure. This paper uses an algorithm Fuzzy Multi-Attribute Decision Making (FMADM) to determine the suitability of food crops. The data used is the geophysical data held by the Department of Agriculture and the Central Bureau of Statistics. The results of this study can be used by the government and farmers in determining the doings of food crops in the Jayapura district, and recommends cassava and taro as a crop that best suits the climate and weather conditions

    In de modder der wereldstad

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    The Cambridge History of Black and Asian British Writing

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    The Cambridge History of Black and Asian British Writing provides a comprehensive historical overview of the diverse literary traditions impacting on this field's evolution, from the eighteenth century to the present. Drawing on the expertise of over forty international experts, this book gathers innovative scholarship to look forward to new readings and perspectives, while also focusing on undervalued writers, texts, and research areas. Creating new pathways to engage with the naming of a field that has often been contested, readings of literary texts are interwoven throughout with key political, social, and material contexts. In making visible the diverse influences constituting past and contemporary British literary culture, this Cambridge History makes a unique contribution to British, Commonwealth, postcolonial, transnational, diasporic, and global literary studies, serving both as one of the first major reference works to cover four centuries of black and Asian British literary history and as a compass for future scholarship
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