433 research outputs found

    LMDA Review, volume 6, issue 2

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    Contents include: Comments from the Co-Presidents, New Dramaturgs, The Following are Minutes from the Annual Meeting at the Atlanta Conference in June 1994, Announcement, New E-mail Address for Dramaturgy List, Stone Mountain Show to Soften Rebel Imagery Stone Mountain, GA (AP), and The Publication of What is Dramaturgy.https://soundideas.pugetsound.edu/lmdareview/1011/thumbnail.jp

    LMDA Review, volume 7, issue 1

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    Contents include: Changes at LMDA, Script Exchange, Minutes from LMDA Meeting June 26, 1995, 1995 Conference Rehash, Toronto Conference News, New Regional Divisions Proposed, Excerpts from Robert Whitehead\u27s Keynote Address, and Check it out.https://soundideas.pugetsound.edu/lmdareview/1012/thumbnail.jp

    LMDA Review, volume 7, issue 3

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    Contents include: Sanford and Sanders Bid Fond Farewell, Greetings from Incoming President Jayme Koszyn, 1996 Rehash, Notes from the Annual General Meeting, Regional News, New Board Members, 1996 Ballot, and Member News.https://soundideas.pugetsound.edu/lmdareview/1013/thumbnail.jp

    One night in Bangkok: Western women's interactions with sexualized spaces in Thailand

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    Key words: Thailand, sex tourism, sex industry, authenticity, voyeurism, tourist experience Research on sex tourism in Thailand has often focused on western men’s sexual interactions with local women (Cohen, 1982; Enloe, 1989; Brown, 2001), and the sexualized entertainment on offer in eroticized tourist spaces/places is assumed to be aimed at western male tourists (Manderson, 1992; Bowes, 2004). While a number of academics have studied sexualized spaces and venues, little has been written on how and to what extent western women engage with this type of touristic entertainment in the Thai (sex tourism) context (Odzer, 1994; Manderson, 1995; Sikes, 2006). This is despite the fact that the number of female tourists visiting Thailand has increased over the past decade (TAT, 2007), and some evidence suggests that the sex industry in Thailand caters for female tourists (Vorakitphokatorn et al, 1994; Williams et al, 2007). This thesis will argue that western women are curious about the nature of the Thai sex industry, and that some tourist women seek to visually explore sexualized tourist areas as part of their ‘tourist experience’ in Thailand. Sex tourism is a contentious subject area, and investigating the extent to which western women might engage with the sex industry as part of their tourist experience necessitates a critical engagement with theoretical understandings of female sex tourism. The findings suggest that western women’s desire for an authentic tourist experience in Thailand facilitates their entry into sexualized zones. While the history of the sex industry in Thailand has helped to popularize its notoriety, discourses on tourist-oriented sexual spaces suggest that visiting a sexual show is something that is ‘ok’, and further is part of ‘real Thailand’. However, women’s visual engagement with the Others who inhabit these spaces reveals a darker side,and perhaps a voyeuristic desire to visit these venues. While part of their motivation to consume the sex industry stems from their understanding of the sex industry as authentically Thai, their contradictory interpretations of Thai sex workers reveals a darker, more complicated picture. This thesis will examine the lines that divide tourism from sex tourism practices to suggest that consuming difference and the desire to engage with exotic (and erotic) Others underpins all touristic engagements, including tourist interactions with the sex industry. Visual sex tourism practices will be outlined here, and current definitions of sex tourism will be deconstructed to reveal a more complicated picture of tourism/sex tourism practices, which calls for a closer examination of gendered tourism behaviors

    Architecture of the Hin Synaptic Complex during Recombination The Recombinase Subunits Translocate with the DNA Strands

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    AbstractMost site-specific recombinases can be grouped into two mechanistically distinct families. Whereas tyrosine recombinases exchange DNA strands through a Holliday intermediate, serine recombinases such as Hin generate double-strand breaks in each recombining partner. Here, site-directed protein crosslinking is used to elucidate the configuration of protein subunits and DNA within the Hin synaptic complex and to follow the movement of protein subunits during DNA strand exchange. Our results show that the protein interface mediating synapsis is localized to a region within the catalytic domains, thereby positioning the DNA strands on the outside of the Hin tetrameric complex. Unexpected crosslinks between residues within the dimerization helices provide evidence for a conformational change that accompanies DNA cleavage. We demonstrate that the Hin subunits, which are linked to the cleaved DNA ends by serine-phosphodiester bonds, translocate between synapsed dimers to exchange the DNA strands

    Immoral geographies and Soho’s sex shops: exploring spaces of sexual diversity in London

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    London’s Soho, situated in the urban heart of the city has long been understood as both a cosmopolitan and diverse space where transgression and deviance, particularly in relation to the sex industry and sexual commerce, are constitutive of this area. Drawing on three years of ethnographic fieldwork, we add to some of the existing debates on sexual spaces in Soho by documenting the changes to the social/sexual landscape of sex shops in this area, and look to geographers interested in the spatial politics of gender and sexuality to understand the importance of this particular place. Looking at two particular sex shops in Soho, we argue that the spatial practices in this very specific part of the city encourage a disruption of traditional hierarchies that often govern gender and sexed practices, and invite women, LGBTQ and kink communities to inhabit more inclusive spaces of sexual citizenshi
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