18,471 research outputs found

    Psychoanalytic theory and textual interpretation

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    The affective underpinnings of soft power

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    The concept of soft power occupies a prominent place in International Relations, foreign policy, and security studies. Primarily developed by Joseph S. Nye, the concept is typically drawn upon to emphasize the more intangible dimensions of power in a field long dominated by overtly material (i.e. military) power. Recently, some scholars have reframed soft power — specifically the key notion of attraction — as a narrative and linguistic process. This literature, however, has downplayed some of the other deep-seated underpinnings of soft power, which this article argues lie in the dynamics of affect. Building upon the International Relations affect and aesthetics literatures, this article develops the concept of soft power as rooted in the political dynamics of emotion and introduces the concept of affective investment. The attraction of soft power stems not only from its cultural influence or narrative construction, but more fundamentally from audiences’ affective investments in the images of identity that it produces. The empirical import of these ideas is offered in an analysis of the construction of American attraction in the war on terror

    Fourth-order flows in surface modelling

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    This short article is a brief account of the usage of fourth-order curvature flow in surface modelling

    Anesthetizing the Public Conscience: Lethal Injection and Animal Euthanasia

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    Identity, affective attachments, and US-Iranian nuclear politics

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    Blind Dates: When Should the Statute of Limitations Begin to Run on a Method-of-Execution Challenge?

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    This Article is the first to take a comprehensive look at the issue of statute-of-limitations accrual in method-of-execution cases. In other words, when does the clock start ticking on a death row inmate\u27s right to challenge the way in which the state intends to execute him? Most circuit courts have held that method-of-execution challenges accrue at the completion of the direct appeal process. This means that death row inmates in these jurisdictions must file method-of-execution challenges years, and sometimes even decades, before an actual execution is scheduled. Although this approach has been the subject of much criticism, even the dissenting view would tie the accrual date to a particular stage of the death row inmate\u27s appeals
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