15 research outputs found

    Copyright law

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    Contents Editorial Research Articles Formats as Media of Cooperation / Axel Volmar Thematic Focus: Copyright Law Editorial: The Reference as Part of the Art Form. A Turning Point in Copyright Law? / Dagmar Hoffmann, Nadine Klass The Concept of “Pastiche” in Directive 2001/29/EC in the Light of the German Case Metall auf Metall / FrĂ©dĂ©ric Döhl Transformative Works and German Copyright Law as Matters of Boundary Work / Kamila Kempfert, Wolfgang Reißmann Negotiating Legal Knowledge, Community Values, and Entrepreneurship in Fan Cultural Production / Sophie G. EinwĂ€chter Referencing in Academia: Video Essay, Mashup, Copyright / Eckart Voigts, Katerina Marshfield Re-Use under US Copyright Law: Fair Use as a Best Practice or Just a Myth of Balance in Copyright? / Sibel Kocatepe Reports Grounded Design in a Value Sensitive Context / Volker Wulf in conversation with Batya Friedma

    Media ethnography

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    Contents Editorial Thematic Focus: Media Ethnography Media Ethnography and Participation in Online Practices / David Waldecker, Kathrin Englert, Wolfgang Ludwig-Mayerhofer, Oliver Schmidtke The Story is Everywhere. Dispersed Situations in a Literary Role Play Game / Wolfgang Reißmann Co-operation and/as Participant Observation: Reflections on Ethnographic Fieldwork in Morocco / Simon Holdermann Ethnomethodological Media Ethnography: Exploring Everyday Digital Practices in Families with Young Children / Clemens Eisenmann, Jan Peter, Erik Wittbusch Cooperation and Difference. Camera Ethnography in the Research Project ‘Early Childhood and Smartphone’ / Bina E. Mohn, Pip Hare, Astrid Vogelpohl, Jutta Wiesemann Reports Coordinations, or Computing is Work / Sebastian Gießman

    Socio-Informatics

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    Contents Editorial Thematic Focus: Socio-Informatics Introduction to the Thematic Focus “Socio-Informatics” / Claudia MĂŒller Digitalisation in Small German Metal-Working Companies. Appropriation of Technology in a “Traditional” Industrial Domain / Bernhard Nett, Jennifer Bönsch Travelling by Taxi Brousse in Madagascar: An Investigation into Practices of Overland Transportation / Volker Wulf, Kaoru Misaki, Dave Randall, and Markus Rohde Mobile and Interactive Media in the Store? Design Case Study on Bluetooth Beacon Concepts for Food Retail / Christian Reuter, Inken Leopold Facebook and the Mass Media in Tunisia / Konstantin Aal, MarĂ©n Schorch, Esma Ben Hadj Elkilani, Volker Wulf Book Review Symposium Charles Goodwin Charles Goodwin’s Co-Operative Action: The Idea and the Argument / Erhard SchĂŒttpelz, Christian Meyer Multi-Modal Interaction and Tool-Making: Goodwin’s Intuition / Christian Meyer, Erhard SchĂŒttpelz Co-Operation is a Feature of Sociality, not an Attribute of People : “We inhabit each other’s actions.” (Goodwin, cover) / Jutta Wiesemann, Klaus Amann The Making of the World in Co-Operative Action. From Sentence Construction to Cultural Evolution / JĂŒrgen Streeck On Goodwin and his Co-Operative Action / Jörg R. Bergman

    Neofaschismus in Italien. Politik, Familie und Religion in Rom. Eine Ethnographie.

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    Wie lĂ€sst sich der italienische Neofaschismus heute ĂŒber seine politischen Inhalte hinaus verstehen? Lene Fausts sozialanthropologische Studie berĂŒcksichtigt besonders mehrgenerationale BezĂŒge. Dieser innovative Ansatz erlaubt eine mehrdimensionale Interpretation des Neofaschismus als Zusammenspiel gesellschaftlicher Marginalisierungsprozesse, familiĂ€rer Dynamiken, religiöser Elemente und politischer Wirksamkeit. Indem Mechanismen der VerdrĂ€ngung und der Weitergabe von Tradition und Trauma in römischen Familien systematisch aufgearbeitet werden, kann konzise die zentrale Bedeutung des vorpolitischen Raums fĂŒr die Existenzsicherung der Subkultur in einer auf kollektivem Antifaschismus basierenden Nachkriegsrepublik erklĂ€rt werden

    Vesuv und Ätna. Zwei Vulkane, zwei Heilige.

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    Moral Challenges in Anthropological Research among Italian Neo-Fascists: The Significance of the Body

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    This paper examines moral challenges that arise when conducting anthropological research with Italian neo-fascists, and more particularly when observing a neo-fascist commemoration ceremony. Drawing on the ongoing debates about the importance of dealing with affect and emotions within anthropology, it emphasises the importance of considering moral and emotional challenges as an important source of data within research in such politically highly contested fields. A particular focus lies on related moral implications and unique insights through (bodily) co-presence for the production of anthropological knowledge. Against this background, the paper discusses the ‘double’ meaning of corporeality: on the one hand, the crucial role of corporeality within the neo-fascist subculture, especially with regard to neo-fascist rituals; on the other, the bodily dimension as an epistemological tool not only with regard to the experience of this corporeality, but also to emotions in the context of a (morally) challenging research situation. The paper makes a case against limiting the methodological repertoire of anthropological fieldwork in highly contested research fields

    Im Namen der Toten. Neofaschismus in Italien: Krieg, TĂ€terschaft und Trauma in transgenerationaler Perspektive

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    This article focuses on post-war fascism in Italy from a transgenerational perspective. It raises the question of the long-term effects of ‘historical’ scars and distortions caused by war, the perpetration of violence and trauma in family and society. The lack of reflection on the perpetuation of such scars, I argue, can contribute to subcultures establishing and developing social and political niches from which they interact with the majority society. A look at the consequences of experiences of war and the perpetration, repression and transmission of trauma and war experiences from a transgenerational perspective shows that analysing the anchoring of political culture in family spaces can provide painful insights into the ‘scarred’ culture of memory and different strategies of the political instrumentalisation of the past. Such a perspective on post-war fascism uncovers how deeply fractures or scars can be anchored in a society, how they are passed down generations and how they become permanent as a result. The transgenerational perspective is key to understanding the culture of remembrance and the neo-fascist scene in contemporary Italy, which has been consistently strong since 1945 as a consequence of the structural scarring of society over generations
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