232 research outputs found

    Renowned Zimbabwe Writer Chenjerai Hove Remembered

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    LSE’s Matthew Engelke paints a personal and professional portrait of one of Zimbabwe’s foremost storytellers, Chenjerai Hove

    The coffin question: death and materiality in humanist funerals

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    In this article I explore the attitudes of humanist celebrants in England to the presence of the coffin at the funerals they conduct. For these celebrants, who are members of the British Humanist Association, the coffin is something that can disrupt the integrity of “the immanent frame.” Throughout the course of the article, I relate this concern to questions of materiality and material culture, arguing, in line with a growing number of others in the human sciences, that we cannot understand secular formations without attention to its embodied and material dimensions

    "Good without God": happiness and pleasure among the humanists

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    In this article, I explore conceptions of happiness and pleasure among secular humanists in Britain. Based on fieldwork among members of the British Humanist Association, and its associated local groups, I argue that happiness for the humanists is both the promise and demand of enlightenment, of an appeal to reason over and against what they see as the irrationality of religion. For them, happiness and pleasure are subjective experiences, but they are also indices of philosophical and ethical commitments. For the humanists, in short, to be happy is to be secular

    Secular shadows: African, immanent, post-colonial

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    Almost none of the critical theory concerned with the secular addresses it in relation to sub-Saharan Africa. This is notable not least given the extent to which other post-colonial regions, such as North Africa and South Asia, are central to such discussions. It is not, however, that the critical theorists are ignoring Africanists' work; indeed, looking at the Africanist literature in any depth makes it clear that there is not, and has never been, a field of “secular studies.” Taking this observation as a point of departure, and considering it in relation to a range of classic and contemporary ethnographic cases, this paper aims to shed light (and cast shadows) on some of the key terms in current debates about the secular—terms such as immanence, the mundane, critique, and doubt. In doing so, it calls for further considerations of how to figure the Africanist canon in relation to the terms of critical theory

    Dear Max : Victor Turner From the Field in 1951

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    Increased Recombination Between Active tRNA Genes

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    Transfer RNA genes are distributed throughout eukaryotic genomes, and are frequently found as multicopy families. In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, tRNA gene transcription by RNA polymerase III suppresses nearby transcription by RNA polymerase II, partially because the tRNA genes are clustered near the nucleolus. We have tested whether active transcription of tRNA genes might also suppress recombination, since recombination between identical copies of the repetitive tRNA genes could delete intervening genes and be detrimental to survival. The opposite proved to be the case. Recombination between active tRNA genes was elevated, but only when both genes are transcribed. We also tested the effects of tRNA genes on recombination between the direct terminal repeats of a neighboring retrotransposon, since most Ty retrotransposons reside next to tRNA genes, and the selective advantage of this arrangement is not known.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/63113/1/dna.2006.25.359.pd

    Cinema Darkroom: A Deferred Rendering Framework for Large-Scale Datasets

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    This paper presents a framework that fully leverages the advantages of a deferred rendering approach for the interactive visualization of large-scale datasets. Geometry buffers (G-Buffers) are generated and stored in situ, and shading is performed post hoc in an interactive image-based rendering front end. This decoupled framework has two major advantages. First, the G-Buffers only need to be computed and stored once---which corresponds to the most expensive part of the rendering pipeline. Second, the stored G-Buffers can later be consumed in an image-based rendering front end that enables users to interactively adjust various visualization parameters---such as the applied color map or the strength of ambient occlusion---where suitable choices are often not known a priori. This paper demonstrates the use of Cinema Darkroom on several real-world datasets, highlighting CD's ability to effectively decouple the complexity and size of the dataset from its visualization

    Practising the Space Between: Embodying Belief as an Evangelical Anglican Student

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    This article explores the formation of British evangelical university students as believers. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork conducted with a conservative evangelical Anglican congregation in London, I describe how students in this church come to embody a highly cognitive, word-based mode of belief through particular material practices. As they learn to identify themselves as believers, practices of reflexivity and accountability enable them to develop a sense of narrative coherence in their lives that allows them to negotiate tensions that arise from their participation in church and broader social structures. I demonstrate that propositional belief – in contexts where it becomes an identity marker – is bound up with relational practices of belief, such that distinctions between “belief in” and “belief that” are necessarily blurred in the lives of young evangelicals
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