278 research outputs found
Gayatri Rajapatni's Leadership Strategy as a Revolutionary Woman Designer of the Majapahit Empire's Vision
Modern societies view women as equal to men, especially in government. conversely, societies with traditional stigmas view women as having power only in the domestic sphere. Historically, Javanese women, particularly in the ancient Javanese era, held a strategic position in shaping government policy. This is evident in the presence of Gayatri Rajapatni in the Majapahit Kingdom. Gayatri served as an advisor to the king and a policy maker, although she was not legally the queen. This study aims to determine the leadership strategy of Gayatri Rajapatni, a figure behind the success of Majapahit. This study used historical research methods and resulted in an analysis of Gayatri Rajapatni's leadership strategy in building the Majapahit Empire. The author concludes that Gayatri Rajapatni employed various leadership strategies to implement her vision for Majapahit's glory, namely by developing tactics and leadership patterns inherited from her father (Kertanegara)
Critical intimacy: an interview with Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak
Purpose
This paper is an interview with Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, whose work is inspiration for this special issue.
Design/methodology/approach
Public radio interview methodology was used.
Findings
This paper provides autobiographical reflections by Spivak.
Practical implications
The paper provides a glimpse into Spivak’s reflections on her life and work and its impact on her practice.
Originality/value
This is an excerpt of a previously published interview, included here by permission, and adds value to the special issue with insights from the author of “Can the Subaltern Speak?”.
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Gayatri Spivak: ethics, subalternity and the critique of postcolonial reason
This study offers an advanced and sustained analysis of Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak’s thought. In particular, it traces the ethical dimension of Spivak’s thought in and through her persistent critique of Marxism, feminism, deconstruction and postcolonial studies. In so doing, the book seeks to argue that what underpins Spivak’s essays and interventions is a political commitment to achieve what she calls a relation of ethical singularity with the subaltern. The book offers a concise and authoritative introduction to the work of this increasingly important thinker; it is written by an author with an established reputation as a critic and interpreter of Spivak's work; it provides an in-depth analysis of Spivak's relationship to postcolonialism, feminism, Marxism, and subaltern studies; it deals with the complete trajectory of Spivak's writing, from her early translations of Derrida, to her recent contributions to debates on human rights, terrorism and globalization; and it addresses some of Spivak's most recent writings
Rekonseptualisasi Lembaga Keamanan Laut sebagai Upaya Mewujudkan Indonesia Menjadi Negara Poros Maritim. AUTHOR: Alfian Nur Salsabila, Gayatri Galuh Pertiwi, Popi Fitriyah Dewi
Rekonseptualisasi Lembaga Keamanan Laut sebagai Upaya Mewujudkan Indonesia Menjadi Negara Poros Maritim
Alfian Nur Salsabila, Gayatri Galuh Pertiwi, Popi Fitriyah Dew
Fanon and the intelligent machine; concerning violence, Part 2. Reflections from a conversation with Gayatri Spivak
Taking the form of a series of reflections emerging from a conversation between the author and critic Gayatri Spivak, this article turns the exploration of the question concerning violence to the significance of Frantz Fanon as healer, image, exemplar and, following the term coined by cinema philosopher and filmmaker Jean Epstein, photo-electric psychoanalyst. It advances on the exploration of the significance of the cinematographer and the camera as a tool for acceleration that by focusing on discontinuity allows a singular attention to voices that utter and images or gazes that confront us with contradiction thereby permitting to verify the universality of forms of justice and subjectivities in search for justice and liberation
Calculation of collision probability for autonomous vehicles using trajectory prediction
The aim of this thesis is to create a decision making algorithm. The goal would be to check the feasibility of the current maneuver by nding the probability of collision between the subject and target vehicles. These outputs can be used by other Advanced Driver Assistance System (ADAS) features including path planner, lateral control, longitudinal control, etc. We make use of some sensors like camera/radar (simulated data) and fuse these together for better estimation of measurements. With earlier experience with cameras, they are really poor at giving longitudinal distances whereas radars give more accurate measurements longitudinally. Using these measurements about targets ahead in the environment, we predict the trajectories of the obstacles/targets as well as the subject vehicle (autonomous vehicle). The algorithm predicts if it is safe to continue with the current maneuver in the near future for several seconds ahead of time, and makes the decision if the maneuver is possible. The results are obtained using probabilistic approach whether the future trajectories are going to collide. The thesis primarily focuses on target tracking, e cient sensor data fusion and future collision estimation. With the lessons learnt using existing literature an e cient approach is employed. The simulation is performed in PreScan simulator and MATLAB. Enhancements in the sensor data fusion using standby measurements and quasi-decentralized approach to combine measurements to yield improved results and achieve better scalability are proposed and implemented.M.S.Includes bibliographical referencesby Gayatri Powa
The good parodist: beyond images of escape in the fiction of Doris lessing
In her earlier fiction, Doris Leasing presents images of escape from what Cohen and Taylor term "everyday life”. These images of escape, such as the vision of the "noble city, set four-square" in Martha Quest and Martha's plunge into the muddy veld pothole in A Proper Marriage, are framed by realism. In positing an escape from 'realism'(understood as both literary form and "everyday reality") they suggest the inadequacy of realism. However, the success of these images is limited as they attempt to posit an "outside", a project which postmodernism has taught us, is bound to fail. Lessing increasingly replaces these images of escape with parody. Parody more fundamentally interrogates realism and allows Lessing to negotiate an escape whilst recognizing her implication in contemporary society. My model of parody takes its lead from Linda Hutcheon's consideration of "serious parody", as marking "the intersection of creation and re-creation, of invention and critique" (A Theory of Parody, 1985). This, I argue, is the intersection of Lessing's political and aesthetic projects. Lessing's use of parody also provides her with a useful strategy for negotiating subjectivity. I argue that whilst she questions the liberal humanist self, she does not completely reject it. She is "post-humanist" rather than "anti-humanist". Lessing's "space fiction" seems to signal a return to the project of positing an "outside" implied by her images of escape. However, I illustrate how her space fiction is equally subject to the problematic politics of parody. Just as parody "installs" a pre-existing text to "subvert" it, so space fiction "installs" the Earth in order to critique it. The "dual-codedness" of parody is, I conclude, perfect for Lessing's multiple projects
Pal Interpolation of Integral Types
In this paper, the author(s) discuss existence and uniqueness results of three so-called integral types of Pal interpolation schemes which are interesting extensions/ generalizations of classical Hermite-Fejer Interpolation problem. The results are of interest to approximation theory
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