3,001 research outputs found

    sj-docx-1-msj-10.1177_13524585231181841 – Supplemental material for Inverse association between Mediterranean diet and risk of multiple sclerosis

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    Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-msj-10.1177_13524585231181841 for Inverse association between Mediterranean diet and risk of multiple sclerosis by Lars Alfredsson, Tomas Olsson and Anna Karin Hedström in Multiple Sclerosis Journal</p

    Uteslutna associationer, språkvåld och återideologisering hos Anna Hallberg och Lars Mikael Raattamaa

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    Johan Alfredsson, Department of Literature, History of Ideas, and Religion, University ofGothenburg Excluded Associations, Violence of Language and Re-ideologisation in Anna Hallberg and Lars Mikael Raattamaa (Uteslutna associationer, Språkvåld och återideologisering hos Anna Hallberg och Lars Mikael Raattamaa) The purpose of this article is to study what the French linguist Jean-Jacques Lecercle identified as “the remainder of language” in his book The Violence of Language (1990), and how this is put into play in two poetry books from 2008, by the Swedish poets Anna Hallberg and Lars Mikael Raattamaa. By explicitly challenging a large number of conventions of language, typography, and poetry, these books raise critical issues on how the language system works. These issues specifically concern what parts and aspects of language are allowed into the linguistic system, and what parts and aspects are kept out. These regulatory mechanisms are demonstrated, and scrutinised, in these books — making them meta-critical, as well as ideology-critical. This scrutiny not only shows the relevance of identifying and understanding the mechanisms of exclusion that Lecercle identified among academic linguistics 25 years ago. It also brings them into contemporary society, where they – due to globalisation and technological development — have disseminated, and become part of almost everyone’s daily experience. The results of the article stress how this dissemination increases the societal relevance of the kind of scrutiny undertaken by Hallberg and Raattamaa, and how it can assist in re-ideologising language

    Uteslutna associationer, språkvåld och återideologisering hos Anna Hallberg och Lars Mikael Raattamaa [Elektronisk resurs]

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    Johan Alfredsson, Department of Literature, History of Ideas, and Religion, University ofGothenburgExcluded Associations, Violence of Language and Re-ideologisation in Anna Hallberg and Lars Mikael Raattamaa (Uteslutna associationer, Språkvåld och återideologisering hos Anna Hallberg och Lars Mikael Raattamaa)The purpose of this article is to study what the French linguist Jean-Jacques Lecercle identified as “the remainder of language” in his book The Violence of Language (1990), and how this is put into play in two poetry books from 2008, by the Swedish poets Anna Hallberg and Lars Mikael Raattamaa. By explicitly challenging a large number of conventions of language, typography, and poetry, these books raise critical issues on how the language system works. These issues specifically concern what parts and aspects of language are allowed into the linguistic system, and what parts and aspects are kept out. These regulatory mechanisms are demonstrated, and scrutinised, in these books — making them meta-critical, as well as ideology-critical. This scrutiny not only shows the relevance of identifying and understanding the mechanisms of exclusion that Lecercle identified among academic linguistics 25 years ago. It also brings them into contemporary society, where they – due to globalisation and technological development — have disseminated, and become part of almost everyone’s daily experience. The results of the article stress how this dissemination increases the societal relevance of the kind of scrutiny undertaken by Hallberg and Raattamaa, and how it can assist in re-ideologising language.</p

    Bolinder and Alfredsson Respond

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    Reptricket. Förord till Lars Gustafsson: Mot noll

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    Introduction to a collection of philosophical essays by Swedish author Lars Gustafsson (b. 1936)

    Author Functions in Lars Kepler\u27s The Hypnotist: An Analysis

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    This paper examines Foucault\u27s notion of the author function as it pertains to Lars Kepler\u27s bestselling 2011 crime thriller, The Hypnotist. Lars Kepler is the pseudonym of a Swedish husband-wife writing duo, making him the perfect subject for analysis centering on illusory notion of the author. This paper will answer these questions: Who is the true author of The Hypnotist? What factors influence the author function of this bestelling novel? And what can The Hypnotist phenomenon tell us about the relationships between authors and their readers? This paper will demonstrate that no literary works may be ascribed to an individual person, and that authors hold no privileged knowledge of the works they produce, because authors cease to be authors the moment pen is lifted from page

    MSJ877685_supplemental_tables – Supplemental material for The influence of human leukocyte antigen-DRB1*15:01 and its interaction with smoking in MS development is dependent on DQA1*01:01 status

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    Supplemental material, MSJ877685_supplemental_tables for The influence of human leukocyte antigen-DRB1*15:01 and its interaction with smoking in MS development is dependent on DQA1*01:01 status by Anna Karin Hedström, Ola Hössjer, Jan Hillert, Pernilla Stridh, Ingrid Kockum, Tomas Olsson and Lars Alfredsson in Multiple Sclerosis Journal</p

    The Politics of Form – Lars-Mikael Raattamaa and Anna Hallberg

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    What happens when a writer crosses the boundaries of literature? This is a question which it is quite pointless to ask, unless you state your theoretical point of departure. When that has been done, however, it is one of the most important issues which a literary scholar can raise. Through certain parts of the theories of Jean-Jacques Lecercle (mainly his concept of the “remainder” in language), Marjorie Perloff (mainly her discussions of how free verse is convention-based, and of what comes out of that insight: what she labels “after free verse”), and Jacques Rancière (mainly his concepts “polis” and “the political”), I aim to discuss what happens when Swedish contemporary poets Anna Hallberg and Lars-Mikael Raattamaa during recent years have sought to actively cross the boundaries of literature. These theoretical perspectives enable me to dwell on the political implications of this kind of boundary-crossing. This political dimension consists of a critique not only of the conventions of literature, but also of the modernist view of e.g. free verse. The crossing of literature’s boundaries not only moves them. More importantly, in these cases, it identifies them; it even highlights them, rendering them open for scrutiny

    Uteslutna associationer, språkvåld och återideologisering hos Anna Hallberg och Lars Mikael Raattamaa Excluded Associations, Violence of Language and Re-ideologisation in Anna Hallberg and Lars Mikael Raattamaa

    No full text
    The purpose of this article is to study what the French linguist Jean-Jacques Lecercle identified as ”the remainder of language” in his book The Violence of Language (1990), and how this is being put into play in two poetry books from 2008, by the Swedish poets Anna Hallberg and Lars Mikael Raattamaa. By explicitly challenging a large number of conventions of language, typography, and poetry, these books raise critical issues on how the language system works. These issues specifically concern what parts and aspects of language are allowed in within the linguistic system, and what parts and aspects are being kept out. These regulational mechanisms are demonstrated, and scrutinised, in these books – giving them touches of meta-critique, as well as of ideology critique. This scrutiny not only shows the relevance of identifying and understanding the mechanisms of exclusion that Lecercle identified within academic linguistics 25 years ago. It also brings them into contemporary society, where they – due to globalisation, and technological development – have disseminated, and become part of almost everyone’s daily experience. The results of the article stress how this dissemination increases the societal relevance of the kind of scrutiny undertaken by Hallberg and Raattamaa, and how it can assist in re-ideologising language
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