1,358,231 research outputs found
Alessandro Magnasco, Il ratto delle Sabine
La scheda discute un dipinto attribuito da Zeri al Magnasco anche in relazione al complesso nodo dei rapporti Magnasco-Sebastiano Ricci nella Milano fra Sei e Settecento
Pietro Baratta, St Catherine of Alexandria, Figure of a female Saint
Vengono presentate due terrecotte inedite di Pietro Baratta, lo scultore carrarese ma attivo a Venezia nel primo Settecent
Pompeo Girolamo Batoni, La Vierge en gloire avec Saint Joseph de Calasanz
La scheda presenta un dipinto inedito di Batoni conservato nel Museo Fesch di Ajacci
Un romano a Milano
Il testo ripercorre il lungo rapporto fra Federico Zeri e la città di Milano, esaminando in particolare quello con i colleghi, i collezionisti, gli antiquari, i musei
Approaches to gender mainstreaming: What's the problem (represented to be)?
Introduction: Carol Bacchi and Joan Eveline Previous chapters have made reference to the need to rethink policy as a creative (productive or constitutive) process. The major purpose of this chapter is to clarify what this means and to illustrate the usefulness of this way of thinking about policy for studying gender mainstreaming and gender analysis. The specific focus is ‘gender proofing’ in Ireland and ‘gender impact assessment’ in the Netherlands. The underlying proposition in thinking about policies as productive, or as constitutive, is that policies and policy proposals give shape and meaning to the ‘problems’ they purport to ‘address’. That is, policy ‘problems’ do not exist ‘out there’ in society, waiting to be ‘solved’ through timely and perspicacious policy interventions. Rather, specific policy proposals ‘imagine’ ‘problems’ in particular ways that have real and meaningful effects. Hence, to understand how policies operate requires that we ask of policy proposals ‘What's the Problem represented to be?’. This question forms the starting place for Bacchi's (1999; 2009a) novel method of policy analysis (elaborated below), captured in the acronym WPR. The proposition that ‘problems’ do not ‘exist’ ‘out there’ in society does not ignore or downplay the full range of troubling conditions, including the subordination of women, that characterise social relations. Instead, it insists that how ‘problems’ are represented in policies – how they are discursively produced – affects the particular understanding given to those conditions at points in time and space, and that these understandings matter.Carol Bacchi and Joan Evelin
Giovanni Battista da Carona a Vicenza, l'ultima attribuzione di Stefano Tumidei
Il contributo esamina l'attività vicentina, negli anni intorno al 1530, dello scultore Giovanni Battista da Caron
Checklist of Bernini’s Portrait Busts, pp. 283-297
Catalogo completo dell'opera ritrattistica di Bernin
Poststructural interview analysis: Politicizing "personhood"
This Appendix introduces a new poststructural approach to interview analysis. It outlines seven closely related processes that address the following questions:
• precisely what is said in the interview?
• how was it or is it possible to say those things?
• which networks of relations (discursive practices) are relevant to the interview topic?
• what do the selected “things said” produce as “subjects”, “objects” and “places”?
• how do the interviewers and interviewees problematize “what they are, what they do, and the world in which they live” (Foucault, 1986: 10)?
• which “things said” put in question pervasive ways of thinking?
• what political consequences follow from interviewers’ selection and distribution practices?Carol Bacchi and Jennifer Bonha
Girolamo Paliari
Viene qui attribuita a Girolamo Paliari, attivo a Venezia nella prima metà del Seicento, un importante scultura in marmo raffigurante una Madonna con il Bambino
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