6,695 research outputs found

    ADA newsletter

    No full text
    This archived document is maintained by the State Library of Oregon as part of the Oregon Documents Depository Program. It is for informational purposes and may not be suitable for legal purposes.Mode of access: Internet from the Oregon Government Publications Collection.Text in English

    The very short story in the time of revolution. al-Mihmāz (the Spur) and the Syrian author Zakariyā Tāmir

    No full text
    The mass protests swept through the Middle East in early 2011 underlined the role of modern information-communication technologies (ICT). From a literary point of view, the “Arab Spring” inevitably marked the birth of a new model of writing, characterised by a more participatory, global and immediate manner of expression that could be defined as Humanism 2.0. In this context, we may insert the experimental writing by the famous Syrian author Zakariyā Tāmir: on the al-Mihmāz (The Spur) Facebook page the writer begins a literary journey publishing daily posts and explicitly supporting the Syrian revolution. This contribution intends to analyse a few of Tāmir’s most significant posts published on Facebook. The time span is 2012, just one year after the Syrian revolution: thanks to aphorisms, posts and short stories, a new literary pact with potential readers is inaugurated, within a phenomenon that we can call al-adab al-raqmī (digital literature

    Un eccezionale Baedeker: La rappresentazione degli spazi nell’opera di Vincenzo Consolo

    No full text
    Partendo dall’evidente ricchezza di riferimenti geografi ci osservabile nell’opera di Vincenzo Consolo, il saggio si propone, mediante uno studio delle modalità di costruzione dell’immagine letteraria, di accendere l’attenzione non solo sugli spazi di cui l’autore parla direttamente, ma anche sulla nostra relazione con lo spazio. Guida dunque il lettore attraverso un universo labirintico e ‘palincestuoso’, che ha il suo centro in Sicilia e che comprende il Mediterraneo, l’Italia, il mondo intero. Invitandolo a cogliere la complessità della percezione e della rappresentazione, si sofferma sul dramma ecologico di un paesaggio costantemente a rischio e sulla crisi dell’identità umana che ne consegue. Evidenziando poi la caratterizzazione del mar Mediterraneo come spazio di molteplicità e migrazioni, lo studio rivela un’importante rifl essione autoriale sulle emergenze dei nostri giorni

    Introduction a "Iraq After 2003: When Trauma Becomes Art. Myth, History, and Literature"

    No full text
    The article aims at introducing the volume "Iraq After 2003: When Trauma Becomes Art. Myth, History, and Literature", edited By Ada Barbaro. The volume aims to provide lenses that examine, from various angles, a country, Iraq, in the aftermath of the quintessential trauma of its contemporary history, namely, 2003.The volume is thus a collection of "narratives", of narrative acts that render the relationship between reality and its discourse almost oxymoronic. The present work, born in the wake of the conference «Iraq After 2003: When Trauma Becomes Art. Myth, History, and Literature», is therefore published as an outcome of the scientific project "Forms, Languages, and [Con]texts of Tàrìkh: Writing and Rewriting History in Iraq", of which the author of these pages is the Principal Investigator

    Il culto di san Michele in Campania. Antonino e Catello

    No full text
    Il volume, diviso in quattro sezioni, approfondisce l'origine e la diffusione del culto di San Michele in Campania, nelle sue varie espressioni. Nella prima parte vengono indagati gli insediamenti micaelici, con particolare riferimento alle numerose grotte che, sull'esempio di quella garganica, furono dedicate a San Michele soprattutto lungo l'asse Salerno-Avellino- Benevento. Il volume analizza numerosi testi agiografici campani che attestano la presenza dell'Angelo talvolta con generiche funzioni di angelo custode, talaltra con gli attributi tipici di San Michele. Una cospicua sezione del volume è dedicata al dossier agiografico di Antonino e Catello, rispettivamente monaco e vescovo di Sorrento e Stabia, un'area da sempre roccaforte bizantina. Sulla base di elementi storici e di elementi rivenienti dal dossier agiografico viene posticipata all'XI secolo - e quindi di oltre un secolo rispetto alle posizioni della critica- l'epoca di composizione della Vita Antonini (XI secolo). In quest'epoca Sorrento vive un particolare momento di vivacità e di rinnovamento a livello politico, sociale e religioso. Nei testi agiografici Antonino e Catello sono co-fondatori del Santuario del Monte Faito, considerato il santuario nazionale dei Bizantini, anche per ragioni di antagonismo e rivalità con il Santuario di San Michele del Gargano, santuario nazionale dei LongobardiThe book, divided into four parts, is a thorough analysis of the cult of St. Michael in Campania, in its various expressions. In the first part the author presents micaelici settlements with particular reference to the numerous caves that, based on the example of the Gargano, were dedicated to the Angel, especially along the road Salerno-Avellino-Benevento. The book contains an examination of the hagiographic texts from Campania attesting the presence of Angel, sometimes in its generic function of custos, sometimes with attributes typical of Michael. The author analyzes the hagiographic dossier of Antoninus and Catello, respectively monaco and bishop of Sorrento and Stabiae. The author basing on historical data and data emerging from the same dossier, delaies more than a century the composition of the Vita Antonini (11th century). In this century Sorrento lived a revival on political-institutional-religious level. The anonymous author of Life - probably a monaco /bishop - approaches Antonino (IX century) and Catello (sixth century) making the abbot of Sorrento co-starred in the foundation of the sanctuary of St. Michael on Mount Fait, considered a national shrine of the Byzantines in Naples, also for reasons of competition with the sanctuary of Mount St. Michael Gargano, traditionally linked to the Lombards

    The construction of Karen Karnak: The multi-author-function

    No full text
    This thesis is situated within the comparatively recent developments of Web 2.0 and the emergence of interactive WikiMedia, and explores the mode of authorship within a Read/Write culture compared to that of a Read/Only tradition. The hypothesis of this study is that the role of the audience has become merged with the author, and as such, represents new functions and attributes, distinct from a more conventional concept of authorship, in which the roles of audience and author are more separate. Read/Write and participatory culture, as defined by this study, is focused on collaboration, and includes the influences of D.I.Y. culture, Open-Source practices and the production of text by multiple authors. Multi-authorship presents a re-thinking of several concepts which support the notion of the individual author, since the focus of multi-authorship is not on attribution and ownership of a finished text, but on the continued malleability of a text. Modes of multi-authorship, demonstrated in the use of the pseudonyms Alan Smithee and Karen Eliot, represent declarative authors whose names signify multiple origins, whilst concurrently indicating a distinct body of work. The function of these names form an important context to this study, since primary research involves the construction of an experimental mode of multi-authorship utilising WikiMedia technology and the interaction of thirty nine participants, who are invited to create a body of work under the collective pseudonym Karen Karnak. The data generated by this experiment is analysed using aspects of Michel Foucault's author-function to identify and determine power structures inherent in the WikiMedia context. The interplay of power structures, including concepts such as identity, ownership and the body of work, affect the resulting mode of authorship and contribute to the construction of Karen Karnak, suggesting further areas of research into the emerging multi-author

    ... ADA Program report

    No full text
    Began with 2020.This archived document is maintained by the State Library of Oregon as part of the Oregon Documents Depository Program. It is for informational purposes and may not be suitable for legal purposes.Mode of access: Internet from the Oregon Government Publications Collection.Text in English

    Iraq after 2003: when trauma becomes art. Myth, history, and literature

    No full text
    The volume aims to provide lenses that examine, from various angles, a country, Iraq, in the aftermath of the quintessential trauma of its contemporary history, namely, 2003.The volume is thus a collection of "narratives", of narrative acts that render the relationship between reality and its discourse almost oxymoronic. The present work, born in the wake of the conference «Iraq After 2003: When Trauma Becomes Art. Myth, History, and Literature», is therefore published as an outcome of the scientific project "Forms, Languages, and [Con]texts of Tàrìkh: Writing and Rewriting History in Iraq", of which the author of these pages is the Principal Investigator

    Abiotic and biotic controls of soil moisture spatio-temporal variability and the occurrence of hysteresis

    No full text
    An expression that separates biotic and abiotic controls on the temporal dynamics of the soil moisture spatial coefficient of variation Cv(?) was explored via numerical simulations using a mechanistic ecohydrological model, Tethys-Chloris. Continuous soil moisture spatiotemporal dynamics at an exemplary hillslope domain were computed for six case studies characterized by different climate and vegetation cover and for three configurations of soil properties. It was shown that abiotic controls largely exceed their biotic counterparts in wet climates. Biotic controls on Cv(?) were found to be more pronounced in Mediterranean climates. The relation between Cv(?) and spatial mean soil moisture inline image was found to be unique in wet locations, regardless of the soil properties. For the case of homogeneous soil texture, hysteretic cycles between Cv(?) and inline image were observed in all Mediterranean climate locations considered here and to a lesser extent in a deciduous temperate forest. Heterogeneity in soil properties increased Cv(?) to values commensurate with field observations and weakened signatures of hysteresis at all of the studied locations. This finding highlights the role of site-specific heterogeneities in hiding or even eliminating the signature of climatic and biotic controls on Cv(?), thereby offering a new perspective on causes of confounding results reported across field experiments

    al-Qārūrah (La bottiglia, 2004) dello scrittore saudita Yūsuf al-Muḥaymīd. Quale “genere” di lettura?

    No full text
    al-Qārūrah (The Bottle, 2004) is one of the best-known novels written by the Saudi author Yūsuf al-Muḥaymīd (1964). Set in the timeline of the Gulf War (1990-91), the novel mainly reconstructs the life of Munīrah al-Sāhī, the female protagonist. Symbol of the general climate of violence towards women in her country, she decides to record women’s stories on pieces of paper that she places in the bottle given to her by her grandmother. Feminism, struggles for women empowerment and historical critique are – as one would expect – the central aspects of this novel. This article will try to introduce a different key reading, by assuming that the originality of the work probably lies in its unusual act of re-writing History. The single pieces of paper are single stories able to re-construct the collective History. So Munīrah becomes a particular ḥakawātiyyah, collecting stories in order to offer an historical narration
    corecore