1,876 research outputs found
Index. Café Royal Books
Index began as an online open submission project, attracting IRO 2500 international submissions. Criteria being, ‘submissions must have already been used to communicate, or be communicative in their own right’. All submissions have been removed from their original context, breaking the messages or ideas for which they were created. For example, some of the drawings and photographs might have been made or shot to brief or assignment, for a magazine or newspaper. Index stripped them of this original context, bias and message.
Using Index as a container, exhibition space and story telling device, the pages that follow have been edited to create pairs or combinations of images that can be read as new narratives. The book is an experimental exchange of internationally created, out-of-context, repurposed text and image.
Index was acquired by The Museum of Modern Art NY Special Collection April 4th 2014.
Project and launch initially at Hanover Project, University of Central Lancashire, Preston.
Index
Various artists and authors
01.04.14
56 pages
18cm x 26cm
b/w litho
edition of 1000
Included in Index:
5 6 7 19 Sarah Bodman bookarts.uwe.ac.uk
8 9 10 11 Dr Sarah Cook University of Dundee
12 Mark Adams markadamsimages.wordpress.com
13 Christophe Le Toquin katacri.net/christophe
14 Ray Ogar rayogar.com
15 21 56 Faye Coral Johnson fayecoraljohnson.com
16 18 Craig Atkinson craigatkinson.co.uk
17 Dean Stephen Davies deanstephendavies.com
20 John Claridge johnclaridgephotographer.com
22 Jade Montserrat crescentarts.co.uk/site/jade-montserrat
23 Ravi Juneja ravijuneja.co.uk
24 Rachel Pursglove rachelpursglove.co.uk
25 Anna McQuillin
26 27 46 Meral Guler meralguler.com
28 Claire Boyd youjustgotboyd.com
29 Karen Harvey karen-harvey.co.uk
30 Thomas Darby thomasdarby.co.uk
31 Steven Marshall steven-marshall.co.uk
32 Julian McKenny processional.co.uk
33 42 43 Fabian Knöbl mondbewohner.com
34 Andrew Bracey andrewbracey.com
35 Andrew Seto andrewseto.com
36 Stephen McCoy mccoywynne.co.uk
37 Stephen Clarke [email protected]
38 39 Andrew Scott [email protected]
40 41 Kenneth Gray kennethgray.co.uk
44 45 Stephen Fowler stephenfowler72.blogspot.com
47 David Dipré daviddipre.blogspot.com
48 Michael Dietrich dietrichmichael.com
49 Marc Vallée www.marcvallee.co.uk
50 Megan Wellington megangodwin.com
51 Egle Zvirblyte nakedteeth.tumblr.com
52 54 Matthew Birchall matthewbirchall.co.uk
53 Liam Clark liamashleyclark.co
Craig, Cujas, and the Definition of Feudum: Is a Feu a Usufruct?
This chapter is devoted to the disagreement of Thomas Craig of Riccarton with Jacques Cujas’ Romanist view that a feu (feudum or fief) was the grant of a usufruct of property belonging in dominium to the grantor. The chapter is divided into three sections. The first section briefly discusses Craig and Jus feudale, not only because author and work deserve wider recognition, but also because an understanding of the nature of Jus feudale is important in explaining the disagreement with Cujas. The second section explores the differences between Cujas and Craig. The concluding section attempts to explain the differences between Craig’s and Cujas’ definitions, and places them in a wider context.</p
All-age learning: implications for faith development, education and nurture in a changing church
Since the late 1980's all-age learning has become a significant feature of education and worship within the Church of England. This thesis relates Christian education to the faith development theory of James Fowler. Recognising both the value and limitations of Fowler's theory, there is an appreciation of how the debate arising from his research enriches the sphere of Christian education. Churches need to take responsibility for carefully defining Christian education, establishing precise aims and identifying worthwhile outcomes. The particular aim presented in this thesis is regarded as one which is achieved by effective all-age learning (sometimes abbreviated in the thesis to "all-age"). An associated worthwhile outcome is the promotion of faith development. It is argued that the success of this developmental process becomes apparent in unpredictable as well as predictable outcomes. Claims are made for a holistic view of learning which takes into account a full range of identifiable human operations, represented by what are broadly referred to as the cognitive and affective domains. Part of the intentional process of learning within formative all-age Christian education should include the development of critical skills. This highlights the issue of evaluation and brings with it a challenge to the Church in its present form. A positive response to the possibility and reality of challenge may bring change. Where all-age features in Christian education and worship, it is hoped that such change will affect the entire Church community rather than isolated individuals. It soon becomes clear that all-age might serve as a pragmatic and effective tool within Christian education. However, the corporate nature of the Church of England is as important as its individual membership. Thus there are further conclusions which centre on one in particular; that all-age is a necessary component of a changing and developing corporate Church, where there exists a desire to respond to what is perceived to be the continuing creative power of God
Pleonosporium ricksearlesii C. W. Schneider & G. W. Saunders 2024, sp. nov.
<i>Pleonosporium ricksearlesii</i> C.W.Schneider & G.W.Saunders, sp. nov. (Fig. 3) <p> HOLOTYPE (DESIGNATED HERE). — <b>Bermuda</b>. Somerset Island, 32°16.783’N, 64°52.788’W, on wooden dock in Ely’s Harbour, depth 0-1 m, 30.VI.2015, <i>C.W</i> <i>. Schneider & T.R. <i>Popolizio 15-21-3</i> (holo-, MICH[1210917]), dried silica sample: BDA1944, GenBank: OR336107 (COI-5P), OR336112 (<i>rbc</i> L).</i></p> <p>ISOTYPES. — Same data as holotype (iso-, NY, UNB, Herb. CWS).</p> <p> ETYMOLOGY. — Named for Prof. Richard Brownlee Searles, the first author’s graduate mentor, collaborator and friend, on the occasion of his 87th birthday. Joint cruises with the first author to study mesophotic seaweeds off Bermuda aboard the R/V <i>Seahawk</i> in the early 1980s initiated four decades of investigation on the macroalgal flora of this Atlantic archipelago.</p> <p>DISTRIBUTION. — Endemic to Bermuda as currently known.</p> DESCRIPTION <p>Delicate plants lignicolous or on mud-saturated wood, bushy, erect to 5.0 cm tall, Persian red in colour (Graf 1x 2023) and ecorticate (Fig. 3A); indeterminate axes fine with alternately irregular branching above with corymbose and narrowly-angled branches at apices, some with some branches overtopping the apex (Fig. 3B); most branches simple of 15 with fewer cells or once branched, indeterminate branches irregularly replacing these branches; in lower portions of indeterminate axes, the lateral branches markedly smaller than the axis that produced them (Fig. 3C), and with most lateral branches losing all but a few of their most proximal cells; in distal portions the axes only slightly larger in diam. than the branches they produce; indeterminate axial cells cylindrical and usually flared at their proximal ends in basal portions of main axes (Fig. 3C, F, G), 95-150 µm diam. and 370-530 µm long, gradually tapering distally to cells 20-30 µm diam. and 85-250 µm long several segments below the apices; upper branches incurved, apical cells slightly tapering but obtuse (Fig. 3D); tetrasporangia adaxially sessile on upper incurved branches, borne singly or in a series of successive cells or every other branch cell (Fig. 3E), subglobose to obovoidal, 33-36 µm diam. and 36-48 µm long, including a thick wall, sporangia also forming laterally or terminally, at times clustered or in secund series, on broken lower and regenerating lateral branches (Fig. 3F, G), some appearing to have single-celled stalks; gametangia unknown.</p>Published as part of <i>Schneider, Craig W. & Saunders, Gary W., 2024, Australasian Lophothamnion J. Agardh aligns genetically with Pleonosporium Nägeli (Wrangeliaceae, Spongoclonieae): new species from the western Atlantic, pp. 1-10 in Cryptogamie, Algologie 20 (1)</i> on page 4, DOI: 10.5252/cryptogamie-algologie2024v45a1, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/10526738">http://zenodo.org/record/10526738</a>
Contributions to the Science of Environmental Impact Assessment: Three Papers on the Arctic Cisco (Coregonus autumnalis) of Northern Alaska
Editor's Introduction -- D. W. Norton; An Assessment of the Colville River Delta Stock of Arctic Cisco--Migrants from Canada? -- B. J. Gallaway, W. B. Griffiths, P. C. Craig, W. J. Gazey, and J. W. Helmericks; Temperature Preference of Juvenile Arctic Cisco (Coregonus autumnalis) From the Alaskan Beaufort Sea -- R. G. Fechhelm, W. H. Neill, and B. J. Gallaway; Modeling Movements and Distribution of Arctic Cisco (Coregonus autumnalis) Relative to Temperature-Salinity Regimes of the Beaufort Sea Near the Waterflood Causeway, Prudhoe Bay, Alaska. -- W. H. Neill, R. G. Fechhelm, B. J. Gallaway, J. D. Bryan, and S. W. Anderson; Notice to Author
Practical Guidance for Clinical Microbiology Laboratories: Diagnosis of Ocular Infections
The variety and complexity of ocular infections have increased significantly in the last decade since the publication of Cumitech 13B, Laboratory Diagnosis of Ocular Infections (L. D. Gray, P. H. Gilligan, and W. C. Fowler, Cumitech 13B, Laboratory Diagnosis of Ocular Infections, 2010). The purpose of this practical guidance document is to review, for individuals working in clinical microbiology laboratories, current tools used in the laboratory diagnosis of ocular infections. This document begins by describing the complex, delicate anatomy of the eye, which often leads to limitations in specimen quantity, requiring a close working bond between laboratorians and ophthalmologists to ensure high-quality diagnostic care. Descriptions are provided of common ocular infections in developed nations and neglected ocular infections seen in developing nations. Subsequently, preanalytic, analytic, and postanalytic aspects of laboratory diagnosis and antimicrobial susceptibility testing are explored in depth
Above Vulgar Economy: Jane Austen and Money
Abstract: "Above Vulgar Economy": Jane Austen and Money By: Sheryl Bonar Craig Jane Austen's career as an author coincided with a series of economic recessions leading to a major economic depression, a banking crisis that resulted in government intervention, a number of controversial economic bills that were rejected or approved by Parliament in spite of public opinion, and the grudging public acceptance of paper money and debased coins. This discussion is an attempt to clarify some of the economic and political references that modern readers of Jane Austen's novels tend to overlook or to misunderstand and, in that process, to reveal Austen's interest in political economics and her familiarity with the ideas of the leading economists of her era, including Adam Smith, Edmund Burke, Thomas Malthus, Jeremy Bentham, Frederic Eden and Patrick Colquhoun. Austen's informed and opinionated references to her nation's economy reveal an author engaged with the political/economic debates of her volatile, turbulent era, such as the Restriction Act, the Speenhamland System, the Poor Law Reform Bill and the Corn Law. As Mary Poovey notes in Genres of the Credit Economy, the economic instability during Jane Austen's adult life created a great deal of insecurity in the British public, and Austen uses "her fiction to manage the anxieties it caused" (370). Austen's books thus reveal themselves to be state-of-the-nation novels and a series of texts that respond to the ongoing deterioration of the late 18th and early 19th century British economy
Validity and reliability concerns associated with cardiopulmonary exercise testing young people with cystic fibrosis
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from the publisher via the DOI in this record.Letter to the Edito
The Reception of Antiquity, or Romantic Nationalization of Ancient Period
The article offers a critical reading of an important and original book by Maciej Junkiert – Nowi Grecy: Historyzm polskich romantyków wobec narodzin “Altertumswissenschaft”. The author considers the book in the context of Junkiert’s earlier works and the current critical interest in the concept of reception, its theoretical approaches and practical application. The author concludes that the book casts new light on the antiquarian research and historicism, situating its onset in the German myth of “new Greeks” and nationalistic reading of [email protected] Zawadzka, dr hab., prof. Uniwersytetu w Białymstoku. Historyczka literatury polskiej, badaczka literatury regionalnej. Autorka książek: Pokolenie klęski 1812 roku. O Antonim Malczewskim i odludkach (Warszawa 2000), Lelewel i Mickiewicz. Paralela (Białystok 2014), Lelewel prasowy (Warszawa 2018). Inicjatorka Białej Serii, poświęconej podlaskiemu regionalizmowi literackiemu. Publikowała w „Pamiętniku Literackim”, „Wieku XIX”, „Przeglądzie Humanistycznym”, „Białostockich Studiach Literaturoznawczych”. Zainteresowania naukowe: piśmiennictwo dziewiętnastowieczne i jego recepcja (zwłaszcza w kontekście pamięcioznawczym i postkolonialnym), doświadczenie historyczne oraz „zapis” miejsca w literaturze, kulturze oraz historiografii, pamięć kobiet i chłopów.Uniwersytet w Białymstoku. Wydział FilologicznyAxer Jerzy (2012), Recepcja śródziemnomorskiej tradycji antycznej w Europie Środkowo-Wschodniej, w: Czy Polska leży nad Morzem Śródziemnym?, red. R. Kusek, J. Sanetra-Szeliga, Kraków: Międzynarodowe Centrum Kultury.Hamilton Craig, Schneider Ralf (2012), Od Isera do Turnera i dalej. Na styku teorii recepcji i krytyki kognitywnej, przeł. M. Marecki, „Przestrzenie Teorii”, nr 18, s. 221–246.Jarmuszkiewicz Anna (2019), Recepcja literacka – jak może być rozumiana we współczesnym literaturoznawstwie?, „Pamiętnik Literacki”, nr 1, s. 139–148.Jauss Hans Robert (1999), Historia literatury jako prowokacja, przeł. M. Łukasiewicz, Warszawa: Wydawnictwo IBL PAN.Julkowska Violetta (2010), Historia dla wyobraźni. Recepcja i interpretacja pisarstwa historycznego Karola Szajnochy, Poznań: Wydawnictwo Poznańskie.Julkowska Violetta (2014), Badanie recepcji jako koncept w obszarze historii i historiografii, „Sensus Historiae”, nr 3, s. 15–28.Kalinowska Maria (1994), Grecja romantyków. Studia nad obrazem Grecji w literaturze romantycznej, Toruń: Wydawnictwo UMK.Kalinowska Maria, Paprocka-Podlasiak Bogna [red.] (2003), Antyk romantyków – model europejski i wariant polski. Rekonesans, Toruń: Wydawnictwo Naukowe Grado.Kuziak Michał (2016) Historyzm w dyskursie krytycznoliterackim, w: Słownik polskiej krytyki literackiej 1764–1918. Pojęcia – terminy – zjawiska – przekroje, red. J. Bachórz, G. Borkowska, T. Kostkiewiczowa, M. Rudkowska i M. Strzyżewski, Toruń–Warszawa: Wydawnictwo UMK, s. 438–448.Skrendo Andrzej (2001), Recepcja literatury: przedmiot, zakresy, cele badań. Komentarz do tytułu i „postscriptum”, „Teksty Drugie”, nr 5, s. 87–93.Współczesna myśl literaturoznawcza w Repubublice Federalnej Niemiec. Antologia (1986), wyb. opr. i wstęp H. Orłowski, przeł. M. Łukasiewicz, W. Bialik, M. Przybecki,
Warszawa: Czytelnik.Wysłouch Seweryna (2015), Dwie propozycje kulturowej historii literatury – „braudelowska” i „jaussowska”, w: Kulturowa historia literatury, red. A. Łebkowska, R. Nycz,
Warszawa Wydawnictwo: IBL PAN, s. 15–29.1416317
The sense of a beginning : Bakhtinian dialogic criticism on 'the gospel' in Mark.
Contemporary literary approaches have caused paradigm shifts in Biblical Studies in the last two decades as it appears in a great deal of Markan studies using narrative, reader-response, deconstructive, feminist, and new historicist approaches. However, literary studies on the Gospel of Mark have not taken into account theoretical questions underlying those approaches. As a result biblical critics are driven by new trends without ever having a chance to examine the critical baggage of the approaches. Consequently, there is a gap of communication between the old and the new one. Therefore this thesis is an attempt to meet the need of enhancing the quality of critical endeavour in biblical studies. In the light of most recent competing critical theories of literature, the first contribution of this thesis is the methodological finding that Bakhtinian dialogic criticism contains the most profound philosophical and practical foundations for solving some crucial theoretical problems in contemporary literary theories. It is a critique to a Saussurian linguistic system of language which becomes the very foundation of modern and postmodern literary criticism. Bakhtinian literary theory shifts the foundation of literary criticism on linguistic signs into the creative activity of the socio-cultural production of human communication. The shift into socio-cultural reality of language communication makes the notion of 'genre' very important to unlock the problem of text and context in literary studies. Since the Gospel of Mark has fascinated most literary critics in Biblical Studies, the problem of 'genre' of this gospel is chosen as the focus of this study. Secondly, as no agreement is reached as to what 'genre' the Gospel of Mark belongs, this thesis makes its contribution to the discussion by locating the problem of 'genre' of Mark in the context of genre theories and argues that the Bakhtinian suggestion to find genre in the socio-cultural sphere by analysing artistic intercourse between narrative agents in Mark has freed the competing analysis from the unresolved problem between the kerygmatic (content oriented) approach and the analogical (form oriented) approach. To achieve finding 'genre' in the socio-cultural sphere, this thesis focuses on Bakhtinian analysis of the process of artistic intercourse between narrative agents. The narrative communicative interrelationships between narrative agents is constructed in this thesis as a 'stereophonic' Bakhtinian model of dialogic communication. This model is an original contribution of this thesis for revising the traditional two dimensional model of narrative communication. Based on this dialogical model of communication, a special role is given to the Bakhtinian 'author-creator' in the realization process of genre through the interaction of polyphonic voices. Through the interaction of voices of the author-artist and the hero we are led to discover a relatively stable type of portraying and controlling reality in Mark, known as the genre of Roman 'satire'. The closest literary affinity is Satyrica by Petronius. This narrative strategy of 'satire' in Mark has its root in the prophetic discourse of the Old Testament which is saturating the speech of the narrator, John the Immerser, the centurion, the people, and even Jesus. Finally, the whole search for Markan 'genre' culminates in the analysis of the realization of genre through the analysis of Bakhtinian chronotope. The reality of the genre of Mark is its social reality that is in its role as dpxrj/ 'beginning'. As the Gospel of Mark proclaims itself as 'a beginning', it defines its claim of socio-cultural 'authority' in early Christianity. It is this 'sense of beginning' which enables the narrating and the narrated world of Mark to interact dialogically
- …
