Results 101 to 110 of about 64,730 (265)
Chasing Frankenstein's monster: information literacy in the black box society
Purpose The purpose of this paper is to introduce and examine algorithmic culture and consider the implications of algorithms for information literacy practice. The questions for information literacy scholars and educators are how can one understand the
A. Lloyd
semanticscholar +1 more source
Did Mary Shelley write Frankenstein? A stylometric analysis
Lee Suddaby, G. Ross
semanticscholar +1 more source
Freud, Frankenstein and our fear of robots: projection in our cultural perception of technology
This paper examines why robots are so often presented as monstrous in the popular media (e.g. film, newspapers), regardless of the intended applications of the robots themselves.
Michael Szollosy
semanticscholar +1 more source
«The horror of that countenance» from Frankenstein to Duckenstein
The masterpieces of Western literature survive today in translations, adaptations, and rewritings. The examples to which I am referring to are taken from publications of Italian Disney, that from 1935 has been made autonomous from US production and has ...
Marina Guglielmi
doaj +1 more source
‘There have been developments’: Frankenstein’s Monster finds a (Mahlerian) voice
The article discusses the author's insights on the implications of the musical score of the motion picture "Bride of Frankenstein," by Max Steiner and Erich Wolfgang Korngold in the U.S. in the 1930s. He believes that the musical score critiques the Nazi
Winters, Ben
core
The curse of Frankenstein: visions of technology and society in the debate over new reproductive technologies [PDF]
At each successive moment in their development new reproductive technologies have provided the occasion for virulent argument about the role of technology in human affairs. And more generally, technoscientific knowledge has long been held both in awe and
Bloomfield, B P, Vurdubakis, T
core
The IRAP as a Measure of Implicit Cognition: A Case of Frankenstein’s Monster
D. Barnes-Holmes, Colin Harte
semanticscholar +1 more source
¿Que medidas contam para o interesse público? [PDF]
The “measure” of this article is a bit different from most -there are almost as many words in the endnotes as in the body of the text. Endnotes, as endnotes, are a significant part of my writing, both in terms of recognizing the connections and ...
Frankenstein, Marilyn
core +1 more source
Spartan Daily September 19, 2018 [PDF]
Volume 151, Issue 13https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/spartan_daily_2018/1055/thumbnail ...
San Jose State University, School of Journalism and Mass Communications
core +1 more source
Frankenstein’s creature is twice-made; firstly, Frankenstein is an organic being without any real biological parentage, and literary being through his own reading, which makes him aware of his intellectual and emotional affinities with humans. The trap closes around Frankenstein’s creature, imprisoning him in the values he assimilates through reading ...
openaire +3 more sources

