Seen and named in narratives: denizens of hell in the early Middle Ages
This article discusses a special type of narrative: encounters with named individuals in hell. The catchment is broad (Homer to Dante) but the focus is on the early Middle Ages. Philological and literary techniques elucidate and reinterpret a number of important visionary texts, Anglo‐Saxon, Merovingian, and Carolingian. Boniface, Ep. 115 re‐emerges as
Danuta Shanzer
wiley +1 more source
De cómo la antigüedad griega en Foucault nos permite leer la relación capitalismo-democracia
El examen sobre la filosofía griega clásica desarrollada por Michel Foucault constituye un modo de observación que podemos proyectar sobre nuestro tiempo para seguir algunas pistas sobre nuestra habitación neoliberal, ahí donde se cruza capitalismo y ...
Jorge Olivares-Rocuant
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Religión y saber del cuerpo en las colonias valdenses del Uruguay (1911-1950) : Tensiones en la configuración de un ethos [PDF]
El presente trabajo indaga acerca de las tensiones discursivas que en torno al saber del cuerpo y la religión hacen a la configuración de un ethos solidario al proceso de institucionalización del deporte y la gimnasia en las colonias valdenses del ...
Malán, Paula
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“Subjectivities, academic work and mothering practice”: Navigating obscure and unspoken disciplines
Abstract A robust and important body of scholarship is exploring the multiple and layered complexities of mothering and paid work. In this paper, we theoretically and empirically contribute to this work by exploring how, at the level of the self, women with children understand themselves in relation to their paid work and their mothering.
Michelle O’Shea +2 more
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Ecos lucianescos en el Quijote: una perspectiva helenista
Lucian’s name never appears in the works of Cervantes. Nevertheless, scholars agree that some similar features can be recognized in the writing of both authors.
Montserrat Jufresa
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Παρρησία and Comedy, a Nonsense Link in the Classical Period
The expression comic parrhesia is common in the scholarly literature, and the notion that the word παρρησία in ancient Greek may denote comedy’s freedom of speech is almost commonplace, and taken for granted.
Xavier Riu
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Heidegger with Foucoault. Aletheia, parrhesia and the will to tell the truth [PDF]
El presente trabajo ha sido posible gracias al apoyo de la Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)El objetivo de nuestra aportación consiste en configurar una perspectiva para conjugar y confrontar, de un modo fructífero ...
Camello, David
core
Taking Stand‐Up Seriously: Comedy as a Site for Imagining Decolonial Futures
Stand‐up comedy is a rich arena of sociological inquiry that enables social actors to utter bold truths in a way that educates rather than offends. As such, stand‐up comedy can inform conversations around potentially “thorny” issues like racial inequality.
Oskar Primbs, Marcelle C. Dawson
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Conceptual Engineering and Parrhesia: To the Problem of Managing Subjectivity
The study examines conceptual engineering and its connection with the rhetoric of science and parrhesia. It is argued that the normative-revisionist orientation of conceptual engineering, expressed in the criticism of concepts and the comprehension of ...
Natalya Yu. Kozlova
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Feminist social movements and whistleblowing disclosures: Ireland's Women of Honour
Abstract Feminist social movements based on workers disclosing sexual harassment and sexual violence have had a dramatic impact on workplaces worldwide. But what are the specific dynamics shaping organizations founded on acts of disclosure? Organizational whistleblowing research has overlooked this topic, while literature on feminist social movements ...
Kate Kenny
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