Results 271 to 280 of about 914,670 (330)

About the Imaginary

open access: yesFormats: revista de comunicació audiovisual, 2001
openaire   +1 more source
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.

Related searches:

The Imaginary

Anthropological Theory, 2006
It is common in anthropology now to speak of imaginaries instead of cultural beliefs. This article examines the way Cornelius Castoriadis, Jacques Lacan, Benedict Anderson, and Charles Taylor analyzed this concept. For Castoriadis, the imaginary is a culture's ethos, for Lacan, it is a fantasy, for Anderson and Taylor, it is a shared cognitive schema.
openaire   +1 more source

The Anarchist Imaginary:

2019
Max Nettlau’s publications became key documents for the study of Latin American anarchism and radical history. Nettlau considered Hispanic anarchists in the United States as an integral part of the Latin American anarchist imaginary. This chapter explores Nettlau’s correspondence with two anarchist activists, José Lóuzara de Andrés (1891-1973) from ...
openaire   +1 more source

Imagination and the imaginary

Journal of Analytical Psychology, 2006
Abstract:  This paper argues that real imagination depends on the capacity to acknowledge the absence of what is imagined from the world of material actuality. This leads on to a view of symbol formation as the operation of the transcendent function between the opposites of presence and absence.
openaire   +2 more sources

A communicational matrix to the imaginary: Looking into the media imaginary

Empedocles: European Journal for the Philosophy of Communication, 2017
Phenomenology, Sociology, Hermeneutics and Psychoanalysis have accumulated different methods and knowledge on the imaginary. Nevertheless, the crucial connection between the social imagining and communication has not always been truly examined. In this article, we take the imaginary (seen as a symbolic thought of images) and communication (seen as a ...
openaire   +2 more sources

The Counterhuman Imaginary

2023
This book proposes that alongside the historical, social, and institutional structures of human reality that seem to be the sole subject of the literary text, an other-than-human world is everywhere in evidence. The book's author finds that within eighteenth-century British literature, the human cultural imaginary can be seen, equally, as a ...
openaire   +1 more source

The Acoustic Imaginary

2014
You already know about the acoustic imaginary. If you have ever had a tune stuck in your head (an “earworm”) or have recalled the sound of someone’s voice or of a particular place, or have mistakenly thought you heard something in your immediate environment, then you have experienced the faculty of imagined hearing.
openaire   +1 more source

Home - About - Disclaimer - Privacy