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Published: 11 February 2011
DOI: 10.1215/9780822392873-006
EISBN: 978-0-8223-9287-3
Published: 01 January 1995
DOI: 10.1215/9780822397083-004
EISBN: 978-0-8223-9708-3
Series: Post-Contemporary Interventions
Published: 02 November 1998
DOI: 10.1215/9780822382522-024
EISBN: 978-0-8223-8252-2
Published: 01 May 2020
EISBN: 978-1-4780-0918-4
...A Note on Use of Verb Tense, Spellings, Translation, Names, and Abbreviations ...
Series: The World Readers
Published: 01 January 2010
DOI: 10.1215/9780822392583-089
EISBN: 978-0-8223-9258-3
Published: 29 April 2016
DOI: 10.1215/9780822374510-022
EISBN: 978-0-8223-7451-0
... Where the verb dépaysement evokes a mood of disorientation experienced during travel, it is argued that it is the primary medium through which Renée Green pursues a postconceptual art practice across installation, film, video, and writing. Showing how strategies of site specificity...
Published: 01 April 2015
DOI: 10.1215/9780822375494-017
EISBN: 978-0-8223-7549-4
... and an identification with noise as socially problematic. Silencing, as a verb, is often used as a mode of coercive action central to the dialectics of secrecy and negativity, exclusion and oppression that are constitutive of modern forms of biopolitics. The perception and understanding of silence also depends on how...
Series: Theory in Forms
Published: 05 January 2024
DOI: 10.1215/9781478027379-006
EISBN: 978-1-4780-9370-1
... and the world. The chapter begins and ends with collectives of women whose labor, organization, design collaborations, and building have lent form and infrastructure to Dadaab. Juxtaposing these spatial practices and mobile architectures gives a textured picture of Dadaab, in which design—as noun and verb...
Published: 30 August 2024
DOI: 10.1215/9781478059868-003
EISBN: 978-1-4780-5986-8
... of playing with the familiar and the strange, it is not our aim to explain our responses, but to articulate them. As we seek words to do so, we stretch the verb to taste. Tasting, or so our ethnographic experiment suggests, need not be understood as an activity confined to the tongue. Instead, if given...
Book Chapter

By Kobena Mercer
Published: 29 April 2016
DOI: 10.1215/9780822374510-020
EISBN: 978-0-8223-7451-0
... of allegory in baroque mourning plays as revealing the “fallen” condition of a secular modernity that must continually grapple with the human condition of transience and decay. black necrophilia intertextuality melancholia montage trauma Where the verb dépaysement evokes a mood...