Winter: Five Windows on the Season PDF Book

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Winter: Five Windows on the Season PDF Book WINTER: FIVE WINDOWS ON THE SEASON PDF, EPUB, EBOOK Adam Gopnik | 256 pages | 27 Sep 2011 | House of Anansi Press | 9780887849756 | English | Toronto, Canada, Canada Winter: Five Windows on the Season PDF Book Americans in Paris Amazon. Shelves: arts-literat-classics. I don't know where I came across this title, but I'm very glad I did. I need to read this at least twice more to absorb the layers of this dense text. We aim to create a safe and valuable space for discussion and debate. Much of Gopnik's quest is rooted in the joy of his own childhood imagination: if there were a heaven, he suggests, for him it would perpetually be 19 December; school is out, coloured lights are in the shops, there is ice underfoot and Christmas a week away. We use cookies to serve you certain types of ads , including ads relevant to your interests on Book Depository and to work with approved third parties in the process of delivering ad content, including ads relevant to your interests, to measure the effectiveness of their ads, and to perform services on behalf of Book Depository. Stafford Beer. He had previously authored several books on different topics, the most successful being Paris to the Moon , a collection of essays published in Performance and Analytics. That's pretty much my only complaint with this book. Adam Gopnik has been contributing to The New Yorker since A delightful, insightful, often humourous investigation into the modern Western idea of winter: what is the season, what does it mean to us, what has it meant to us in the past. I also thought that with some insight on this frigid season, I could learn to dislike it a little less. Sep 26, Nancy rated it it was amazing. While at the university; he was one of the people who contributed greatly towards The McGill Daily. The essays break down to extreme winter polar exploration , winter in verse and art, sentimental winter Christmas , winter sports, and remembering winter. And at the time, god help us and god forgive us, it seemed like an interesting anecdote to the depression that had overwhelmed New York in the previous decade. View 1 comment. When my kids were younger, we would come here on Saturday mornings and take out everything from The Ink Drinker series to Make Way for Ducklings. The author is often startlingly good at tracing the elements of these fantasies in two centuries since the invention of modern winter. Adam Gopnik. Bak Sietse de Vries. But then we also have Coleridge and the other Romantics and the idea of sublime nature, and there's also lots of interesting stuff about Caspar David Friedrich and other Germans, and Russians too, taking up winter and the love of winter as something that separates their cultures from the French. Reviewers variously described the book as "interesting", [11] "charming" [12] and "fascinating" [8] and the prose as "eloquent", [1] "thoughtful", [13] but sometimes slow. The academic mixes with passionate hockey in the sport chapter and the entire book makes it unusual but also readable and enjoyable. Gopnik uses the five lectures in the book to look at winter from five different angles, or through five different "windows," as the book's subtitle puts it. The value of quality journalism When you subscribe to globeandmail. Winter: Five Windows on the Season Writer The Collective Don Lee. Add links. I did have difficulty keeping up with him though. Brueghel was its first serious propagandist. For Gopnik's purposes the idea of winter was really invented in northern Europe, between the years and , when a long cooling of the Earth eventually coincided with the abundance of coal. Feb 23, Nancy Groves rated it it was amazing. Lists with This Book. Both cities are heavily romanticized. Still contains some interesting tidbits about winter, but I'd start with one of his other works. The domination of our history by the false idea of masculinity is very powerful. Text Size. Inside us, where they remain, as winter remains my favorite season. He evokes first a memory of himself as a boy gazing from the window of the family home, appreciatively safe inside, as a November snowstorm swirls into the street and garden. It's very much like reading a series of lectures delivered by a brilliant person, complete with tangents. I enjoyed every page of the book: It is so well written, but effortless; filled with facts, but always pellucid. Richard Avedon tends to be extremely light in heart, and mind, and foot. Sep 25, Mark rated it liked it. Thereafter, Gopnik began his long professional association in the year with the New Yorker; there were pieces that eventually show his future range, childhood, and renaissance art. In his recent years he has written extensively about gun violence and gun control in the United States of America. I picked up this book - Winter - to celebrate the arrival of the season. Looking forward to reading "The Table Comes First" soon. He is currently working on a book about the adventure, tentatively titled Little Ship of Fools. He also boost of having an entry on the culture of the United States being featured in the Encyclopedia Britannica. It can be a big world, like the Frick Collection , or it can be a tiny basement apartment. Sep 26, Sarah rated it really liked it Shelves: science-and-environment , non-fiction. Winter: Five Windows on the Season Reviews Gopnik could not have written a more fitting 50th anniversary lecture to a season that so represents the Canadian soul. Enlarge cover. Some information in it may no longer be current. Adam Gopnik, speaker at the Fall Lecture. The essays break down to extreme winter polar exploration , winter in verse and art, sentimental winter Christmas , winter sports, and remembering winter. Winnipeg Free Press. It consists of five essays about winter, exploring it through paintings, music, poetry, sports, urban design, technology, climate change, and other frameworks. Gopnik begins with the dualism expressed by the twin Roman winter solstice festivals Saturnalia and Kalends--the reversal feast vs. Some winter cultures experienced this freedom even more keenly. To be perfectly honest, this is not really what I was hoping for. Margaret Macmillan. Brueghel was its first serious propagandist. He calls this his sense that "the entirety of the universe could have been made--was made--without purpose, that is cold, spinning, unconscious, neither kind nor cruel, just following laws that are in the end not even laws, just regularities produced by the cycling of chances. Sign up now. There were interesting sections about architecture and city planning where he wrote about the advent of central heating, the invention of the car, and the subterranean city of Montreal. That was the standard view of it. In a subsequent lecture, Gopnik rediscovers this sense of flight in the pleasure and elegance of skating and, later yet, in Joni Mitchell's elegiac lament, "Wish I had a river I could skate away on. Special to The Globe and Mail. Dec 09, Larry rated it really liked it. Yes there are some undoubtedly original and quite interesting ideas and insights, and some nice poetry, but there are also a few common-place observations and statements that do not add much value. He explores the artistic representations of winter from that time, pictorial and written. Sometimes it is obvious that this was originally conceived as something to be spoken. For the time being, a more obvious point to emerge from these reflections is that when it comes to winter, preparedness is all. Did you know This new attitude to the season was simultaneously an escape from "the too rationalized, the too Cartesian, the too reasonable systems of the French Enlightenment. Adam Gopnik has been contributing to The New Yorker since Loading comments… Trouble loading? There are no discussion topics on this book yet. Other editions. I found myself searching for photos of art and listening to music that Gopnik wrote about. Every winter the grapes on the Niagara Peninsula are left not merely to chill but to actually freeze - the worst thing that normally can happen to fruit - and the the brutal cold forces all the natural sugar into the core of the grape, where it waits to be pressed out. We'll base this on various factors for example "If you like Jack Reacher Winter symbolizes the moment that we, as humans, stare into the void of the universe--into the void of our own minds, individual and collective--and describe, discriminate, seek, move, create. I've made a tickler on the calendar for next Dec. October 24, Texas Carmen Boullosa. And in the end, he pays homage to what could be a lost season — and thus, a lost collective cultural history — due to the threat of global warming. Other winter observations were lighter such as the This book was written in conjunction with five Massey Lectures broadcast in Canada by the CBC. Richard Avedon tends to be extremely light in heart, and mind, and foot. The Ontarion. Essential We use cookies to provide our services , for example, to keep track of items stored in your shopping basket, prevent fraudulent activity, improve the security of our services, keep track of your specific preferences e. We welcome the melt, and the thaw, and the endless springing forward of our etc etc etc. Winter: Five Windows on the Season Read Online Adam Gopnik's love letter to the snowy season makes a perfect fireside companion, says Tim Adams". Gopnik has shared his expertise by teaching at the annual Iceland Writers Retreat in Reykjavik, in the spring of the year and also in the year I don't know where I came across this title, but I'm very glad I did.
Recommended publications
  • Representations of Social Media in Popular Discourse
    REPRESENTATIONS OF SOCIAL MEDIA IN POPULAR DISCOURSE REPRESENTATIONS OF SOCIAL MEDIA IN POPULAR DISCOURSE By PAMELA INGLETON, B.A. (Hons), M.A. A Thesis Submitted to the School of Graduate Studies in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree Doctor of Philosophy McMaster University © Copyright by Pamela Ingleton, December 2017 McMaster University DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY (2017) Hamilton, Ontario (English and Cultural Studies) TITLE: Representations of Social Media in Popular Discourse AUTHOR: Pamela Ingleton, B.A. (Hons) (Queen’s University), M.A. (McMaster University) SUPERVISOR: Professor Lorraine York NUMBER OF PAGES: ix, 248 ii Lay Abstract This sandwich thesis of works published from 2010 – 2017 considers how we talk and write about social media in relation to a variety of other concerns: authorship and popular fiction, writing and publishing, archives and everyday life, celebrity and the opaque morality of media promotion. The project addresses social networking platforms (primarily Twitter and Facebook) and those who serve and critique their interests (authors, readers, academics, “everyday people,” national archives, celebrities and filmmakers), often focusing on the “meta” of the media they take as their focus: “extratexts,” reviews and interviews, tweets about books and books about tweets, critical reception, etc. By examining writing on and about social media, this work offers an alternative, context-specific approach to new media scholarship that, in its examination of things said and unsaid, will help inform our contemporary understanding of social media and, by extension, our social media experience. iii Abstract This sandwich thesis of works published from 2010 – 2017 takes up the discursive articulation of “social media” as a mobilizing concept in relation to a variety of other concerns: authorship and popular fiction, writing and publishing, archives and everyday life, celebrity and the opaque morality of media promotion.
    [Show full text]
  • Appendix B: a Literary Heritage I
    Appendix B: A Literary Heritage I. Suggested Authors, Illustrators, and Works from the Ancient World to the Late Twentieth Century All American students should acquire knowledge of a range of literary works reflecting a common literary heritage that goes back thousands of years to the ancient world. In addition, all students should become familiar with some of the outstanding works in the rich body of literature that is their particular heritage in the English- speaking world, which includes the first literature in the world created just for children, whose authors viewed childhood as a special period in life. The suggestions below constitute a core list of those authors, illustrators, or works that comprise the literary and intellectual capital drawn on by those in this country or elsewhere who write in English, whether for novels, poems, nonfiction, newspapers, or public speeches. The next section of this document contains a second list of suggested contemporary authors and illustrators—including the many excellent writers and illustrators of children’s books of recent years—and highlights authors and works from around the world. In planning a curriculum, it is important to balance depth with breadth. As teachers in schools and districts work with this curriculum Framework to develop literature units, they will often combine literary and informational works from the two lists into thematic units. Exemplary curriculum is always evolving—we urge districts to take initiative to create programs meeting the needs of their students. The lists of suggested authors, illustrators, and works are organized by grade clusters: pre-K–2, 3–4, 5–8, and 9– 12.
    [Show full text]
  • The Birthplace of Hockey Adam Gopnik Traces the Montreal Roots of Our Greatest Winter Sport
    McG NeALUMw NI MAGAsZINE Moments that changed McGill McGill Daily turns 100 Anne-France Goldwater : arbitre vedette The birthplace of hockey Adam Gopnik traces the Montreal roots of our greatest winter sport FALL/WINTER 20 11 publications.mcgill.ca/mcgillnews “My“My groupgroup ratesrates savedsaved meme a lotlot ofof money.”moneyy..” – Miika Klemetti, McGill graduate Satisfied client since 2008 Insurance program recommended by the SeeSee howhow goodgood youryour quotequote cancan be.be. At TD Insurance Meloche Monnex, we know how important it is to save wherever you can. As a member of the McGill Alumni Association, you can enjoy preferred group rates and other exclusive privileges, thanks to ourour partnership with your association. You’ll also benefit fromom great coverage and outstanding service. At TD Insurance, we believe in making insurance easy to understand so you can choose your coverage with confidence. GetGet anan onlineonline quotequote atat www.melochemonnex.com/mcgillwww.melochemomonnex.com/mcgill oror callcall 1-866-352-61871-866-352-6187 MondayMonday toto Friday,Friday, 8 a.m.a.m. toto 8 p.m.p.m. SSaturday,aturday, 9 aa.m..m. ttoo 4 pp.m..m. The TD Insurance Meloche Monnex home and auto insurance pprogramg is underunderwritten byy SECURITY NAATIONALTIONAL INSURANCEINSURANCE COMPANY. The program is distributed by MelocheMeloche Monnex Insurance and Financial Services Inc. in Quebecebec and by Meloche Monnex Financiall Services Inc. in the rest off Canada. Due to pprovincial legislation,g our auto insurance program is not offered in British Coolumbia, Manitoba or Saskatchewan. *No purchaseh required.d Contest endsd on January 13, 2012.
    [Show full text]
  • Modes of Adaptation and Appropriation in the Hogarth Shakespeare Series
    Trabajo de Fin de Máster en Estudios Literarios y Culturales Ingleses y su Proyección Social Modes of Adaptation and Appropriation in the Hogarth Shakespeare Series Autor: Mario Giménez Yuste Tutora: Dra. Marta Cerezo Moreno Facultad de Filología UNED Convocatoria general: junio 2019 Curso: 2018-19 Modes of Adaptation and Appropriation in the Hogarth Shakespeare Series Contents 1. Introduction ..................................................................................................................... 2 2. Theoretical Framework .................................................................................................. 4 2.1. Adaptation and Appropriation ................................................................................... 4 3. The Hogarth Series .................................................................................................... 14 3.1. Critical Reception ..................................................................................................... 14 3.2. A Brief Consideration of the Seven Novels ............................................................... 16 3.3. Selection Criteria ...................................................................................................... 20 4. The Chosen Novels ........................................................................................................ 21 4.1. Dunbar ...................................................................................................................... 21 4.1.1. Critical Reception .............................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • TBT Sep-Oct 2018 for Online
    Talking Book Topics September–October 2018 Volume 84, Number 5 Need help? Your local cooperating library is always the place to start. For general information and to order books, call 1-888-NLS-READ (1-888-657-7323) to be connected to your local cooperating library. To find your library, visit www.loc.gov/nls and select “Find Your Library.” To change your Talking Book Topics subscription, contact your local cooperating library. Get books fast from BARD Most books and magazines listed in Talking Book Topics are available to eligible readers for download on the NLS Braille and Audio Reading Download (BARD) site. To use BARD, contact your local cooperating library or visit nlsbard.loc.gov for more information. The free BARD Mobile app is available from the App Store, Google Play, and Amazon’s Appstore. About Talking Book Topics Talking Book Topics, published in audio, large print, and online, is distributed free to people unable to read regular print and is available in an abridged form in braille. Talking Book Topics lists titles recently added to the NLS collection. The entire collection, with hundreds of thousands of titles, is available at www.loc.gov/nls. Select “Catalog Search” to view the collection. Talking Book Topics is also online at www.loc.gov/nls/tbt and in downloadable audio files from BARD. Overseas Service American citizens living abroad may enroll and request delivery to foreign addresses by contacting the NLS Overseas Librarian by phone at (202) 707-9261 or by email at [email protected]. Page 1 of 87 Music scores and instructional materials NLS music patrons can receive braille and large-print music scores and instructional recordings through the NLS Music Section.
    [Show full text]
  • Political Science 104 Introduction to American Politics and Government
    Political Science 104 I, 20-21 UW-Madison Syllabus Professor Mayer ([email protected]) 4 credits Head TA: Victoria Casola ([email protected]) Lecture: TR 9:30-10:45am, ONLINE (Blackboard/Canvas) OFFICE HOURS: Scheduled online for Wednesdays 10-11AM for remote conferencing (not private). Political Science 104 Introduction to American Politics and Government Preliminaries Before we start, I want to make a few things clear: First, no one in this class (or any other that I teach) will be penalized, rewarded, or otherwise evaluated based on ideology, partisanship, political views, vote preferences, or anything other than the requirements set out below and in course assignments. Second, a key component of an education is developing the ability to distinguish between statements of fact and evidence and interpretations about what those facts mean. Third, a statement, interpretation, or idea that goes against your priors, or even one that you find offensive, is not by definition a personal attack or a hostile act; the ability to listen, engage, respond, and counterargue in this situation is an essential element of becoming a critical thinker.1 Remember why you’re here: “Whatever may be limitations which trammel inquiry elsewhere, we believe that the great state University of Wisconsin should ever encourage that continual and fearless sifting and winnowing by which alone the truth can be found.” Thank you for coming to my TED talk. Now let’s get on with it. I. Course Description We are at a pivotal moment in our history, one in which the basic functions of national government are breaking down.
    [Show full text]
  • Author Adam Gopnik to Deliver 17Th Lafontaine-Baldwin Lecture Tickets to See Best-Selling Author at 6 Degrees Toronto Are Now on Sale
    NEWS RELEASE For immediate release Author Adam Gopnik to deliver 17th LaFontaine-Baldwin Lecture Tickets to see best-selling author at 6 Degrees Toronto are now on sale TORONTO, June 25, 2019 — 6 Degrees, the global forum for inclusion, announces that Adam Gopnik will headline its signature opening lecture, the LaFontaine-Baldwin Lecture on September 24, at the TELUS Centre for Performance and Learning, Koerner Hall, in Toronto. A project of the Institute for Canadian Citizenship, 6 Degrees is centered around connection, conversation, and action. “I’m so proud to be coming to 6 Degrees Toronto to deliver the 17th LaFontaine-Baldwin Lecture”, said Gopnik. “Questions of identity and citizenship are more urgent than ever, and we must explore the tension between our local and global selfhoods. What's shared and what's specific? What do we owe our neighbours and what do we owe ourselves?” Adam Gopnik is a celebrated author and speaker. He has been exploring “small L” liberalism and its actors for his entire career, including in The New Yorker, and his new book, A Thousand Small Sanities: The Moral Adventure of Liberalism. It has been heralded by reviewers for its relevance in a time that democratic and inclusive values are under threat. Gopnik promises to question, illuminate, and serve as an antidote to the rising tide of nationalism here and around the world. The 17th LaFontaine-Baldwin lecture will also feature Gopnik in conversation with celebrated author and thinker, John Ralston Saul. "I can't think of a more urgent time and a better person to be rethinking, rediscovering, reinventing the concept of the engaged citizen, the citizen who understands what it means to be inclusive”, said Institute for Canadian Citizenship’s co-founder and co-chair John Ralston Saul.
    [Show full text]
  • Navigating the Political Divide: Lessons from Lincoln,” on April 20
    LINCOLN MEMORIAL UNIVERSITY LAW REVIEW __________________________________ VOLUME 1 DECEMBER 2013 ISSUE 1 _____________________________________ SYMPOSIUM: NAVIGATING THE POLITICAL DIVIDE : LESSONS FROM LINCOLN FOREWORD : NAVIGATION THE POLITICAL DIVIDE : LESSONS FROM LINCOLN Matthew R. Lyon and William Evans ARTICLES: WAR ON TERROR : LESSONS FROM LINCOLN M. Akram Faizer INTRODUCTION : LINCOLN ’S DIVIDED HOUSE : THE CONSTITUTION AND THE UNION Charles M. Hubbard TRANSCRIPTS: THE ROAD TO 2012 AND GAME CHANGE Mark Halperin MAKING PRISONERS VISIBLE : HOW LITERATURE CAN ILLUMINATE THE CRISIS OF MASS INCARCERATION Helen E. Lee THE EXECUTIVE BRANCH : TOO MUCH POWER ? Michael Steele THE POWERS OF THE PRESIDENT Siegfried Wiessner BOOK REVIEWS: THE FOURTH AMENDMENT : NOT LIKE FINE WINE Nicholas S. Davenport, V GOVERNMENT , WHAT HAVE YOU DONE FOR ME LATELY ? Tracy P. Knight LINCOLN MEMORIAL UNIVERSITY LAW REVIEW __________________________________ VOLUME 1 DECEMBER 2013 ISSUE 1 _____________________________________ BOARD OF EDITORS 2012-2013 Dennis Bailey Editor in Chief Katie Hill Executive Managing Editor Rachel Donsbach Executive Articles Editor Jeff Glaspie Executive Notes Editor ASSOCIATE EDITORS LuAnn Hileman & James Lawrence STAFF EDITORS David Gratz, Chris Poulopoulos, Robert Simpson, Tyler Stafford, & Kelly Tanner FACULTY ADVISORS : Matthew Lyon & Charles MacLean i We would like to thank: BOARD OF EDITORS 2011-2012 Rebecca Lee Editor in Chief Nikki Price Executive Managing Editor Lin Phillips Executive Articles Editor Danielle Goins Executive Notes Editor William Evans Executive Symposium Editor ASSOCIATE EDITORS Dennis Bailey & Amanda Coop STAFF EDITORS Michael Aaron Bates, Katie Hill, Ryan Goddard, & Rachel Owens FACULTY ADVISOR : Sandra Ruffin We would also like to thank Ann Walsh-Long and Keri Stophel for all of their extremely valuable assistance.
    [Show full text]
  • Adam Gopnik the New Yorker Cometh to Miami
    Inspicio journalism Introduction to Adam Gopnik. 0:33 sec. Camera: Lee Skye. Video Editor: Nikita Grant. Photo & Design: Raymond Elman. Adam Gopnik: The New Yorker Cometh to Miami By Elman + Skye + Grant staff writer for The New Yorker since 1986, Adam Gopnik was born in Philadelphia and raised in Montreal. He re- A ceived his B.A. in Art History from McGill University, be- fore completing his graduate work at the Institute of Fine Arts, New York University. His first essay inThe New Yorker, “Quat- trocento Baseball” appeared in May of 1986 and he served as the magazine’s art critic from 1987 to 1995. That year, he left New York to live and write in Paris, where he wrote The New Yorker’s “Paris Journal” for the next five years. His expanded collection of essays from Paris, Paris To the Moon, appeared in 2000, and was called by the New York Times “the finest book on France in recent years.” While in Paris, he began work on an adventure novel, The King in the Window, which was published in 2005. He still often writes from Paris for The New Yorker and has edited the anthology Americans in Paris for the Library of America. Gopnik’s 2006 book, Through the Children’s Gate: A Home In New York collected and expanded his essays from the previous five years about life in New York and about raising two children in the shadow of many kinds of sadness. In 2009, Gopnik completed Angels and Ages: A Short Book about Lincoln, Darwin And Modern Life, which became a nation- al best-seller.
    [Show full text]
  • Catalogue 12
    2 CATALOGUE 12 1904 Coolidge Ave., Altadena, California 91001 · Tel. (626) 297-7700 · [email protected] www.WhitmoreRareBooks.com Books may be reserved by email: [email protected] and by phone: (626) 297-7700 We welcome collectors and dealers to come visit our library by appointment at: 1904 Coolidge Ave., Altadena, CA 91001 For our complete inventory, including many first editions, signed books and other rare items, please visit our website at: www.WhitmoreRareBooks.com CATALOGUE DESIGNED AND PHOTOGRAPH BY DARINKA MONTANO WITH A SPECIAL THANKS TO JULISSA MOREIRA. Catalogue 12 An off-beat, sci-fi adventure book that is laugh-out-loud funny. 1. Adams, Douglas The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy Inscribed First Edition London: Arthur Barker Ltd., 1979. First edition. Inscribed by the author on the title page: “To Mike & Wendy Best wishes Douglas Adams.” A Fine copy of the book in like dust jacket. Surprisingly scarce in the first edition and often found read to death. This copy with “Capricorn One” advertisement on the rear panel of the jacket, as required for the first issue. An exceptional copy. The author’s first book, and first in the series. “The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy” is an off-beat, sci-fi adventure book generally regarded as one of the most hilarious books written in the last fifty years. It has been wildly successful through its various radio, TV, stage, and film adaptations with millions of fans worldwide. A superb copy of this classic work of science fiction. “Humorous science fiction novels have notoriously limited audiences..
    [Show full text]
  • Avi Final for Sending to the Uni Sep 19
    After the Law: Towards Judicial-Visual Activism by Avi Feldman A dissertation submitted to The University of Reading For PhD in Fine Art provided by Central Archive at the University of Reading View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk CORE brought to you by Reading School of Art September, 2017 1 Declaration of original authorship 'I confirm that this is my own work and the use of all material from other sources has been properly and fully acknowledged.’ Avi Feldman 2 Abstract Law and art are oftentimes perceived as standing in opposition, and even seen in conflicting terms. The first is dismissed as provincial, rigid, and bureaucratic, while the latter is repeatedly characterized as global, flexible, and dynamic. Yet, closer observation and analysis reveal hidden links and layers, and substantial preoccupation by both legal and art practitioners in the visual and in the judicial. It is through the unraveling of spaces, gaps, and lacunae in which both fields of practice and knowledge intersect that this publication sets in motion an exploration of influences and interactions between law and art. Offering a new critical approach and methodology to deal with existing and imagined relations between law and art, this publication analyzes curatorial and artistic projects by revealing overlooked legal dimensions embedded within them. It introduces legal theory and scholarship in relation to visual artworks in order to expand and foster new paths for both judicial and visual activism. Based on the reassessment of artistic and curatorial capabilities and encounters in a time of globalization, it is concerned with broadening our perception of the role of art and legal practitioners with regard to justice.
    [Show full text]
  • Social Robots and Emotion: Transcending the Boundary Between Humans and Icts
    intervalla: Vol. 1, 2013 ISSN: 2296-3413 Social Robots and Emotion: Transcending the Boundary Between Humans and ICTs Satomi Sugiyama Franklin College Switzerland Jane Vincent London School of Economics and Political Science University of Surrey Digital World Research Centre KEY WORDS: social robot, emotion, ICTs, mobile phone, body Copyright © 2013 (Sugiyama & Vincent). Licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution Noncommercial No Derivatives (by-nc- nd/3.0). Sugiyama & Vincent Social Robots and Emotion The notion of social robots often evokes the idea of ‘humanoid social robots’ which are “human- made autonomous entities that interact with humans in a humanlike way” (Zhao, 2006, p. 405). These humanoid social robots, and also zoomorphic social robots, are becoming a part of our everyday communicative interactions. They have been introduced to us as relational artefacts such as Tamagotchis, Furbies, and Aibos, asking the question of who we are becoming as we develop intimate and emotional relationships with machines (Picard 1997; Turkle, 2007, 2012). These relationships between humans and machines have been discussed not only in terms of intelligent machines, such as humanoid social robots incorporated into our social domains, but also in terms of the hybridization of the human body and machines (Haraway 1991; Fortunati, 2003a, 2003b; Katz, 2003; Fortunati, Katz, & Riccini, 2003). At the surface level, humanoid social robots and artificial intelligence might create an impression that the questions about the relationship between humans and technologies are still far removed from our everyday experiences and saved for the research laboratories and the world of science fiction. However, information and communication technologies (ICTs) have been slowly but steadily ‘approaching’ the human body, calling for a reconsideration of the notion of social robots.
    [Show full text]