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Journal articles on the topic 'Modes of subjugation'

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1

Ramos Silva, Luciane. "Black Brazilians on the Move." Dance Research Journal 53, no. 2 (2021): 124–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0149767721000267.

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AbstractThis Keynote offers a brief overview of an artistic and activist editorial project based in São Paulo City, the magazine O Menelick 2° Ato, as well as presents a portrait of some Black contemporary women artists, some of them interdisciplinary, and articulates modes of interrogating political and symbolic violence and subjugation from Brazilian colonially, creating an artistic presence rooted in the search for self-determination, autonomy, and modes of existence ignited by Black diasporas’ ways of self-writing. Their creative work also disrupts hegemonic epistemologies and calls us to
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Yogesh Shreekant Anvekar. "Feminist analysis of Rupa Bajwa’s: The sari shop." World Journal of Advanced Research and Reviews 22, no. 1 (2024): 543–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.30574/wjarr.2024.22.1.1134.

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An analysis of the ‘The Sari Shop’ by Rupa Bajwa using Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s Theory of women and economics has been attempted. The Researcher has analyzed the different ways and circumstances through which the women protagonists were made to leave productive modes of employment to take up reproductive employment and the benefits offered to them, the consequences and the intermingling of both capitalism and patriarchy to keep those women under subjugation along with the consequences of the rebellion lead by the protagonists which differed according to their class, family and educational ba
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Christiansen, Steen Ledet. "Pain and the Cinesthetic Subject in Black Swan." Screen Bodies 1, no. 2 (2016): 25–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.3167/screen.2016.010203.

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Darren Aronofsky’s Black Swan (2010) produces a cinesthetic subject that articulates issues of gendered violence but at the same time also opens up space for producing a new subject outside of biopower. Tracing the production of pain as a way of feeling gendered violence rather than simply understanding it, the article also argues that Nina Sawyer’s transformation is an act of subversive becoming. Pain is produced by the film’s formal properties, pulling us along as viewers, and producing new modes of sensing biopower’s cultural techniques and subjugation of bodies. At the same time, pain beco
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Yogesh, Shreekant Anvekar. "Feminist analysis of Rupa Bajwa's: The sari shop." World Journal of Advanced Research and Reviews 22, no. 1 (2024): 543–46. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.14206324.

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An analysis of the ‘The Sari Shop’ by Rupa Bajwa using Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s Theory of women and economics has been attempted. The Researcher has analyzed the different ways and circumstances through which the women protagonists were made to leave productive modes of employment to take up reproductive employment and the benefits offered to them, the consequences and the intermingling of both capitalism and patriarchy to keep those women under subjugation along with the consequences of the rebellion lead by the protagonists which differed according to their class, family
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Simone, AbdouMaliq. "An Urban Political from the "End of the World": Dock Nine and its Technical Epistles." Anthropological Quarterly 96, no. 1 (2024): 153–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/anq.2024.a923087.

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ABSTRACT: This essay explores some resonances between the measures taken by the intensely subjugated residents of an urban district in Jayapura, West Papua (Indonesia) and notions of the "technical" examined by multiple strands in philosophies of media/computation, as well as Black thought. It explores some of the collective orientations and practices deployed to address a context of intensive subjugation, emphasizing these practices as modes of technicity applied to sustaining ways of acting in concert in a situation that continually undermines social coherence and intimacy. This exploration
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Burguete Miguel, Enrique Eduardo. "Gender’s post-feminism and transhumanism." Medicina e Morale 68, no. 2 (2019): 197–210. http://dx.doi.org/10.4081/mem.2019.582.

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The corollary of the humanist project for human enhancement is transhumanism, which considers post-human modes of existence to be desirable, and aspires to overcome our vulnerability by incorporating available technology into our nature. One of its manifestations is the queer theory, which calls for actively redefining the “self”, starting with the sexed body and its functioning. This article analyses the transhumanist impulse and the queer theory from the concepts of emancipation and progress, asking the following questions: a) What do both terms mean when we refer to human beings? and b) Are
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Tazzioli, Martina, and Nicholas De Genova. "Kidnapping migrants as a tactic of border enforcement." Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 38, no. 5 (2020): 867–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0263775820925492.

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This article identifies and analyses the tactic of kidnapping migrants that is increasingly deployed by states to disrupt, decelerate, and block migrants’ mobility. Kidnapping, we argue, is one of the political technologies of capture used by state authorities in their efforts to reassert control over migratory movements. This analysis contributes to a new understanding of the politics of border enforcement through strategies aimed at the containment of migration. The article focuses on the U.S.–Mexico border and the European border in the Mediterranean Sea as crucial sites where states have i
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Du, Yifan. "During the Anti-Japanese war period, Comparison of the newspaper distribution of the Communist Party of China between in the Shanxi-Gansu-Ningxia border area and the Kuomintang area." SHS Web of Conferences 157 (2023): 03014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/shsconf/202315703014.

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The “Lugou bridge Incident” broke out on July 7, 1937. In order to save the country from subjugation, the Kuomintang and the Communist Party carried out the second cooperation. This cooperation is non party cooperation, and there are great differences in political, military and ruling regions. In response to these differences, the Communist Party of China adopted different newspaper distribution models and public opinion management modes. Based on the historical and environmental background of the War of Resistance against Japanese Aggression, this paper collects the distributing data of Party
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9

Williams, Sean, and Lillis Ó Laoire. "Vernacular Catholicism in Ireland: The Keening Woman." Religions 15, no. 7 (2024): 879. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/rel15070879.

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The relationship between popular vernacular Catholicism and the more official liturgical variety has varied over centuries. Following the subjugation of Ireland by the late 17th century, and the institution of anti-Catholic proscriptions, the number of priests available became more restricted. Religious observation subsequently centered on holy days and local sacred sites including healing wells, many of them dedicated to saints. Always central figures in death rituals, women who mourned the dead—“keening women”—were so called because they lamented the dead through a combination of voice and s
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Yıldız, Hatice. "The Politics of Time in Colonial Bombay: Labor Patterns and Protest in Cotton Mills." Journal of Social History 54, no. 1 (2019): 206–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jsh/shz016.

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Abstract This article examines the modes of time and work discipline that emerged through factory industry in colonial Bombay. Based on a wide range of archival sources, it shows that mechanized production did not invariably suggest a transition from task-based, irregular to clock-measured, rationally organized work patterns. Operating simultaneously within temporal orders constructed by the global economy, agriculture, family, and community, cotton mills combined new disciplinary practices with a flexible approach to labor. Gender, marital status, religion, skill, and position in the manufact
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Sandhu, Shubhpreet. "Identify and Self-Search in Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale." SMART MOVES JOURNAL IJELLH 9, no. 1 (2021): 95–100. http://dx.doi.org/10.24113/ijellh.v9i1.10882.

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This paper attempts to capture the social status, domination of women by men faced by Offred, the protagonist of the sixth best seller novel by the Canadian author Margaret Atwood. The famous fantasy fiction The Handmaid’s Tale is written in the dystopian tradition.Through this novel, she has penned powerfully her social concern regarding the social status, domination, the mental turmoil and the identity crises of women in a male – dominated society and their consequent struggle to overcome this domination, repression and subjugation through many modes of escape strategies. This kind of strugg
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STERIE, Maria Cristina. "TREATING NARCISSISTIC PERSONALITY DISORDER WITH SCHEMA THERAPY – A CASE STUDY." ANTHROPOLOGICAL RESEARCHES AND STUDIES 14, no. 1 (2024): 205–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.26758/14.1.15.

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Objectives. This case study endeavors to provide an in-depth understanding of the schema and mode structure of narcissistic personality disorder (NPD) and to illustrate a possible therapeutic approach using schema therapy (ST). Material and methods. The recorded material from a 2-year therapeutic journey of a 38-year-old female client diagnosed with NPD was transcribed and systematically analyzed, together with the results of questionnaires that were given to the client at the start of therapy and at the end of the process. Results. The Millon Clinical Multiaxial Inventory (MCMI-III) was initi
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Obuse. "Living Compound Marginality: Experiences of a Japanese Muslim Woman." Religions 10, no. 7 (2019): 434. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/rel10070434.

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The present article discusses the ways in which ethnic Japanese Muslim women are perceived and treated in contemporary Japanese society, through a case study of one Japanese female convert. It examines the complexity found in her experiences of marginality by highlighting three inter-related modes of marginalization: marginality deriving from being a Muslim, from being a Japanese Muslim and from being a woman. It discusses her responses to these discourses of marginalization and how she establishes her identity as a Muslim, through responding to them. The article first shows that ethnic Japane
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Márcio, Batista de Oliveira. "Família, política e atualidade." Brasiliensis 6, no. 12 (2017): 133–75. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.8128288.

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https://brasiliensis.cerm.org.br/index.php/brasiliensis/article/view/122/version/122 In these lines, the phenomenon of social dechristianization and deconstruction of the family paradigm in Western society and, in particular, in Brazil, is presented in a succinct manner and with historical-analytical bias. It seeks to demonstrate the origin of this process precisely in the population planning and family planning politic of the 1970s, based on the neo-malthusean theory of demographic development. The neo-malthusean model of analysis of demographic behavior was adopted by the agents conduct
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Werbanowska, Marta. "Ecojustice Poetry in The BreakBeat Poets Anthologies." Ecozon@: European Journal of Literature, Culture and Environment 13, no. 1 (2022): 89–105. http://dx.doi.org/10.37536/ecozona.2022.13.1.4421.

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Ecological modes of thinking and an awareness of environmental (in)justice are becoming increasingly pronounced in the ethics and aesthetics of hip hop. One area in which the culture’s growing interest in ecology as practice and metaphor is particularly visible is hip hop poetry’s turn to ecojustice, or an intersectional concern with social and environmental justice, liberation, diversity, and sustainability. This article examines selected works from the first two volumes of anthologies published by Haymarket Books as part of their BreakBeat Poets series, focusing on three ecojustice-oriented
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Hornung, Severin, and Thomas Höge. "Analysing power and control in work organizations: Assimilating a critical socio-psychodynamic perspective." Business & Management Studies: An International Journal 9, no. 1 (2021): 355–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.15295/bmij.v9i1.1754.

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This conceptual article draws on critical traditions from several social science disciplines, notably, social, political, and systems theory, sociology, psychology, and management studies, as it seeks to explore, assemble, and integrate some constitutive components of a socio- and psychodynamic perspective on power and control in work organizations. At its core is an archetypal taxonomy of formal (economic), real (technocratic), normative (ideological), and formative (biopolitical) modes of power and managerial control through various means and combinations of commodification (contracts, compe
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Cohen, Lara Langer. "Going Underground: Race, Space, and the Subterranean in the Nineteenth-Century US." American Literary History 33, no. 3 (2021): 510–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/alh/ajab053.

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Abstract This essay examines the emergence of the underground as a figure for being in but not of a rotten world. First popularized by newspaper coverage of the Underground Railroad in the 1840s, the underground offered a metaphor for subversive activity that has remained central to our political vocabulary. My forthcoming book, Going Underground: Race, Space, and the Subterranean in the Nineteenth-Century US, excavates the long history of this now-familiar idea, but most of all, it seeks out versions of the underground that got left behind along the way. To do so, it traces images of the subt
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Foster, Travis M. "White Supremacist Submission." TSQ 10, no. 3-4 (2023): 426–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/23289252-10900942.

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Abstract Scholars tend to envision the sexual politics of settler colonialism and slavery through masculinist conceptions in which penetration designates mastery and receptiveness subjugation. This article asks instead how white desires for sexual submission to nonwhite men operate within white supremacy. It augments white trans and queer studies' conceptualizations of bottoming with theories of white submission found in Black thought, particularly Frantz Fanon and James Baldwin. And it argues that both sets of ideas find themselves anticipated in the mid-nineteenth-century writings of the whi
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Dhobi, Saleem. "Critical Appraisal of Female Consciousness in Anita Desai’s The Fire on The Mountain." Patan Pragya 13, no. 2 (2024): 113–22. https://doi.org/10.3126/pragya.v13i2.78796.

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This paper assesses the consciousness of female characters who represent women in Indian society. By using the feminist perspective, Desai’s work, Fire on the Mountain is analyzed to explain why and how women suffer oppression, confinement, slavery and obedience in marriage system that is guided by the principles of patriarchy. The novel portrays Nanda Kaul’s consciousness that is missing in the beginning but gradually confinement, oppression and exploitation teach her to become aware of her individuality. Her life is deeply impacted by societal limitations and patriarchal norms and values. Th
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Lee, Dong-Jin, and Robert J. Elias. "Paleobiologic and evolutionary significance of corallite increase and associated features inSaffordophyllum newcombae(Tabulata, Late Ordovician, southern Manitoba)." Journal of Paleontology 74, no. 3 (2000): 404–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022336000031681.

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Saffordophyllum newcombaeFlower, 1961, displays unique abilities and an unprecedented range in types of corallite increase. Cerioid growth was characteristic, but colonies on soft substrates could grow in a tollinaform manner during early astogeny. The capacity for recovery from damage and partial mortality is amazing. Rejuvenation may have been accompanied by peripheral expansion in some cases. Rapid regeneration could involve axial increase. Circular lacunae that formed during recovery became sites of rapid lateral increase or corallite decrease.Two types of axial increase occurred within co
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Anisimov, Oleg V. "The Russian Empire as a Regulator of the Hajj and Russian Orthodox Pilgrimage." Vestnik of Saint Petersburg University. History 68, no. 2 (2023): 549–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.21638/spbu02.2023.215.

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The work by Eileen Kane on the Russian Empire’s experience of regulating the hajj — the Muslim pilgrimage from the Volga region, the Caucasus, and Central Asia to the Middle East — is of interest not only from the perspective of Asian and African studies or the history of religion. It is also, potentially, a comparative study as the author illustrates her observations and conclusions by referring to Russia’s policies towards the Christian populations of the Arab provinces of the Ottoman Empire. E. Kane advances a debatable thesis that Russia provided unofficial support for the hajj undertaken
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Vyas, Lata, and Manisha Shekhawat. "Environment Jurisprudence, Ecofeminism Nature Law and Women." Innovation The Research Concept 9, no. 3 (2024): E55—E63. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.11096158.

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This paper has been published in Peer-reviewed International Journal "Innovation The Research Concept"                      URL : https://www.socialresearchfoundation.com/new/publish-journal.php?editID=8958 Publisher : Social Research Foundation, Kanpur (SRF International)  Abstract : In recent decades, the fields of environmental law and feminist theory have evolved in parallel, both seeking to address systemic issues of power, justice, and equality. Within this intersection lies
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Edwards, Will, and Amir Kalan. "Addressing the Subjugation of Knowledge in Educational Settings through Structuration of Teacher Research." Canadian Journal of Action Research 24, no. 1 (2024): 56–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.33524/cjar.v24i1.664.

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Building on critical sociological models and action research traditions, our work theorizes a structurated model of action research to address the subjugation of knowledge within educational settings. We focus on the interplay between structure and agency and how these dimensions can co-evolve in teacher research. In this article, we examine how teachers and researchers engaged in collaborative inquiry communities inhabit a complicated role within educational structures. The authors outline and detail rich cases that illustrate the dense particulars of knowledge subjugation within educational
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Arshad, Rasidah. "Psychological contract violation and turnover intention: do cultural values matter?" Journal of Managerial Psychology 31, no. 1 (2016): 251–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/jmp-10-2013-0337.

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Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to examine the role of cultural value orientations (mastery and subjugation) in moderating the relationship between psychological contract violation (PCV) and turnover intention. Design/methodology/approach – A longitudinal survey method was used to collect data from downsizing survivors in two phases. The final sample was 281 cases. Confirmatory factor analysis and hierarchical regression models were used to test the hypotheses. Findings – PCV is positively related to turnover intention, and the relationship is moderated by cultural value orientations. S
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A.Selvam and S.Thanigaivelan. "The Image of New Woman in Select Novels of Shobaa De." Shanlax International Journal of English 7, no. 1 (2019): 34–36. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3269027.

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The Indian English novel has witnessed a signi cant growth particularly over the last three decades. There is a certain multiplicity of themes and variety of styles seen in this genre today. Apart from the political and social themes, there are genderbased themes, ethnic-minority themes and themes dealing with the expatriate experience. The present paper provides a modest study of the novels of Shobha De, the most popular Indian Woman writer in English. It has made comprehensive critical comments on her  ction with an emphasis on the image of woman portrayed in her novels. She has an extraor
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Roychoudhary, Dr Mausumi. "‘Marriage: Freedom or Subjugation’: A Case Study of Paro’s Dreams by Namita Gokhale." SMART MOVES JOURNAL IJELLH 8, no. 5 (2020): 125. http://dx.doi.org/10.24113/ijellh.v8i5.10589.

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The present paper searches to present a modest study of the novel of Namita Gokhale. It can be truly said that Namita Gokhale introduced herself to the world of English Literature through the novel Paro: dreams of passion and got recognition and appreciation as the best seller, as she realistically projected the elite class of Delhi. Her novel made her the talk of the town. It also aims at the exploration of the versatile personality of the author. Namita Gokhale is a world renowned Indian author and novelist known for her works in English language. She is a founder-director of the Jaipur Lite
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Cardoso, Roberta Elpídio, Nei Antonio Nunes, Alexandre Zawaki Pazetto, et al. "The Effects Resulting from Using WhatsApp in the Routines of Education Workers." Journal of Education and Learning 13, no. 5 (2024): 102. http://dx.doi.org/10.5539/jel.v13n5p102.

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This article aims to explore the impacts of power dynamics arising from the use of the WhatsApp instant messaging application on the work routines of civil servants within a public educational institution. Utilizing the Foucauldian genealogy of power as a theoretical framework, we endeavor to conduct a critical historical analysis of the mechanics behind socially constituted power relations. Employing a qualitative case study approach, we juxtapose the analytics of power (drawing categories from the Foucauldian genealogy) with the investigative model of technological paradoxes, focusing on &am
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Imran, Tazeem. ""Master Disciple Relationship in the Hindi Poetry of Amir Khusrow: An Analysis" by Tazeem Imran." Global Language Review VIII, no. I (2023): 418–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.31703/glr.2023(viii-i).39.

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The Indo-Persian Sufi tradition emphasizes incommunicable, unbound, and unconditioned Divine love, evoking a bridal metaphor as a symbol of divinity. The spiritual path evolves through esoteric contemplation of Fana Fil Shaykh, characterized by complete trust and willingness to discover the miraculous powers of the Holy Guide. The Master emerges as the prime model for the seeker of divine love, and the relationship between the Master and Disciple is characterized by self-subjugation and meditation. Amir Khusrow, a distinguished Sufi poet, transcribed the intimacy and mutual love between Master
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Yu, Wei-Chun, and Wen-Sung Lai. "Effects of long-term social subjugations during puberty on adult behavioral performance: using male hamsters as a model." Neuroscience Research 68 (January 2010): e410. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neures.2010.07.1818.

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Huang, G. Steve, and Meng-Yen Hong. "Genomic Expression for Rat Model of Damp Obstruction in Chinese Medicine: Application of Microarray Technology." American Journal of Chinese Medicine 33, no. 03 (2005): 459–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/s0192415x05003065.

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Damp obstruction refers to the stagnation of vital energy (qi) caused by dampness resulting in dysfunction of body and limbs movement, as well as impairment of spleen and stomach digestive function. Damp obstruction is the dampness-induced imbalance of five elements; thus it serves as an ideal model for genomic study using cDNA microarray. We have performed microarray analyses to major organs of damp-obstructed rats. Cluster analysis for the expression profiles of major organs indicated that spleen, stomach, and kidney respond to dampness differently from heart, liver, lung, and brain. Gene ex
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Sharma, Ritu. "Nehru's World-View: An Alternative to the Superpowers' Model of International Relations." India Quarterly: A Journal of International Affairs 45, no. 4 (1989): 324–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/097492848904500402.

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Jawaharlal Nehru's keen sense of history and his intense nationalism played a key role in the evolution of his world-view which pioneered to give new direction to international politics in the post-Indian independence period. This world-view had developed gradually but formidably over a span of half a century entailing and synchronising the turmoil at the national and global level and finally leaving a profound impact on Nehru's mind.1 The vulnerable Western colonial domination of the world; the gripping struggle between the fascist and the liberal forces within the West itself and the confron
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Kravets, А. Y. "Biocentrism as one of the main categories of everyday biopolitical discourse." Науково-теоретичний альманах "Грані" 21, no. 7 (2018): 5–10. http://dx.doi.org/10.15421/171887.

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The main aim of the article is the conceptualization of the categorical apparatus of biopolitics. The focus is on biocentrism as one of the main categories of modern biopolitical discourse. It is stated that biopolitics today offers a variety of research directions and a specific categorical apparatus, while fluctuations in the interpretations of the main terms and categories should be noted. The main terms are considered: «biopolitics», «political man», biopower and biocentrism. The definition of the above terms in the biopolitics is systematized and proposed author’s definitions. «Homo Polit
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Ryner, Bradley. "Shakespearean Families and Ideological Critique in Hill and Rodriguez's Locke & Key Authors." Borrowers and Lenders: The Journal of Shakespeare Appropriations 16, no. 2 (2025): 1–15. https://doi.org/10.18274/va9d9s43.

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Joe Hill’s and Gabriel Rodriguez’s fantasy/horror comic book series Locke & Key (2008–2013) appropriates the classical psychoanalytic reading of Hamlet in combination with structural elements modeled on The Tempest to mount a critique of the role of families in perpetuating socioeconomic inequalities that strongly resembles the Althusserian critique of ideology, which also extrapolates a model of social subjugation from an Oedipal model of the family. When Hill belatedly attempts to incorporate race into this critique in the issues following Barack Obama’s election and the backlash of whit
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Nodeh, Soghra, Niloofar Taherian, and Behzad Pourgharib. "The Subordinated Other: Exploring Gender and Environmental Subjugation in Barbara Kingsolver’s Prodigal Summer through Val Plumwood’s Theory of Master Model." Interdisciplinary Literary Studies 26, no. 4 (2024): 521–41. https://doi.org/10.5325/intelitestud.26.4.0521.

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ABSTRACT One of the fundamental issues in mankind’s pursuit of greater development is the protection of the environment and other subordinated groups, which has been a major concern of ecofeminists in recent decades. Claiming that environmental issues are feminist issues, ecofeminists argue that the domination of women correlates with the exploitation of nature and there are critical linkages between the two. Val Plumwood, one of the most distinguished environmental philosophers, describes the oppression of humans and nature as a phenomenon stemming from a system of dualistic structures. Accor
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Becker, Ralf. "Methodischer Mechanismus und instrumentelle Vernunft." Deutsche Zeitschrift für Philosophie 68, no. 5 (2020): 734–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/dzph-2020-0050.

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Abstract Mechanistic explanations – especially mechanistic models – are commonly used to describe living beings. But their usage should be scrutinised closely. This text elucidates the motives, conditions and implications of a so called ‘methodical mechanism’. Due to the fact that humans cannot properly explain certain biotic processes, they have to rely on their technical knowledge to explain them. The history of philosophy and scientific thinking is, therefore, intertwined with the history of technology: the way humans interpret and explain natural phenomena is subject to the technological k
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Louissaint, Guilberly. "The Ceremonial Bath, a Surrender to the Spirits." Journal of Haitian Studies 29, no. 1 (2023): 69–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/jhs.2023.a922858.

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Abstract: In a time of ecological devastation, Haiti must once again turn to its sacred ecologies. Vodou is the lifeline of Haitian national identity, serving multiple social functions, “healing” among them. This piece argues that Haitian Vodou is a model of ecological healing that runs counter to Western medicine, a biologically reductionist system grounded in the ecological, racialized scientific research-based exploitation of the island and its inhabitants. Focusing on the history of ritual bathing through the rise of balneological science in Saint-Domingue, I argue that the question of hea
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Orouq, Ayham Abu. "“The Question of Palestine”: Power and Resistance in Fadia Faqir’s Nisanit." Eger Journal of English Studies, no. 24 (2024): 43–70. https://doi.org/10.33035/egerjes.2024.24.43.

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This study examines aspects of the Palestinian–Israeli conflict as depicted in Fadia Faqir’s Nisanit. It explores both the methods of subjugation employed by the Israeli occupier and the forms of resistance undertaken by the Palestinian occupied. Drawing upon political perspectives that classify this encounter as a neo-colonial paradigm, alongside postcolonial critical views, the textual analysis of Faqir’s text reveals that the settler–native clash is an existential conflict constructed on imposing an exclusivist identity in Palestine. Nisanit exemplifies that the Israeli authorities use a ra
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Kolobara, Robert. "Information Operations as a Means of Cognitive Superiority - Theory and Term Research in Bosnia and Herzegovina." National security and the future 24, no. 2 (2023): 41–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.37458/nstf.24.2.3.

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The goal of today's information operations is to overthrow reality, i.e. to establish an imposed perception and understanding that lead to the same thinking, which will ultimately cause the desired action. Therefore, the mass media no longer transmit only interpretations of past events or model a narrative, but also teach the target audience how to think correctly, thus producing a behavioral outcome of a political and social character. Consequently with the political-security evolution, communication has become a means of a new hybrid war where the goal is cognitive superiority as the ultimat
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CHIRU, ADELA. "THE CHAINS OF LIBERATION AS SEEN THROUGH THE LENS OF SADEQ CHUBAK’S STORY “THE BABOON WHOSE BUFFOON WAS DEAD”." Romano-Arabica 23, no. 1/2024 (2025): 9–24. https://doi.org/10.62229/roar_xxiii/1.

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This article proposes an examination of the theme of alienation and freedom in Sadeq Chubak’s short story “The Baboon Whose Buffoon Was Dead”. Through the character of Makhmal, a domesticated baboon bound to his deceased master, Chubak constructs an allegory that explores the existential and social dimensions of alienation within the context of Iran’s rapid modernization. Using Jaeggi’s philosophical concept of alienation as powerlessness and internal division, alongside Seeman’s social-psychological model, the study investigates how Makhmal’s symbolic struggle with the death of his master ref
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Brausin Cortés, Julian Santiago. "Caracterización de experiencias significativas de educación ambiental en Colombia: Un análisis descriptivo de la identificación de tendencias para el desarrollo sustentable." Campos en Ciencias Sociales 11, no. 2 (2024): 101–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.15332/25006681.10256.

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The current environmental crisis, resulting from humanity's subjugation and domination of nature, has significantly contributed to the decline of ecological biodiversity worldwide. In the case of Colombia, the main causes of biodiversity loss include land-use changes, urbanization, among others. This underscores the urgent need to strengthen environmental education (EE) in the country to promote a sustainable environmental culture in harmony with nature. Accordingly, this research aims to characterize environmental education experiences in Colombia based on the database "Experiencias significa
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T. U. Cohen, Josh. "GENDER IDENTITIES AND FEMINISM." Ethics, Politics & Society 1 (May 14, 2018): 35. http://dx.doi.org/10.21814/eps.1.1.54.

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Many feminists (e.g. T. Bettcher and B.R. George) argue for a principle of first person authority (FPA) about gender, i.e. that we should (at least) not disavow people's gender self-categorisations. However, there is a feminist tradition resistant to FPA about gender, which I call "radical feminism”. Feminists in this tradition define gender-categories via biological sex, thus denying non-binary and trans self-identifications. Using a taxonomy by B. R. George, I begin to demystify the concept of gender. We are also able to use the taxonomy to model various feminist approaches. It becomes easie
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Downs, Jacob Kingsbury. "Headphones, Auditory Violence and the Sonic Flooding of Corporeal Space." Body & Society 27, no. 3 (2021): 58–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1357034x211024352.

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In this article, I develop and redirect Julian Henriques’s model of sonic dominance through examination of accounts of acoustic violence and torture involving headphones. Specifically, I show how auditory experience has been weaponized as an intracorporeal phenomenon, with headphones effecting a sense of sounds invading the interior phenomenological space of the head. By analysing reported cases of sonic violence and torture involving headphones through a composite theoretical lens drawn from the fields of music, sound and body studies, I argue that in saturating the head’s perceived interior
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Watson, Simon R. "God in Creation: A Consideration of Natural Selection as the Sacrificial Means of a Free Creation." Studies in Religion/Sciences Religieuses 48, no. 2 (2019): 216–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0008429819830356.

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If the Christian God is creator of all things and revealed in Christ to be costly love, then how can divine agency in creation be understood in light of scientific discoveries revealing that biological warfare undergirds Darwinian evolution by natural selection? To explore this challenge, I look to Philip Hefner’s teleonomic axiom as a measure for divine agency in the fulfillment and survival of natural structures and processes. Drawing on this criterion and the feminist writing of Judith Plaskow, I conclude that Hefner’s attempt to understand divine immanence using the metaphor of sacrifice w
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Kala Burrell Craft, Petra Robinson, and Ayana Allen-Handy. "A Conceptual Framework for Positive Black Female Identity Formation." Journal of African American Women and Girls in Education 2, no. 3 (2023): 34–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.21423/jaawge-v2i3a104.

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Educating Black females about critical media literacy is a fundamental responsibility that should be shared by all who are concerned with the ways in which Black females navigate the world, especially because of the media’s pervasiveness. We proposed a conceptual framework for equipping Black females with the necessary critical media literacy (CML) skills to successfully recognize, decode, and deconstruct negative media messaging to develop a positive Black female identity. Utilizing the Critical Literacies Advancement Model (CLAM) as a foundation, we argued that critical theory can help in te
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NÚÑEZ, MARÍA BARBA, CARMEN MORÁN DE CASTRO, and PABLO MEIRA CARTEA. "ENVIRONMENTAL EDUCATION IN TIMES OF CRISIS. WHERE IS IT WHEN IT IS MOST NECESSARY?" Ambiente & Sociedade 20, no. 3 (2017): 135–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/1809-4422asoc0026v2032017.

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Abstract This article analyzes the disappearance of environmental education from public policies and their funding lines, precisely at a historic time that, now more than ever, would call for its strengthening. For this reason, it is important to analyze the power dynamics that lie beyond the discourse justifying the austerity policies that lead to a disappearance of EE. To this end, we approach the field’s trajectory by applying Bourdieu’s theory, from a socio-biographical approach based on the life trajectory of nine environmental educators, a survey addressed to the Galician professional fi
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Rahman, Anila, Shumaila Ashee, and Sabeen nil. "From Prejudice to Print: American Newspapers and the Reporting of Black Murders." Global Sociological Review IX, no. I (2024): 112–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.31703/gsr.2024(ix-i).10.

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The present study explores the inherent ideologies of newspaper discourse and the subjugation of the readers to the said ideologies. 30 articles reporting Black murders by White policemen published in The New York Times, USA Today and Washington Post between 2014-2021 are used for creating three corpora of 25,561 words in total. AntCon 3.5.9 is used to generate the wordlist, N-Grams and concords; and LancsBox 6.0 is used to annotate the corpora.The study uses Critical Discourse Analysis and the Ideological Square Model of Van Dijk as its framework. The findings reveal that the use of certain l
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Imbroscio, David. "Stop Worrying (So Much) about Exclusionary Zoning and Fight Our Real Enemies: A Reply to My Critics." Urban Affairs Review 57, no. 1 (2019): 298–311. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1078087419890679.

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In this short reply, I attempt to address my critics in the limited space allotted. I show, inter alia, how the Anti–Exclusionary Zoning (Anti-EZ) Project: (1) brutally reproduces White supremacy, rather than subverting it; (2) employs pernicious neoliberal and antidemocratic means to achieve its—at best—inherently modest ends; (3) emanates from and reflects the elitist politics of the liberal professional-managerial class that locks in the neoliberal status quo, instead of building upon the emancipatory potentialities and power of grassroots, street-fighting mobilizations for housing justice
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Swanson, Joel Howard. "A Pathologically Abnormal Situation: Le Cercle Gaston Crémieux and the [Im]Possibility of an Anti-National Jewishness." Religions 13, no. 11 (2022): 1018. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/rel13111018.

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This paper examines the diasporist French Jewish political group, Le Cercle Gaston Crémieux, founded in 1967 “to promote a diasporic Jewish existence without subjugation to the synagogue or to Zionism”. In contrast to either an assimilationist model which demanded the acceptance of French national identity in the public sphere, or a Zionist model of Jewish nationalism, the Cercle offered a model in which the state of exile and diaspora becomes constitutive of Jewish identity, positioned as an alternate mode of being-in-the-world defined against white Christian European nationalism. Yet to expo
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Florea, Dumitrita. "The Legal Status of Women in Islam." Logos Universality Mentality Education Novelty: Law 10, no. 2 (2023): 37–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.18662/lumenlaw/10.2/75.

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The gender difference fueled throughout our history as a species a series of inequalities that were transposed into society in the form of a hierarchical system in which political, economic and religious power was under the auspices of male gender representatives, and social and family relationships were outlined around the concept of subjugation of women, the so-called „patriarchal society” in which roles in society were clearly defined, and deviations from archaic norms were sanctioned with public opprobrium. The role of women in society is a topic that has been intensely debated in the last
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Kadel, Bhanubhakta Sharma. "Caste: A Socio-political Institution in Hindu Society." Janapriya Journal of Interdisciplinary Studies 3 (July 31, 2017): 9–15. http://dx.doi.org/10.3126/jjis.v3i0.17892.

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Caste has been a form of social stratification characterized by endogamy, hereditary transmission of a lifestyle, which often includes an occupation, ritual status in a hierarchy and customary social interaction and exclusion based on cultural notions of purity and pollution. Hierarchy, commensality, repulsion and hereditary membership and specialization are the major characteristics of caste system. It is assumed that castes arose from differences in family ritual practices, racial distinctions, and occupational differentiation and specialization but it is socio-political institution mainly c
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