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In: Differences: a journal of feminist cultural studies, Band 34, Heft 1, S. 165-174
ISSN: 1527-1986
Leo Bersani is well known for making a case for the pleasures of sameness. But "to circulate within sameness," he notes, "we must first of all welcome [ . . . ] lessness." This essay explores that hospitable gesture in Bersani's work, focusing on the self-abnegating practice of willing ourselves "to be less than who we are." What does it mean to be "uncontaminated by a psychology of desire" and "unaccompanied by an essentially doomed and generally anguished interrogation of the other's desire"? There can be no single answer to that ethically consequential question, which explains the jubilant restlessness of Bersani's oeuvre. The author concludes with a reading of Freud's infamous fort/da game, arguing that the child lessens his stake in a magisterial and anxious identity so as to extend himself, or parts of himself, joyfully and impersonally, into the world.
In: Administrative science quarterly: ASQ ; dedicated to advancing the understanding of administration through empirical investigation and theoretical analysis, Band 30, Heft 2, S. 295-296
ISSN: 0001-8392
In: SUNY series, the margins of literature
In: Education and urban society, Band 15, Heft 3, S. 367-387
ISSN: 1552-3535
In: Education and urban society, Band 15, Heft 3, S. 397-398
ISSN: 1552-3535
In: Yale French studies number 127
Addresses French-inspired theoretical and philosophical concerns centered on animals and animality. Contributors from France, the United Kingdom, and North America discuss animal-related topics in the French philosophical and literary tradition, offering a wide range of perspectives on animals, ethics, and the future of animal studies. Essays question the reducibility of animal lives to rights discourse on the one hand and scientific empiricisms on the other, and examine whether and how the advent of the posthuman will affect the standing and the future of the nonhuman animal.--Provided by publisher
In: SUNY series, the margins of literature
In: EBSCOhost eBook Collection
Speculations: Idealism and its Rem(a)inders / Tilottama Rajan and David L. Clark -- Fictions of Authority: Kierkegaard, de Man, and the Ethics of Reading / Christopher Norris -- Mimesis and the End of Art / John Sallis -- "The Necessary Heritage of Darkness": Tropics of Negativity in Schelling, Derrida, and de Man / David L. Clark -- Language, Music, and the Body: Nietzsche and Deconstruction / Tilottama Rajan -- Stubborn Attachment, Bodily Subjection: Rereading Hegel on the Unhappy Consciousness / Judith Butler -- The Ring of Being: Nietzsche, Freud, and the History of Conscience / Ned Lukacher -- Immediacy and Dissolution: Notes on the Languages of Moral Agency and Critical Discourse / Thomas Pfau -- "Non-Identity": The German Romantics, Schelling and Adorno / Andrew Bowie -- Complementarity, History, and the Unconscious / Arkady Plotnitsky -- Reconstructing Aesthetic Education: Modernity, Postmodernity, and Romantic Historicism / Eric Meyer.
In: Administrative Science Quarterly, Band 29, Heft 3, S. 487
In: Administrative Science Quarterly, Band 30, Heft 2, S. 295
The Saricicek howardite meteorite shower consisting of 343 documented stones occurred on September 2, 2015 in Turkey and is the first documented howardite fall. Cosmogenic isotopes show that Saricicek experienced a complex cosmic-ray exposure history, exposed during 12-14Ma in a regolith near the surface of a parent asteroid, and that an 1m sized meteoroid was launched by an impact 22 +/- 2Ma ago to Earth (as did one-third of all HED meteorites). SIMS dating of zircon and baddeleyite yielded 4550.4 +/- 2.5Ma and 4553 +/- 8.8Ma crystallization ages for the basaltic magma clasts. The apatite U-Pb age of 4525 +/- 17Ma, K-Ar age of 3.9Ga, and the U,Th-He ages of 1.8 +/- 0.7 and 2.6 +/- 0.3Ga are interpreted to represent thermal metamorphic and impact-related resetting ages, respectively. Petrographic; geochemical; and O-, Cr-, and Ti-isotopic studies confirm that Saricicek belongs to the normal clan of HED meteorites. Petrographic observations and analysis of organic material indicate a small portion of carbonaceous chondrite material in the Saricicek regolith and organic contamination of the meteorite after a few days on soil. Video observations of the fall show an atmospheric entry at 17.3 +/- 0.8kms(-1) from NW; fragmentations at 37, 33, 31, and 27km altitude; and provide a pre-atmospheric orbit that is the first dynamical link between the normal HED meteorite clan and the inner Main Belt. Spectral data indicate the similarity of Saricicek with the Vesta asteroid family (V-class) spectra, a group of asteroids stretching to delivery resonances, which includes (4) Vesta. Dynamical modeling of meteoroid delivery to Earth shows that the complete disruption of a 1km sized Vesta family asteroid or a 10km sized impact crater on Vesta is required to provide sufficient meteoroids 4m in size to account for the influx of meteorites from this HED clan. The 16.7km diameter Antionia impact crater on Vesta was formed on terrain of the same age as given by the He-4 retention age of Saricicek. Lunar scaling for crater production to crater counts of its ejecta blanket show it was formed 22Ma ago. ; Istanbul UniversityIstanbul University [40339, 58261]; Scientific and Technological Research Council of TurkeyTurkiye Bilimsel ve Teknolojik Arastirma Kurumu (TUBITAK) [MFAG/113F035]; Swiss National Science foundationSwiss National Science Foundation (SNSF)European Commission [PZ00P2_154874]; Swiss National Science foundation (NCCR PlanetS)Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF); Ministry of Science and Higher Education of the Russian Federation [3.1959.2017/4.6]; Act 211 of the Government of the Russian Federation [02.A03.21.0006]; National Natural Science Foundation of ChinaNational Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC) [41403055]; Simons Foundation [302497]; Academy of FinlandAcademy of FinlandEuropean Commission [299543]; NASA Cosmochemistry ProgramNational Aeronautics & Space Administration (NASA) [NNX14AM62G]; NASA Emerging Worlds Program [NNX16AD34G]; NASA NEOO program [NNX14-AR92G] ; We thank N. Ergun and family in the village of Saricicek for donating the meteorites studied here and collecting meteorite fall coordinates. We thank E. Atalan and S. Ozdemir at Bingol University, and E. Necip Yardim and M. Cicek at Mus Alparslan University, for facilitating our research at the campuses, and S. Pamuk at the Bingol police headquarters. We thank A. and T. Ozduman, police officers in Bingol, for assisting with the field study. For technical assistance, we further acknowledge support from M. Fehr, Y.-J. Lai, and L. Hoffland (NASA Ames Research Center); David Mittlefehldt (NASA JSC); K. Wimmer (Ries Crater Museum); J. Sanchez (Planetary Science Institute); A. Neesemann (Free University Berlin); S. Atanasova-Vladimirova and I. Piroeva (Institute of Physical Chemistry, BAS); and B. Georgieva and V. Strijkova (Institute of Optical Materials and Technologies, BAS). This work was supported by Istanbul University (Project No. 40339 and 58261), the Scientific and Technological Research Council of Turkey (MFAG/113F035), the Swiss National Science foundation (PZ00P2_154874 and NCCR PlanetS), the Ministry of Science and Higher Education of the Russian Federation (Project # 3.1959.2017/4.6), Act 211 of the Government of the Russian Federation, contract No 02.A03.21.0006, the National Natural Science Foundation of China (41403055), the Simons Foundation (302497), the Academy of Finland (299543), the NASA Cosmochemistry Program (NNX14AM62G), the NASA Emerging Worlds Program (NNX16AD34G), and the NASA NEOO program (NNX14-AR92G). ; WOS:000468026900001 ; 2-s2.0-85063957015
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Frontmatter -- CONTENTS -- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS -- 1 INTRODUCTION -- 2 ATLANTA: IF DIXIE WERE ATLANTA -- 3 MIAMI: THE ETHNIC CAULDRON -- 4 NEW ORLEANS: SUNBELT IN THE SWAMP -- 5 TAMPA: FROM HELL HOLE TO THE GOOD LIFE -- 6 DALLAS-FORT: WORTH MARKETING THE METROPLEX -- 7 HOUSTON: THE GOLDEN BUCKLE OF THE SUNBELT -- 8 OKLAHOMA: CITY BOOMING SOONER -- 9 SAN ANTONIO: THE VICISSITUDES OF BOOSTERISM -- 10 ALBUQUERQUE: CITY AT A CROSSROADS -- 11 LOS ANGELES: IMPROBABLE LOS ANGELES -- 12 PHOENIX THE DESERT METROPOLIS -- 13 SAN DIEGO: THE ANTI-CITY -- CONTRIBUTORS