Cultural Ways of Worldmaking

Cultural Ways of Worldmaking
Title Cultural Ways of Worldmaking PDF eBook
Author Vera Nünning
Publisher Walter de Gruyter
Total Pages 370
Release 2010
Genre Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN 311022755X

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Taking as its point of departure Nelson Goodman's theory of symbol systems as delineated in his seminal book «Ways of Worldmaking», this volume gauges the possibilities and perspectives offered by the worldmaking approach as a model for the study of culture. The volume serves to demonstrate how specific media and narratives affect the worlds that are created, and shows how these worlds are established as socially relevant. It also illustrates the extent to which ways of worldmaking are imbued with cultural values, and thus inevitably implicated in power relations.

Ways of Worldmaking

Ways of Worldmaking
Title Ways of Worldmaking PDF eBook
Author Nelson Goodman
Publisher Hackett Publishing
Total Pages 168
Release 1978-01-01
Genre Philosophy
ISBN 9780915144518

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Provides a workable notion of the kinds of skills and capacities that are central for those who work in the arts.

Worldmaking

Worldmaking
Title Worldmaking PDF eBook
Author Tom Clark
Publisher John Benjamins Publishing Company
Total Pages 235
Release 2017-01-19
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 9027266166

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In 1978, Nelson Goodman explored the relation of “worlds” to language and literature, formulating the term, “worldmaking” to suggest that many other worlds can as plausibly exist as the “world” we know right now. We cannot catch or know “the world” as such: all we can catch are the world versions - descriptions, views or workings of the world – that are expressed in symbolic systems (words, music, dancing, visual representations). Over the twenty-five years since then, creative works have played a crucial role in realigning, reshaping and renegotiating our understandings of how worlds can be made and preserved in the face of globalizing trends. The volume is divided into three sections, each engaging with worlds as malleable constructs. Central to all of the contributions is the question: how can we understand the relationships between natural, political, cultural, fictional, literary, linguistic and virtual worlds, and why does this matter?

Narratology in the Age of Cross-disciplinary Narrative Research

Narratology in the Age of Cross-disciplinary Narrative Research
Title Narratology in the Age of Cross-disciplinary Narrative Research PDF eBook
Author Sandra Heinen
Publisher Walter de Gruyter
Total Pages 319
Release 2009
Genre Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN 3110222426

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Narrative Research has developed into an international and interdisciplinary field. This volume collects fifteen essays which look at narrative and narrativity from various perspectives, including literary studies and hermeneutics, cognitive theory and creativity research, metaphor studies, and film theory and intermediality

Making Culture, Changing Society

Making Culture, Changing Society
Title Making Culture, Changing Society PDF eBook
Author Tony Bennett
Publisher Routledge
Total Pages 257
Release 2013-09-02
Genre Social Science
ISBN 1136596178

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Making Culture, Changing Society proposes a challenging new account of the relations between culture and society focused on how particular forms of cultural knowledge and expertise work on, order and transform society. Examining these forms of culture’s action on the social as aspects of a historically distinctive ensemble of cultural institutions, it considers the diverse ways in which culture has been produced and mobilised as a resource for governing populations. These concerns are illustrated in detailed case studies of how anthropological conceptions of the relations between race and culture have shaped – and been shaped by – the relationships between museums, fieldwork and governmental programmes in early twentieth-century France and Australia. These are complemented by a closely argued account of the relations between aesthetics and governance that, in contrast to conventional approaches, interprets the historical emergence of the autonomy of the aesthetic as vastly expanding the range of art’s social uses. In pursuing these concerns, particular attention is given to the role that the cultural disciplines have played in making up and distributing the freedoms through which modern forms of liberal government operate. An examination of the place that has been accorded habit as a route into the regulation of conduct within liberal social, cultural and political thought brings these questions into sharp focus. The book will be of interest to students and scholars of sociology, cultural studies, media studies, anthropology, museum and heritage studies, history, art history and cultural policy studies.

Worldmaking

Worldmaking
Title Worldmaking PDF eBook
Author Dorinne Kondo
Publisher Duke University Press
Total Pages 376
Release 2018-12-24
Genre Social Science
ISBN 1478002425

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In this bold, innovative work, Dorinne Kondo theorizes the racialized structures of inequality that pervade theater and the arts. Grounded in twenty years of fieldwork as dramaturg and playwright, Kondo mobilizes critical race studies, affect theory, psychoanalysis, and dramatic writing to trenchantly analyze theater's work of creativity as theory: acting, writing, dramaturgy. Race-making occurs backstage in the creative process and through economic forces, institutional hierarchies, hiring practices, ideologies of artistic transcendence, and aesthetic form. For audiences, the arts produce racial affect--structurally over-determined ways affect can enhance or diminish life. Upending genre through scholarly interpretation, vivid vignettes, and Kondo's original play, Worldmaking journeys from an initial romance with theater that is shattered by encounters with racism, toward what Kondo calls reparative creativity in the work of minoritarian artists Anna Deavere Smith, David Henry Hwang, and the author herself. Worldmaking performs the potential for the arts to remake worlds, from theater worlds to psychic worlds to worldmaking visions for social transformation.

Frictions in Cosmopolitan Mobilities

Frictions in Cosmopolitan Mobilities
Title Frictions in Cosmopolitan Mobilities PDF eBook
Author Rodanthi Tzanelli
Publisher Edward Elgar Publishing
Total Pages 208
Release 2021-04-30
Genre Social Science
ISBN 1800881428

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This groundbreaking book investigates the clash between a desire for unfettered mobility and the prevalence of inequality, exploring how this generates frictions in everyday life and how it challenges the ideal of just cosmopolitanism. Reading fictional and popular cultural texts against real global contexts, it develops an ‘aesthetics of justice’ that does not advocate cosmopolitan mobility at the expense of care and hospitality but rather interrogates their divorce in neoliberal contexts.