Article List
API Endpoint for journals.
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{ "count": 38430, "next": "https://eartharxiv.org/api/articles/?format=api&limit=100&offset=26300", "previous": "https://eartharxiv.org/api/articles/?format=api&limit=100&offset=26100", "results": [ { "pk": 54860, "title": "Sea Monsters in Antiquity: A Classical and Zoological Investigation", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "Sea monsters inspired both fascination and fear in the minds of the ancients. In this paper, I aim to examine several traditional monsters of antiquity with a multi-faceted approach that couples classical background with modern day zoological knowledge. Looking at the examples of the ketos and the sea serpent in Roman and Greek societies, I evaluate the scientific bases for representations of these monsters across of variety of media, from poetry to ceramics. Through the juxtaposition of the classical material and modern science, I seek to gain a greater understanding of the ancient conception of sea monsters and explain the way in which they were rationalized and depicted by ancient cultures. A closer look at extant literature, historical accounts, and artwork also helps to reveal a human sentiment towards the ocean and its denizens penetrating through time even into the modern day.", "language": "en", "license": { "name": "", "short_name": "", "text": null, "url": "" }, "keywords": [ { "word": "Organismic and Evolutionary Biology" } ], "section": "Articles", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/67t7807d", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Alexander", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Jaffe", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "Harvard University", "department": "" } ], "date_submitted": "2013-03-16T14:55:20-05:00", "date_accepted": "2013-03-16T14:55:20-05:00", "date_published": "2012-12-31T18:00:00-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/ucbclassics_bujc/article/54860/galley/41393/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 60526, "title": "Table of Contents", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "Table of Contents", "language": "en", "license": { "name": "", "short_name": "", "text": null, "url": "" }, "keywords": [], "section": "Front Matter", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/3q08z8ts", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "UCLA", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "JELP", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "", "department": "" } ], "date_submitted": "2013-08-02T12:55:46-05:00", "date_accepted": "2013-08-02T12:55:46-05:00", "date_published": "2012-12-31T18:00:00-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/uclalaw_jelp/article/60526/galley/46491/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 54863, "title": "The Declension of Bloom: Grammar, Diversion, and Union in Joyce’s \nUlysses", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "James Joyce’s novel \nUlysses \napplies the ambiguities of classical grammar and syntax to the English language in order to multiply meanings. He introduces the idea of subjective and objective genitives to illustrate the reciprocal love between a mother and a son. In addition, he declines the name of the character Bloom as a neuter noun rather than a masculine. Reading Bloom as a neuter character connects him to ideas of sterility and childlessness, since a sterile woman is also described in the book as being neuter. This conflation of the feminine and the neuter foreshadows Bloom’s transformation into a woman in the ‘Circe’ chapter, where his name is declined as a neuter noun. The flux of gender in this chapter is also seen in the character Bella/o, who switches between feminine and masculine pronouns. However, the necessity of the grammatical neuter circumscribing Bloom’s gender as simultaneously masculine and feminine is evidenced by the inability of Bella/o’s end-word gender signifiers to represent more than one gender at once. Therefore, Joyce borrows from classical grammar to introduce concepts that English cannot illustrate. In Ulysses, the application of classical grammatical forms is used to unify meanings that are contradictory or inexpressible in conventional English grammar. \nJames Joyce’s novel \nUlysses\n applies the ambiguities of classical grammar and syntax to the English language in order to multiply meanings. He introduces the idea of subjective and objective genitives to illustrate the reciprocal love between a mother and a son. In addition, he declines the name of the character Bloom as a neuter noun rather than a masculine. Reading Bloom as a neuter character connects him to ideas of sterility and childlessness, since a sterile woman is also described in the book as being neuter. This conflation of the feminine and the neuter foreshadows Bloom’s transformation into a woman in the ‘Circe’ chapter, where his name is declined as a neuter noun. The flux of gender in this chapter is also seen in the character Bella/o, who switches between feminine and masculine pronouns. However, the necessity of the grammatical neuter circumscribing Bloom’s gender as simultaneously masculine and feminine is evidenced by the inability of Bella/o’s end-word gender signifiers to represent more than one gender at once. Therefore, Joyce borrows from classical grammar to introduce concepts that English cannot illustrate. In Ulysses, the application of classical grammatical forms is used to unify meanings that are contradictory or inexpressible in conventional English grammar.", "language": "en", "license": { "name": "", "short_name": "", "text": null, "url": "" }, "keywords": [ { "word": "English, Classics" } ], "section": "Articles", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/56m627ts", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Robin", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Goralka", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "University of California at Berkeley", "department": "" } ], "date_submitted": "2013-03-18T23:00:38-05:00", "date_accepted": "2013-03-18T23:00:38-05:00", "date_published": "2012-12-31T18:00:00-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/ucbclassics_bujc/article/54863/galley/41396/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 45170, "title": "The Future of Migration", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "Translation of Jochen Oltmer, \"Zukunft der Migration,\" in \nDas neue Deutschland. Von Migration und Vielfalt\n, ed. Özkan Ezli and Gisela Staupe (Konstanz: Konstanz University Press, 2014).", "language": "en", "license": null, "keywords": [], "section": "Open Forum", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/5580q15s", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Jochen", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Oltmer", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "", "department": "None" }, { "first_name": "Jennifer", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Ingalls", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2014-05-15T15:48:32-05:00", "date_accepted": "2014-05-15T15:48:32-05:00", "date_published": "2012-12-31T18:00:00-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/transit/article/45170/galley/33961/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 34731, "title": "The Health of Undocumented Mexicans in New York City", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "In partnership with the Center for Urban Epidemiologic Studies, andin collaboration with diverse institutions and individuals, the Centerfor Community Problem Solving completed a study of the health of 431 undocumented Mexicans in New York City. Informed by a robustly democratic rebellious vision of problem solving and by adecidedly unorthodox rival theory of undocumented Mexican migra- tion, the study reveals patterns that, if fortified by further investigation, might well change how we think about the health of undocumented Mexicans, how we allocate resources, and how we target interventions. In this Article, Professor Gerald P. López analyzes how this study – more accurately, the effort of which the study is a part – aims at once to close two gaps: the gap between what we now know and what we might learn about the health of undocumented Mexicans in New York City, and the gap between what we typically do now through our practices and what we might do through a rebellious vision of problem solving.", "language": "en", "license": { "name": "", "short_name": "", "text": null, "url": "" }, "keywords": [ { "word": "healthcare" }, { "word": "undocumented Mexicans" }, { "word": "Immigrants" }, { "word": "rebellious lawyering" }, { "word": "Center for Urben Epidemiological Studies" }, { "word": "Center for Community Problem Solving" }, { "word": "Gerald P. López" } ], "section": "Articles", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/1bx8k38h", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Gerald", "middle_name": "P.", "last_name": "López", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "Professor of Law, UCLA School of Law; Co-Director, Rebellious Lawyering Institute; former Director of the Center for Community Problem Solving, New York City", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2014-01-17T01:20:44-06:00", "date_accepted": "2014-01-17T01:20:44-06:00", "date_published": "2012-12-31T18:00:00-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/uclalaw_cllr/article/34731/galley/25875/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 60214, "title": "The Indian Copyright (Amendment) Act of 2012 and American Digital Music Exports: Why the United States Should Make Stricter Anti-Circumvention Laws in India an American Diplomatic Priority", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "India presents the American music industry with a new frontier.\n \nThanks to the wide distribution of cell phones, an expanding digital infrastructure,\n \nand a growing appetite for music entertainment, India has\n \nbecome an important digital music export market for the United States.\n \nHowever, widespread digital piracy has hampered India's potential as\n \na digital music market. In the United States, anti-circumvention laws\n \nhave established a legal infrastructure that defends a digital access\n \nright independent of copyright. As a result, the United States has witnessed\n \nthe emergence of services that offer low priced digital music\n \nthat has managed to curb piracy. This article argues that the Indian\n \nCopyright (Amendment) Act of 2012 fails to provide for the independent\n \naccess right that serves as the legal backbone of America's digital\n \nmusic marketplace. In order to unlock the gateway to India's expanding\n \ndigital music consumer base, this article advocates that the United\n \nStates make the adoption of stricter anti-circumvention laws in India\n \nan American diplomatic priority.", "language": "en", "license": { "name": "", "short_name": "", "text": null, "url": "" }, "keywords": [], "section": "Articles", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/63p215c8", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Sahil", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Chaudry", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "", "department": "" } ], "date_submitted": "2015-04-25T11:19:12-05:00", "date_accepted": "2015-04-25T11:19:12-05:00", "date_published": "2012-12-31T18:00:00-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/uclalaw_elr/article/60214/galley/46173/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 45166, "title": "The Madonna in the Fur Coat", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "With the consent of the original rights-holders Onk Ajans Instanbul and the author’s daughter Filiz Ali; translation rights for the novel in its entirety remain with Onk Ajans Istanbul.", "language": "en", "license": null, "keywords": [], "section": "Open Forum", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/4ht6w6zv", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "David", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Gramling", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "University of Arizona", "department": "None" }, { "first_name": "Ilker", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Hepkaner", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "New York University", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2013-11-22T14:59:36-06:00", "date_accepted": "2013-11-22T14:59:36-06:00", "date_published": "2012-12-31T18:00:00-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/transit/article/45166/galley/33957/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 54868, "title": "The Persian Alexander: The Numismatic Portraiture of the Pontic Dynasty", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "Hellenistic coinage is a popular topic in art historical research as it is an invaluable resource of information about the political relationship between Greek rulers and their subjects. However, most scholars have focused on the wealthier and more famous dynasties of the Ptolemies and the Seleucids. Thus, there have been considerably fewer studies done on the artistic styles of the coins of the smaller outlying Hellenistic kingdoms. This paper analyzes the numismatic portraiture of the kings of Pontus, a peripheral kingdom located in northern Anatolia along the shores of the Black Sea. In order to evaluate the degree of similarity or difference in the Pontic kings’ modes of representation in relation to the traditional royal Hellenistic style, their coinage is compared to the numismatic depictions of Alexander the Great of Macedon. A careful art historical analysis reveals that Pontic portrait styles correlate with the individual political motivations and historical circumstances of each king. Pontic rulers actively choose to diverge from or emulate the royal Hellenistic portrait style with the intention of either gaining support from their Anatolian and Persian subjects or being accepted as legitimate Greek sovereigns within the context of international politics. Overall, this paper illustrates how widely-circulating royal images are purposefully utilized and manipulated to advance the Hellenistic rulers’ political ambitions.", "language": "en", "license": { "name": "", "short_name": "", "text": null, "url": "" }, "keywords": [ { "word": "Classics" }, { "word": "Art History" }, { "word": "Alexander the Great" }, { "word": "Pontus" }, { "word": "Pontic Rulers" }, { "word": "Numismatics" }, { "word": "Ancient Coinage" }, { "word": "Ancient Greece" }, { "word": "Greece" } ], "section": "Articles", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/7xh6g8nn", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Marina", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Gavryushkina", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "Art History and Anthropology", "department": "" } ], "date_submitted": "2013-09-06T20:13:43-05:00", "date_accepted": "2013-09-06T20:13:43-05:00", "date_published": "2012-12-31T18:00:00-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/ucbclassics_bujc/article/54868/galley/41401/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 54869, "title": "The Piraeus and the Panathenaia: Changing Customs in Late-Fifth Century Athens", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "The architecture of ancient Greece has been a field of interest since the 18th century. Equally important to the Greeks of that time, if not more so, was urban planning. One example of this is the reconstruction and reconfiguration of Athens’ port, which coincided with the rise of Athenian democracy and empire. This paper explores the effects that the planning of Athens' port, the Piraeus, by Hippodamus of Miletus had on the celebrations of the Athenians during the Age of Pericles, specifically the Panathenaia. The paper uses a variety of sources, from archaeological evidence to contemporary political theory, to conclude that the rebuilt Piraeus had both directly and indirectly positive effects on Athenian civil identity into the late 500s BCE.", "language": "en", "license": { "name": "", "short_name": "", "text": null, "url": "" }, "keywords": [ { "word": "Classics" }, { "word": "architecture" }, { "word": "Ancient Greece" }, { "word": "Athens" }, { "word": "Piraeus" }, { "word": "Panathenaia" }, { "word": "Hippodamus of Miletus" }, { "word": "Pericles" }, { "word": "City Planning" }, { "word": "Archaeology" }, { "word": "Athenian empire" } ], "section": "Articles", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/9005x4bf", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "J.D.", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Hulsey", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "Architecture", "department": "" } ], "date_submitted": "2013-09-07T13:58:52-05:00", "date_accepted": "2013-09-07T13:58:52-05:00", "date_published": "2012-12-31T18:00:00-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/ucbclassics_bujc/article/54869/galley/41402/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 38133, "title": "The West and the Rest: The Science of the Great Divergence", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "There is now a huge literature attempting to explain the ‘Great Divergence’ between Europe and the rest of the world during the early modern period. \nThe\n \nUniqueness of Western Civilization\n by Ricardo Duchesne follows a distinct route in both framing the question and proposing an answer to it. I see two serious problems with Duchesne’s work. The first one is how he resolves the intrinsic tension between his ideological goals and the requirements of the scientific method. The second problematic aspect, which is shared by most of the broader literature on this topic, is that there are serious methodological difficulties in explaining unique historical events. This article discusses general approaches to the study of unique events, such as the Great Divergence. It also critiques two myths of European exceptionalism that are discussed by Duchesne and, even more importantly, still have broad currency in the historical literature: the supposed geographic uniqueness of Europe and the so-called Western Way of War.", "language": "en", "license": null, "keywords": [], "section": "Forum", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/577293kd", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Peter", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Turchin", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2013-07-25T13:47:48-05:00", "date_accepted": "2013-07-25T13:47:48-05:00", "date_published": "2012-12-31T18:00:00-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/cliodynamics/article/38133/galley/28700/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 45176, "title": "Transit", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "Translation of Deniz Göktürk, \"Transit,\" in \nDas neue Deutschland. Von Migration und Vielfalt\n, ed. Özkan Ezli and Gisela Staupe (Konstanz: Konstanz University Press, 2014).", "language": "en", "license": null, "keywords": [], "section": "Open Forum", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/7247v4z9", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Deniz", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Göktürk", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "", "department": "None" }, { "first_name": "Jon", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Cho-Polizzi", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2014-06-05T05:37:31-05:00", "date_accepted": "2014-06-05T05:37:31-05:00", "date_published": "2012-12-31T18:00:00-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [] }, { "pk": 45165, "title": "Translating Surfaces: A Dual Critique of Modernity in Sabahattin Ali’s Kürk Mantolu Madonna", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "Introduction to David Gramling and Ilker Hepkaner's translation of \"The Madonna in the Fur Coat.\"", "language": "en", "license": null, "keywords": [], "section": "Open Forum", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/7q04w665", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Kristin", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Dickinson", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "UC Berkeley", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2013-11-22T14:56:46-06:00", "date_accepted": "2013-11-22T14:56:46-06:00", "date_published": "2012-12-31T18:00:00-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/transit/article/45165/galley/33956/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 38128, "title": "Networking Past and Present", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "A special feature in the Social Evolution Forum with R.I.M. Dunbar as the author of the focus article. Commentaries by Nicolas Baumard, Marcus J. Hamilton, Paul Hooper, Daniel N. Finkel, and Herbert Gintis.", "language": "en", "license": null, "keywords": [ { "word": "social evolution" } ], "section": "Social Evolution Forum", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/1xq2011h", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "R.I.M.", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Dunbar", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "University of Oxford", "department": "None" }, { "first_name": "Nicolas", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Baumard", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "", "department": "None" }, { "first_name": "Marcus", "middle_name": "J.", "last_name": "Hamilton", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "", "department": "None" }, { "first_name": "Paul", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Hooper", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "", "department": "None" }, { "first_name": "Daniel", "middle_name": "N.", "last_name": "Finkel", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "", "department": "None" }, { "first_name": "Herbert", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Gintis", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2012-12-31T17:06:58-06:00", "date_accepted": "2012-12-31T17:06:58-06:00", "date_published": "2012-12-31T17:09:12-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/cliodynamics/article/38128/galley/28695/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 38127, "title": "Comparative Archaeology: The Camel’s Nose?", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "A Review of \nThe Comparative Archaeology of Complex Societies\n, edited by Michael E. Smith (Cambridge University Press, 2012)", "language": "en", "license": null, "keywords": [], "section": "Book Reviews", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/9wf9z7qk", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Timothy", "middle_name": "A.", "last_name": "Kohler", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "Washington State University", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2012-12-31T16:44:39-06:00", "date_accepted": "2012-12-31T16:44:39-06:00", "date_published": "2012-12-31T16:45:55-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/cliodynamics/article/38127/galley/28694/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 38126, "title": "State Formation in Hawai’i", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "A Review of \nHow Chiefs Became Kings: Divine Kingship and the Rise of Archaic States in Ancient Hawai'i\n by Patrick V. Kirch (University of California Press, 2010)", "language": "en", "license": null, "keywords": [ { "word": "History, Archaeology, Sociocultural Evolution" } ], "section": "Book Reviews", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/9n8560x3", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Michael", "middle_name": "E.", "last_name": "Smith", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "Arizona State University", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2012-12-31T16:38:00-06:00", "date_accepted": "2012-12-31T16:38:00-06:00", "date_published": "2012-12-31T16:39:41-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/cliodynamics/article/38126/galley/28693/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 38118, "title": "Multicultural vs. Post-Multicultural World History: A Review Essay", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "Over the last two decades, a trend of multiculturalism in world history has enjoyed a largely uncontested rise to prominence. Its main aim has been to challenge Eurocentrism. Its main achievement is to have issued a corrective in early modern economic history: prior to the industrial revolution, there were numerous economic parallels between Europe and Asia, particularly China. But multicultural world history is now under greater scrutiny and challenge for marginalizing the West and downplaying numerous non-economic divergences of the West. In response, a post-multicultural world history is now emerging. Its most important work so far is Ricardo Duchesne’s \nThe Uniqueness of Western Civilization\n (2011). The main achievement of post-multicultural world history is to have established that there were numerous critical non-economic divergences between Europe and other regions. The West was both peculiar and inventive across many domains.", "language": "en", "license": null, "keywords": [ { "word": "world history, Western civilization, multiculturalism, post-multicultural, divergent evolution" }, { "word": "History" }, { "word": "World History" }, { "word": "Historical Sociology" }, { "word": "social evolution" } ], "section": "Book Reviews", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/82g096mc", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Martin", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Hewson", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "University of Regina", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2012-07-10T17:03:29-05:00", "date_accepted": "2012-07-10T17:03:29-05:00", "date_published": "2012-12-31T16:09:33-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/cliodynamics/article/38118/galley/28685/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 38104, "title": "Seeing the Forest of Secular Cycles", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "War and Peace and War\n presents a model of cyclic human behavior that can be mapped onto data from historical periods to explain some of the reasons behind these events. This report describes a database for representing these maps between specific instances of the \nsecular cycle \nmodel and high-level descriptions of many of the world’s historical empires. The initial use of this database provides a strategic look at one possible interpretation of well-known historical events. It is hoped that this initial mapping will act as a baseline to be enhanced by more detailed research. In addition, when viewed at this strategic level this mapping suggests a refinement of the Secular Cycle model based on a regular shortening of the periods of these cycles over the full imperial cycle and over the general course of human history.", "language": "en", "license": null, "keywords": [ { "word": "Database, secular cycle" }, { "word": "imperial cycle" }, { "word": "formative period" }, { "word": "empire" }, { "word": "human history" }, { "word": "arithmetic sequence" }, { "word": "History" } ], "section": "Databases", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/6244v78z", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "David", "middle_name": "J", "last_name": "Sirag, Jr.", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2012-03-01T19:32:01-06:00", "date_accepted": "2012-03-01T19:32:01-06:00", "date_published": "2012-12-31T15:58:19-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/cliodynamics/article/38104/galley/28671/download/" }, { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/cliodynamics/article/38104/galley/28672/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 38125, "title": "A Historical Database of Sociocultural Evolution", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "The origin of human ultrasociality—the ability to cooperate in huge groups of genetically unrelated individuals—has long interested evolutionary and social theorists, but there has been little systematic empirical research on the topic. The Historical Database of Sociocultural Evolution, which we introduce in this article, brings the available historical and archaeological data together in a way that will allow hypotheses concerning the origin of ultrasociality to be tested rigorously. In addition to describing the methodology informing the set-up of the database, our article introduces four hypotheses that we intend to test using the database. These hypotheses focus on the resource base, warfare, ritual, and religion, respectively. Ultimately the aim of our database is to offer a ‘rapid discovery science’ route to the study of the past. We believe our approach is not only highly complementary with existing traditions of enquiry in history and archaeology but will extend their intellectual scope and explanatory power.", "language": "en", "license": null, "keywords": [], "section": "Databases", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/2v8119hf", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Peter", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Turchin", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "University of Connecticut", "department": "None" }, { "first_name": "Harvey", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Whitehouse", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "", "department": "None" }, { "first_name": "Pieter", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Francois", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "", "department": "None" }, { "first_name": "Edward", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Slingerland", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "", "department": "None" }, { "first_name": "Mark", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Collard", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2012-12-31T15:36:00-06:00", "date_accepted": "2012-12-31T15:36:00-06:00", "date_published": "2012-12-31T15:43:11-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/cliodynamics/article/38125/galley/28690/download/" }, { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/cliodynamics/article/38125/galley/28691/download/" }, { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/cliodynamics/article/38125/galley/28692/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 38120, "title": "Endogenous Population and Resource Cycles in Historical Hunter-Gatherer Economies", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "This paper constructs a formal spatial model of a hunter-gatherer economy. By assuming that resource locations around a hunter gatherer camp can become congested I obtain the size of the area harvested as a function of population, resource density, gathering efficiency and time costs of commuting to locations. The model is then extended to include Malthusian and resource dynamics. The resulting dynamic properties are quite rich, with the possibility of stable steady states, as well as stable and unstable cycles. One result is that technological progress can actually cause such economies to collapse due to overharvesting of resources. Next, the model is extended to include the possibility of both group and individual migration. The former removes the possibility of collapse and exploding oscillations but introduces a new source of fluctuations in resources and population. Individual migration on the other hand, as long as there is no limit on new camp sites which can be settled by daughter colonies, will completely preclude the existence of oscillations.", "language": "en", "license": null, "keywords": [ { "word": "Hunter-gatherers, Malthus, Resource dynamics" }, { "word": "Economics, Economic History, Anthropology, Ecology" } ], "section": "Article", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/0qv727m1", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Radek", "middle_name": "Szymon", "last_name": "Szulga", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "Carleton College", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2012-09-02T05:11:26-05:00", "date_accepted": "2012-09-02T05:11:26-05:00", "date_published": "2012-12-31T14:45:29-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/cliodynamics/article/38120/galley/28686/download/" }, { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/cliodynamics/article/38120/galley/28687/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 38105, "title": "Evolutionary Decomposition and the Mechanisms of Cultural Change", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "Beginning with the Price equation, recent work has developed the method of evolutionary decomposition, an exact partitioning of mean phenotypic change into underlying demographic processes. We present a method of evolutionary decomposition for human cultural change, and a demonstration of this method on three centuries of half-decadal census records collected from a simulated island population. By decomposing phenotypic trajectories, we can develop and evaluate suitable hypotheses of the driving mechanisms of cultural evolution.", "language": "en", "license": null, "keywords": [ { "word": "cultural evolution, Price equation, evolutionary decomposition, social learning" }, { "word": "History" }, { "word": "Evolution and Ecology" }, { "word": "Anthropology" } ], "section": "Article", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/5w49c6wt", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Bret", "middle_name": "A", "last_name": "Beheim", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "UC Davis", "department": "None" }, { "first_name": "Ryan", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Baldini", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "UC Davis", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2012-03-11T14:10:14-05:00", "date_accepted": "2012-03-11T14:10:14-05:00", "date_published": "2012-12-31T14:02:57-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/cliodynamics/article/38105/galley/28673/download/" }, { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/cliodynamics/article/38105/galley/28674/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 38124, "title": "Introducing a New Section—Databases", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "Editor's Column for Cliodynamics Vol 3, Iss 2", "language": "en", "license": null, "keywords": [ { "word": "History, Sociology, Cultural Evolution" } ], "section": "Editor's Column", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/74b0s1hz", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Peter", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Turchin", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "University of Connecticut", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2012-12-31T13:39:08-06:00", "date_accepted": "2012-12-31T13:39:08-06:00", "date_published": "2012-12-31T13:43:26-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/cliodynamics/article/38124/galley/28689/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 42611, "title": "Transnational Zapata: From the Ejército Zapatista de Liberación Nacional to Immigrant Marches", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "Drawing on the examples of the neo-Zapatista movement and the pro-immigrant marches of 2006, this article analyzes images of Emiliano Zapata, a Mexican national hero intricately tied to postrevolution nation rebuilding, as used within transnational movements that “de/territorialize” his image. At the same time that people in these movements have felt the negative effects of globalization, they have also benefited from certain recent technological developments associated with globalization, especially “technoscapes” and “mediascapes” that have launched the “local” discourse of Revolutionary nationalism across borders and onto the world stage through a variety of national and international (cyber)spaces, creating transnational heterotopias or “other spaces” for cultural and political expression that transgress national boundaries. Analyzing examples of Zapata imagery from the post-revolutionary era (1920s–1930s) against the neo-Zapatista movement of the 1990s and 2000s and the 2006 migrant protests in the United States, the paper explores the ways in which the formation of transnational “imagined communities” can destabilize traditional concepts of the nation-state.", "language": "en", "license": null, "keywords": [ { "word": "Emiliano Zapata" }, { "word": "Globalization" }, { "word": "technoscape" }, { "word": "mediascape" }, { "word": "Transnational" }, { "word": "Heterotopia" }, { "word": "Ejército Zapatista de Liberación Nacional" }, { "word": "migrant protests" }, { "word": "Imagined Communities" }, { "word": "American Studies" } ], "section": "SPECIAL FORUM: Revolutions and Heterotopias", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/1tz2v712", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Stephany", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Slaughter", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "Alma College", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2012-12-28T15:08:31-06:00", "date_accepted": "2012-12-28T15:08:31-06:00", "date_published": "2012-12-29T12:05:16-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/jtas/article/42611/galley/31811/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 42610, "title": "Global Mexico’s Coproduction: \nBabel\n, \nPan’s Labyrinth\n, and \nChildren of Men", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "This essay compares and contrasts \nBabel\n, \nPan’s Labyrinth\n, and \nChildren of Men\n’s treatments of global Mexico. It focuses on each film’s representations of white femininity and children (variously absent, potentially revolutionary, and messianic). In addition, it offers preliminary notes on a theory of “coproduction” as both an aesthetic response to, and an effect of, neoliberal and alter-globalizations.", "language": "en", "license": null, "keywords": [ { "word": "Mexico" }, { "word": "Global" }, { "word": "Babel" }, { "word": "Pan's Labyrinth" }, { "word": "Children of Men" }, { "word": "coproduction" }, { "word": "Cultural Studies" } ], "section": "SPECIAL FORUM: Revolutions and Heterotopias", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/4bp4x1sg", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Amy", "middle_name": "Sara", "last_name": "Carroll", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "University of Michigan", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2012-12-28T14:57:54-06:00", "date_accepted": "2012-12-28T14:57:54-06:00", "date_published": "2012-12-29T12:04:55-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/jtas/article/42610/galley/31810/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 40429, "title": "From Propaganda to Science: Looking at the World of Academies in Early Seventeenth-century Naples", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "Early seventeenth-century Naples was a fragmented society where individual communities had their own religious and secular rulers. Locally deployed confraternities, saints and political representatives granted special protection to single groups, thus becoming symbols of the various districts, corporations, and nationalities settled in the city. The delicate task of managing the spiritual and the political dimension of Neapolitan life favored forms of power interaction between politics and religion that often served a wider need for propaganda. Within this context, academies were commissioned to produce art and choreographed spectacles that provided an idealized and exportable image of Naples, emphasizing symbols of civic unity, political strength and economic stability. In a world where the relationship between people and rulers was far from being peaceful. Contemporary historiography has looked at Italian academies in different ways, though with little attention to those in Naples. In the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries the publication of pioneering works by Carlo Minieri Riccio, Lorenzo Giustiniani, and later on Michele Maylender discovered valuable material on the world of southern Italian academies. By adopting a methodology aimed at collecting data on the number of academies and their members these works became reference tools for scholars. Benedetto Croce’s criticism of seventeenth-century Neapolitan academies as being aspects of the cultural decline that affected Baroque Italy played an important role in cementing a negative perception of this period. These dismissive positions, however, have been cautiously reassessed in view of an increasing scholarly interest in exploring the importance of academies in early modern Italy. Recent scholarship, for example, such as Simone Testa’s work on the transnational impact of Italian academies, has convincingly shown how they were a cultural phenomenon intrinsically linked with the development of a European \nRepublique des Lettres.\n Moreover, the new Arts and Humanities Research Council funded project - \n‘Italian academies 1525-1700: the first intellectual networks of early modern Europe’\n- has led to a major reassessment of how traditional historiography has looked at early modern Italian academies. By bringing to light hitherto unknown material concerning academies that flourished in Naples and other major Italian centers throughout the Italian peninsula this project has demonstrated that academies were major platforms which, on the one hand, promoted an intellectual debate on science, literature, and visual arts, and on the other, often functioned as institutions promoting political and religious propaganda.", "language": "en", "license": { "name": "", "short_name": "", "text": null, "url": "" }, "keywords": [], "section": "II. Early Modern Naples: Image/Realities from Scientific Academies and the Baroque to Enlightenment and the Grand Tour", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/1kf886k4", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Lorenza", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Gianfrancesco", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2012-05-07T13:01:03-05:00", "date_accepted": "2012-05-07T13:01:03-05:00", "date_published": "2012-12-29T02:00:00-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/cisj/article/40429/galley/30389/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 42625, "title": "About the Contributors", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "", "language": "", "license": null, "keywords": [], "section": "Contributors", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/3mz85108", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Caroline", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Hong", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "Queens College, City University of New York", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2012-12-28T16:49:25-06:00", "date_accepted": "2012-12-28T16:49:25-06:00", "date_published": "2012-12-28T16:49:33-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/jtas/article/42625/galley/31825/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 42624, "title": "Imagining Cultures: The Transnational Imaginary in Postrace America", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "Forthcoming in \nThe Imaginary and Its Worlds: American Studies after the Transnational Turn\n, ed. Laura Bieger, Ramón Saldívar, and Johannes Voelz (Dartmouth College Press/University Press of New England, 2013).\nRamón Saldívar‘s contribution is a wide-ranging and spirited piece of critical analysis that deals with the “color line” and its relation to the “cultural imaginary” of Americans. Making virtuosic use of examples drawn from texts by a panoply of different Black, Latino, and Asian American authors, Saldívar interrogates the nature (and existence) of “postethnic fiction.”", "language": "en", "license": null, "keywords": [ { "word": "American Studies" }, { "word": "Transnational" }, { "word": "imaginary" }, { "word": "postrace" }, { "word": "postethnic fiction" } ], "section": "Forward", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/8hd6s1jq", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Ramón", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Saldívar", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "Stanford University", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2012-12-28T16:42:18-06:00", "date_accepted": "2012-12-28T16:42:18-06:00", "date_published": "2012-12-28T16:42:27-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/jtas/article/42624/galley/31824/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 42623, "title": "Excerpt from \nZoot Suit: The Enigmatic Career of an Extreme Style", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "Kathy Peiss knocks the established literature akilter in her study of the zoot suit. This flashy, over-the-top garb of the 1940s has long been studied as a uniform of hipsters and \npachucos\n in the United States, who were targeted for violent repression by white police and servicemen in the 1943 “Zoot Suit Riots” in Los Angeles. Peiss audaciously opens up her study to discuss the signifier of the zoot suit internationally. In a tour de force, she outlines the sense of cultural identity fostered among zoot suiters and allied long-coat wearers, as well as the political meanings assigned to them, in such diverse places as Mexico, Trinidad, South Africa, and the USSR during the 1940s.", "language": "en", "license": null, "keywords": [ { "word": "zoot suit" }, { "word": "Transnational" }, { "word": "History" } ], "section": "Forward", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/78k1r8vc", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Kathy", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Peiss", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "University of Pennsylvania", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2012-12-28T16:37:17-06:00", "date_accepted": "2012-12-28T16:37:17-06:00", "date_published": "2012-12-28T16:37:30-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/jtas/article/42623/galley/31823/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 42622, "title": "Excerpt from \nThe Transatlantic Century: Europe and America, 1890–2010", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "Mary Nolan’s contribution, which comes from her new book, \nThe Transatlantic Century\n, accomplishes the impressive feat of turning the historical literature on its head. Instead of adding to the familiar story of European influences on the United States and American culture, she instead reveals the pervasive influence of the United States on European culture, even before the United States became a hegemonic world power.", "language": "en", "license": null, "keywords": [ { "word": "transatlantic" }, { "word": "Europe" }, { "word": "United States" }, { "word": "History" } ], "section": "Forward", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/7zm7p7f6", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Mary", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Nolan", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "New York University", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2012-12-28T16:31:07-06:00", "date_accepted": "2012-12-28T16:31:07-06:00", "date_published": "2012-12-28T16:31:20-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/jtas/article/42622/galley/31822/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 42621, "title": "Toward a Politics of American Transcultural Studies – Discourses of Diaspora and Cosmopolitanism", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "Excerpt from \nRe-Framing the Transnational Turn in American Studies\n (2011), edited by Winfried Fluck, Donald E. Pease, and John Carlos Rowe, published by Dartmouth College Press in Re-Mapping the Transnational: A Dartmouth Series in American Studies. Used with permission. http://www.upne.com.\nThis piece, which is drawn from Günter Lenz's contribution to a new anthology volume on transnational American Studies, attempts to make sense of the “transnational turn” by contrasting it with what he refers to as “transcultural studies” and looking at how both are informed by cosmopolitanism.", "language": "en", "license": null, "keywords": [ { "word": "American Studies" }, { "word": "Transnational" }, { "word": "Transcultural" }, { "word": "Diaspora" }, { "word": "cosmopolitanism" } ], "section": "Forward", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/24m9n1n3", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Günter", "middle_name": "H.", "last_name": "Lenz", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2012-12-28T16:24:55-06:00", "date_accepted": "2012-12-28T16:24:55-06:00", "date_published": "2012-12-28T16:25:11-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/jtas/article/42621/galley/31821/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 42620, "title": "Excerpts from \nIn Search of First Contact: The Vikings of Vinland, the Peoples of the Dawnland, and the Anglo-American Anxiety of Discovery", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "Annette Kolodny executes a breathtaking leap into creation stories and folklore of native peoples. Kolodny examines both European (notably Viking) and Native American stories about the first contacts between the New World and the Old World, and brings the Native people’s words into the center of historical inquiry.", "language": "en", "license": null, "keywords": [ { "word": "Native American" }, { "word": "Viking" }, { "word": "first contact" }, { "word": "American Studies" }, { "word": "Native American Studies" } ], "section": "Forward", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/2xg468hg", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Annette", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Kolodny", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "University of Arizona", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2012-12-28T16:19:43-06:00", "date_accepted": "2012-12-28T16:19:43-06:00", "date_published": "2012-12-28T16:20:13-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/jtas/article/42620/galley/31820/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 42619, "title": "Excerpt from \nNegro Comrades of the Crown: African Americans and the British Empire Fight the U.S. before Emancipation", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "Negro Comrades of the Crown\n unveils the amazing history of the alliances that African Americans in search of individual and group freedom forged throughout the antebellum decades with the British Empire. Black soldiers were recruited by the British, who had their own imperial and diplomatic interests, in opposing the United States. Whether in the War of 1812, in raids from Spanish Florida, in the Caribbean, or in opposing the secession of Texas from Mexico, they eagerly joined in battles against the slave republic and its citizens.", "language": "en", "license": null, "keywords": [ { "word": "African Americans" }, { "word": "British Empire" }, { "word": "History" }, { "word": "African American Studies" } ], "section": "Forward", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/58n4t1b5", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Gerald", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Horne", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "University of Houston", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2012-12-28T16:12:57-06:00", "date_accepted": "2012-12-28T16:12:57-06:00", "date_published": "2012-12-28T16:13:10-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/jtas/article/42619/galley/31819/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 42618, "title": "Excerpt from \nFlorida’s Snowbirds: Spectacle, Mobility, and Community since 1945", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "Godefroy Desrosiers-Lauzon investigates the phenomenon of the “snowbirds.” Every year, tens of thousands of individuals from eastern Canada and the US Northeast, mainly older people, migrate to Florida for the winter months. Going beyond the usual sociological (and satiric) treatments, Desrosiers-Lauzon studies the development of the migratory flows in the post-1945 period and analyzes them in relation to structural issues in leisure studies, such as the roles of state-promoted tourism, economic development, and environmentalism. Rather than seeing the migrants as contributors to community, either through their presence or their economic input, Floridians have tended to build community by engaging in tourist-bashing—the outsiders being scapegoats for larger concerns over growth and environmental damage. One of the author’s important contributions is in addressing the question of how we should understand this group of border-crossing migrants as constituting “Americans,” and his implicit response to the set of works, of which Lizabeth Cohen’s \nMaking a New Deal\n is perhaps the most prominent, that foreground the role of cultures of consumption in identity formation.", "language": "en", "license": null, "keywords": [ { "word": "snowbirds" }, { "word": "migration" }, { "word": "Florida" }, { "word": "American Studies" } ], "section": "Forward", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/2n4175f6", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Godefroy", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Desrosiers-Lauzon", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "Université du Québec à Montréal", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2012-12-28T16:06:27-06:00", "date_accepted": "2012-12-28T16:06:27-06:00", "date_published": "2012-12-28T16:06:36-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/jtas/article/42618/galley/31818/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 42617, "title": "Excerpt from \nStubborn Roots: Race, Culture, and Inequality in U.S. and South African Schools", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "Prudence L. Carter takes on the formidable task of assessing the impact of race on the culture of public schools, among both students and faculty, in two nations marked by histories of extreme racial inequality: the United States and South Africa. Through school visits, interviews, and patient compilation of statistics, she examines the salience, and in some cases the slippery role, of race in interpersonal and professional relations. In the process, she bravely attempts to bring out the voices and subjectivities of the people on all sides of the color line(s) with whom she interacts.", "language": "en", "license": null, "keywords": [ { "word": "Race" }, { "word": "public education" }, { "word": "United States" }, { "word": "South Africa" }, { "word": "education" } ], "section": "Forward", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/8k43s13c", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Prudence", "middle_name": "L.", "last_name": "Carter", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "Stanford University", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2012-12-28T15:59:27-06:00", "date_accepted": "2012-12-28T15:59:27-06:00", "date_published": "2012-12-28T15:59:36-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/jtas/article/42617/galley/31817/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 42616, "title": "Forward Editor’s Note", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "Forward Editor’s Note for \nJTAS\n 4.2", "language": "en", "license": null, "keywords": [ { "word": "American Studies" }, { "word": "Transnational" }, { "word": "Forward" } ], "section": "Forward", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/2hg1g57m", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Greg", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Robinson", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "Université du Québec à Montréal", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2012-12-28T15:51:13-06:00", "date_accepted": "2012-12-28T15:51:13-06:00", "date_published": "2012-12-28T15:51:26-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/jtas/article/42616/galley/31816/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 42615, "title": "Journeys to Others and Lessons of Self: Carlos Castaneda in \nCamposcape", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "Drawing on Michel Foucault’s concept of heterotopia, this article examines the importance of place and gender within constructions of race politics in Carlos Castaneda’s series on shamanism. Championing a “separate reality” predicated on an indigenous worldview, Castaneda’s lessons invited transnational middle-class youth to \"journey\" alongside him to camposcape—an anachronistic and idealized countryside—as a means to escape the bourgeois values of their homelands and find spiritual fulfillment in a timeless and \"authentic\" Mexico. Castaneda’s work proposed new viable spaces of difference in Mexico, yet inscribed these spaces with a masculinist discourse that served to neutralize the gender trouble within the counterculture movement in both Mexico and the US.", "language": "en", "license": null, "keywords": [ { "word": "Heterotopia" }, { "word": "Carlos Castaneda" }, { "word": "Camposcape" }, { "word": "Mexico" }, { "word": "American Studies" }, { "word": "Latin American Studies" } ], "section": "SPECIAL FORUM: Revolutions and Heterotopias", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/2k72p3w7", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Ageeth", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Sluis", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "Butler University", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2012-12-28T15:47:03-06:00", "date_accepted": "2012-12-28T15:47:03-06:00", "date_published": "2012-12-28T15:47:15-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/jtas/article/42615/galley/31815/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 42614, "title": "Owning the Revolution: Race, Revolution, and Politics from Havana to Miami, 1959–1963", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "“Owning the Revolution” explores the role that conversations about race and racism played in defining the 1959 Cuban Revolution both on the island and in South Florida, where over half of the exiles fled. It highlights how revolutionary leaders challenged internal and external opposition movements by publicly labeling dissenters “counterrevolutionaries” and “racists.” Using the label “racist” to attack an opponent was not altogether new in the 1960s, but by linking the term to counterrevolution, national discussions occurring in newspapers, magazines, and on television defined public racism as existing outside of the norms of a new Cuba. Exiles disagreed with this identification and accused the revolution of betraying the nineteenth-century colorblind goals of Jose Martí. Exile leaders in Miami argued that Castro invented racial tensions and claimed that their fight was not with blacks or \nmulatos\n but with “red” or communist Cubans. The politics expressed by white exile newspapers, however, did not always fit with the concerns of Afro-Cubans in the United States. Miami Cubans failed to acknowledge the persistence of racism in new exile communities in the same way that the revolutionary government dismissed racism on the island. These parallel silences exemplify the dangers of polarized narratives that imagine the revolution as antiracist and the exile community as racist.", "language": "en", "license": null, "keywords": [ { "word": "Race" }, { "word": "racist" }, { "word": "revolution" }, { "word": "Cuba" }, { "word": "Miami" }, { "word": "exile" }, { "word": "History" } ], "section": "SPECIAL FORUM: Revolutions and Heterotopias", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/5sb9d392", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Devyn", "middle_name": "Spence", "last_name": "Benson", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "Williams College", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2012-12-28T15:39:38-06:00", "date_accepted": "2012-12-28T15:39:38-06:00", "date_published": "2012-12-28T15:39:48-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/jtas/article/42614/galley/31814/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 42613, "title": "Tricontinental Routes of Solidarity: Stokely Carmichael in Cuba", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "Stokely Carmichael’s visit to Cuba for three weeks in the summer of 1967 illustrates a convergence in the transnational routes of the African American freedom struggle and the Cuban Revolution. African American activists saw Cuba as a model for resisting US power, eradicating racism, and enacting societal change, while the Cuban government considered African Americans allies against US imperialism and advocates of Cuba’s antiracist stance. Amidst racial violence in the United States and Cuba’s efforts to inspire revolution, Carmichael’s presence at the Organization of Latin American Solidarity conference in Havana—and in particular his interactions with Fidel Castro—caused ripples worldwide. A shared “tricontinental” vision that promoted unity in the Global South against imperialism, capitalism, and racism facilitated Carmichael’s solidarity with Castro. Yet divergent views on the role of race in fighting oppression limited their solidarity. Carmichael and Castro’s spectacular alliance demonstrated their personal affinity and ideological commonalities but did not result in an institutional alliance between the black liberation movement and the Cuban state. Instead Carmichael’s connection with the Cuban Revolution left an underexplored legacy. Examining Carmichael’s visit to Cuba illustrates the possibilities and pitfalls of transnational solidarity and furthers our understanding of postwar struggles for change.", "language": "en", "license": null, "keywords": [ { "word": "Stokely Carmichael" }, { "word": "Cuba" }, { "word": "African American" }, { "word": "black liberation" }, { "word": "Cuban Revolution" }, { "word": "Fidel Castro" }, { "word": "tricontinental" }, { "word": "Transnational" }, { "word": "Solidarity" }, { "word": "American Studies" } ], "section": "SPECIAL FORUM: Revolutions and Heterotopias", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/0wp587sj", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Sarah", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Seidman", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "University of Rochester", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2012-12-28T15:30:52-06:00", "date_accepted": "2012-12-28T15:30:52-06:00", "date_published": "2012-12-28T15:31:01-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/jtas/article/42613/galley/31813/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 42612, "title": "“Si Nicaragua Venció”: Lesbian and Gay Solidarity with the Revolution", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "This article analyzes the radical imagination of lesbian and gay activism in solidarity with the Nicaraguan Revolution. It examines the reasons US lesbian and gay radicals supported that revolution and investigates the ways that homoerotic, especially lesbian, desire shaped their solidarity. Drawing on Herbert Marcuse and Michel Foucault, the article argues that lesbian and gay radicals viewed the Nicaraguan Revolution in erotic and heterotopic terms. Posters, fliers, and interviews reveal that US activists, people of color and white, represented the Revolution and solidarity through tropes of female masculinity and women’s affection. Many Nicaraguan lesbians and gay men shared these nonnormative images of socialist change. Yet while Nicaraguans claimed \nSandinismo\n as their own, for US activists revolution remained a distant object of desire and solidarity a “seduction,” “crush,” or embrace. United States activists who embraced developmentalist views of Latin American sexualities remained unable to witness lesbian and gay life inside Nicaragua, while lesbian and gay Sandinistas kept silent about FSLN homophobia so as not to undermine solidarity against the \nContra\n war. Desire served as a powerful tool for mobilizing transnational solidarity. By failing to examine desire critically, however, US activists limited their communications with Nicaraguan lesbians and gay men and weakened the relationship they sought with revolution itself.", "language": "en", "license": null, "keywords": [ { "word": "lesbian and gay activism" }, { "word": "Nicaraguan Revolution" }, { "word": "Sandinistas" }, { "word": "Desire" }, { "word": "Transnational" }, { "word": "American Studies" } ], "section": "SPECIAL FORUM: Revolutions and Heterotopias", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/9hx356m4", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Emily", "middle_name": "K.", "last_name": "Hobson", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "University of Nevada, Reno", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2012-12-28T15:22:47-06:00", "date_accepted": "2012-12-28T15:22:47-06:00", "date_published": "2012-12-28T15:23:00-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/jtas/article/42612/galley/31812/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 42609, "title": "Keeping Time, Performing Place: Jazz Heterotopia in Candace Allen’s \nValaida", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "Candace Allen’s 2004 novel \nValaida\n illustrates the migratory patterns of early twentieth-century jazz music and musicians, positing the art form and its performers as “heterotopians”: simultaneously in and outside of the power relations of hegemonic time-space compression, traveling in an alternate and progressive space, signified by the music. Through a reading of heterotopic spaces in \nValaida\n, this article seeks to complicate the notion of heterotopias as purely progressive spaces for reversal and liberation. It does so by emphasizing the double nature of heterotopias as both progressive and reactionary and suggests that the way time is employed in a heterotopic space determines its progressive potential. Spaces of cumulative, static, or frozen time refuse to yield any utopian promise, whereas fluid, dynamic, and ephemeral time offers moments of agency. In the case of \nValaida\n, music and performance offer an alternate space, where the radical potential lies in the moment of communication and community, constituting a diasporic practice and \nheterUtopian \nspaces of sound and time.", "language": "en", "license": null, "keywords": [ { "word": "Candace Allen" }, { "word": "Jazz" }, { "word": "Heterotopia" }, { "word": "Cultural Studies" } ], "section": "SPECIAL FORUM: Revolutions and Heterotopias", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/79w3r5ck", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Anne", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Dvinge", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "University of Copenhagen", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2012-12-28T14:49:42-06:00", "date_accepted": "2012-12-28T14:49:42-06:00", "date_published": "2012-12-28T14:49:54-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/jtas/article/42609/galley/31809/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 42608, "title": "The Spatial Politics of Radical Change, an Introduction", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "Introduction to the \nJTAS\n Special Forum entitled \"Revolutions and Heterotopias,\" edited by Micol Seigel, Lessie Jo Frazier, and David Sartorius", "language": "en", "license": null, "keywords": [ { "word": "Transnational" }, { "word": "revolution" }, { "word": "Heterotopia" }, { "word": "American Studies" } ], "section": "SPECIAL FORUM: Revolutions and Heterotopias", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/3ts0f9xh", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Micol", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Seigel", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "Indiana University Bloomington", "department": "None" }, { "first_name": "Lessie Jo", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Frazier", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "Indiana University Bloomington", "department": "None" }, { "first_name": "David", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Sartorius", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "University of Maryland", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2012-12-28T14:38:45-06:00", "date_accepted": "2012-12-28T14:38:45-06:00", "date_published": "2012-12-28T14:39:24-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/jtas/article/42608/galley/31808/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 42607, "title": "Historical Consciousness and Transnational American Studies", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "Editors' Note for \nJTAS\n 4.2", "language": "en", "license": null, "keywords": [ { "word": "American Studies" }, { "word": "Transnational" }, { "word": "History" } ], "section": "Issue Editors' Note", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/08d1j3sq", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Chris", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Suh", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "Stanford University", "department": "None" }, { "first_name": "Greg", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Robinson", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "Université du Québec à Montréal", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2012-12-28T09:32:09-06:00", "date_accepted": "2012-12-28T09:32:09-06:00", "date_published": "2012-12-28T09:33:10-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/jtas/article/42607/galley/31807/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 43469, "title": "Americans Abroad: A Global Diaspora?", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "This article uses the lens of diaspora to explore the understudied case of US emigration and the transnationalism of Americans residing abroad. Although rarely recognized as such, native-born US citizens are also migrants who cross international borders, maintain close cultural and political ties to their homeland, and form social networks with their compatriots scattered across the globe. Despite these \"diasporic\" tendencies, various peculiarities of the case (individual and national privilege high among them) render Americans unlikely subjects for the application of a concept commonly associated with coercion, trauma, and marginalization. Nevertheless, this article maintains that (1) the inclusion of a counterintuitive but compatible case can sharpen the conceptualization of an already inflated term; and (2) the application of a counterintuitive framework can illuminate aspects of American mobility and belonging with significant implications for the host countries, the homeland, and the migrants themselves.", "language": "en", "license": null, "keywords": [ { "word": "Diaspora" }, { "word": "Transnationalism" }, { "word": "American expatriates" }, { "word": "US emigrants" }, { "word": "American Studies" }, { "word": "American History (United States)" }, { "word": "Political Science" }, { "word": "Social and Cultural Anthropology" }, { "word": "sociology" } ], "section": "Articles", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/07c2k96f", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Sheila", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Croucher", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "Miami University", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2011-10-01T20:39:25-05:00", "date_accepted": "2011-10-01T20:39:25-05:00", "date_published": "2012-12-28T02:00:00-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/jtas/article/43469/galley/32325/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 41169, "title": "Artists, Patrons, and Trust in Seventeenth-Century Naples: The Case of the Certosa di San Martino", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "The present article explores the theme of trust, as conceived by Paolo Mattia\n \nDoria, with reference to the professional relationships forged between artists and patrons at the Carthusian monastery in Naples, the Certosa di San Martino, during the seventeenth century. This specific case study is of particular relevance for several reasons. First, it falls within the chronological scope of Spanish viceregal rule observed by Doria. Second, the Carthusian monks at San Martino employed a large number of painters, sculptors, architects, embroiderers, and silversmiths in redecorating their monastery, and they kept careful records of their payments to these artists. The payments, conserved in the Archivio di Stato in Naples, provide a body of recorded transactions that can rarely be reconstructed in any other industry in the city during this period. Third, the amount of money spent by the Carthusians on refurbishing and redecorating their monastery assumes macro-economic proportions. The Carthusian monks paid the premier sculptor-architect in Naples, Cosimo Fanzago, a total of 57,000 ducats over the course of 33 years of work at San Martino, thereby producing an average of 1,900 ducats worth of architectural sculpture at the monastery per year.", "language": "en", "license": { "name": "", "short_name": "", "text": null, "url": "" }, "keywords": [ { "word": "architecture" }, { "word": "European Languages and Societies" }, { "word": "Art History, Criticism and Conservation" } ], "section": "II. Early Modern Naples: Image/Realities from Scientific Academies and the Baroque to Enlightenment and the Grand Tour", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/6jn0b7tz", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "J. Nicholas", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Napoli", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "Pratt Institute", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2011-10-11T16:51:03-05:00", "date_accepted": "2011-10-11T16:51:03-05:00", "date_published": "2012-12-28T02:00:00-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/cisj/article/41169/galley/30793/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 40438, "title": "A \"Study of Truth and Suffering\": Matilde Serao's Early Writings on Naples", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "In this essay, which serves as an introduction to the set of six new translations included in this same volume of the journal, the author examines briefly the life and works of Matilde Serao, one of Italy's leading women writers of the post-Unification period, with particular attention to her early writings on Naples. The essay explores Serao's essentially hybrid prose writing in these texts, which blend together traits of narrative and essay, literary and oral traditions, and concludes with some remarks on the particular problems posed by Serao's style for an English-language translator.", "language": "en", "license": { "name": "", "short_name": "", "text": null, "url": "" }, "keywords": [], "section": "III. Modern and Contemporary Naples: Blurring Fiction and Non-Fiction on Stage and in Print", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/5t84t40h", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Jon", "middle_name": "R.", "last_name": "Snyder", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "UC Santa Barbara", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2012-08-22T16:32:05-05:00", "date_accepted": "2012-08-22T16:32:05-05:00", "date_published": "2012-12-28T02:00:00-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/cisj/article/40438/galley/30396/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 40443, "title": "Back to the Future (Again): Further Comments on the Risorgimento", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "-", "language": "en", "license": { "name": "", "short_name": "", "text": null, "url": "" }, "keywords": [], "section": "Back to the Future (Again): Further Comments on the Risorgimento", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/4h78z5t3", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Randolph", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Starn", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "UC Berkeley", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2012-10-05T11:50:58-05:00", "date_accepted": "2012-10-05T11:50:58-05:00", "date_published": "2012-12-28T02:00:00-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/cisj/article/40443/galley/30400/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 40437, "title": "Between Documentary and Neorealism: Marshall Plan Films in Italy (1948-1955)", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "Using the Marshall Plan Film productions in Italy as a case study, this article re-examines the role of state-sponsored visual information campaigns in renegotiating international documentary film forms, aesthetics, and production networks at the beginning of the Cold War.", "language": "en", "license": { "name": "", "short_name": "", "text": null, "url": "" }, "keywords": [ { "word": "History" }, { "word": "Film and Media Studies" }, { "word": "Italian Studies" } ], "section": "Post-War Italy and Beyond the Risorgimento’s 150th Anniversary", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/0dq0394d", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Regina", "middle_name": "M.", "last_name": "Longo", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "University of California Santa Cruz", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2012-08-07T19:43:12-05:00", "date_accepted": "2012-08-07T19:43:12-05:00", "date_published": "2012-12-28T02:00:00-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/cisj/article/40437/galley/30395/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 40414, "title": "Beyond Mere Containment: The Neapolitan Treasury Chapel of San Gennaro and the Matter of Materials", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "This paper is a consideration of problems encountered in attempting an art historical analysis of the complex baroque forms of architecture in seventeenth- and eighteenth-century Naples, specifically when confronted on the one hand by the rather bald, roughly contemporaneous accounts thereof and, on the other and more especially, by the thrilling experience of entering these buildings today -- experiences that leave one overwhelmed and at a loss, at a loss for words sufficient to them and at a loss in their regard. To look at these buildings today in terms of their affective material productivity, even if they can only be articulated incompletely, is to ask historians to undertake the kind of visual work that they are seldom accustomed to. It means staying the customary hastiness that sees architecture as mere instantiation of idea, and instead – while resisting the temptation to interpret architecture as merely the sum of its parts -- requires a willingness to inquire into the materiality of aspects of architecture and objects which yield ‘nothing’ to see (such as dark areas within sculpture, non-figurative passages within architecture, the shine of silver, illegible letters of unknowable alphabets). Simultaneously we need also to widen our usual scope of vision to restore to architecture its affective elements that make it work. This is to require the mobility of architecture’s affect to engage us fully and temporally, rather than to dissect architecture into a “document”of a “social,” “political,” “cultural,” or “material” history, supposedly capable of embracing it fully, but to which it is, in fact, subordinated.", "language": "en", "license": { "name": "", "short_name": "", "text": null, "url": "" }, "keywords": [], "section": "II. Early Modern Naples: Image/Realities from Scientific Academies and the Baroque to Enlightenment and the Grand Tour", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/7d49p517", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Helen", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Hills", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "University of York", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2012-02-22T15:55:58-06:00", "date_accepted": "2012-02-22T15:55:58-06:00", "date_published": "2012-12-28T02:00:00-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/cisj/article/40414/galley/30381/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 40435, "title": "Comment on Ginsborg et al", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "A comment on Paul Ginsborg's \"Salviamo l'Italia\".", "language": "en", "license": { "name": "", "short_name": "", "text": null, "url": "" }, "keywords": [], "section": "Back to the Future (Again): Further Comments on the Risorgimento", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/6p3696rd", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Raymond", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Grew", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "University of Michigan", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2012-07-06T00:01:40-05:00", "date_accepted": "2012-07-06T00:01:40-05:00", "date_published": "2012-12-28T02:00:00-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/cisj/article/40435/galley/30393/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 40412, "title": "\"Con oscurità mutando i nomi\": Napoli epicurea nei \nSuccessi di Eumolpione\n (1678)", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "This article suggests a new interpretation of the novel \nSuccessi di Eumolpione \n(Naples, 1678) previously considered a simple translation of the \nSatyricon \nof Petronius. Instead, the \nSuccessi di Eumolpione \nis a sophisticated \nroman à clé \nwhich hides several references to the Neapolitan society of the 1670s. In particular, the \nSuccessi di Eumolpione \nmust be read in the frame of the dispute between its dedicatee, Giovan Giacomo Lavagna, and the group of the Investiganti (namely, Leonardo Di Capua). Moreover, the novel seems to be not only a satire against the Investiganti but also a satire of the \nSatyricon\n itself.", "language": "it", "license": { "name": "", "short_name": "", "text": null, "url": "" }, "keywords": [ { "word": "satire" }, { "word": "Accademia degli Investiganti" }, { "word": "Tommaso Campanella" }, { "word": "Petronius" }, { "word": "Libertines" }, { "word": "Kingdom of Naples" }, { "word": "XVII Century" }, { "word": "History" }, { "word": "Cultural Studies" } ], "section": "II. Early Modern Naples: Image/Realities from Scientific Academies and the Baroque to Enlightenment and the Grand Tour", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/2tr7x1nd", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Corinna", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Onelli", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "University of Warwick", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2012-01-31T01:58:41-06:00", "date_accepted": "2012-01-31T01:58:41-06:00", "date_published": "2012-12-28T02:00:00-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/cisj/article/40412/galley/30380/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 40427, "title": "Cultura cittadina e lessico di origine francese e provenzale a Napoli in epoca angioina (1266-1442)", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "Following the methodological perspective of Bruno Migliorini, this paper intends to show the interplay between cultural history (\"storia esterna\") and linguistic history (\"storia interna\") during the Neapolitan Angevin period (1266-1442). The paper focus on some words borrowed from French and Provençal that appeared in the most important literary texts of the Angevin period: the \nNeapolitan Letter of Giovanni Boccaccio \nand the \nLibro de la destuctione de Troya.\n These words demonstrate how deep the linguistic influence of the Angevins was on local language. Through analysis of the type of diffusion of French words, it is evident that these words spread in the local language via everyday spoken comunication. In fact these loan words reflect the phonetic adaptation to Neapolitan and a significant variety of forms. The great proliferation of some French suffixes, such us the suffix -\nanza\n, indicates that French loan words were not only read and written but also used in everyday conversation. Therefore, using French words, Boccaccio intended to describe a lexical cliché of the Neapolitan manner of speaking.", "language": "en", "license": { "name": "", "short_name": "", "text": null, "url": "" }, "keywords": [], "section": "I. Medieval and Renaissance Naples: Forging Neapolitan Identity through History, Literature, Philosophy, and Art", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/5t1283th", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Nicola", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "DeBlasi", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "Università DI Napoli \"Federico II\"", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2012-04-10T12:18:45-05:00", "date_accepted": "2012-04-10T12:18:45-05:00", "date_published": "2012-12-28T02:00:00-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/cisj/article/40427/galley/30388/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 40431, "title": "Discorsi per Immagini\n: Of Political and Architectural Experimentation", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "The essay examines a set of visual critiques created by the Florentines and known as \ndiscorsi per immagini\n. Developed by the experimentalist groups Superstudio and Archizoom from 1968 to 1973, \ndiscorsi per immagini\n emphasized modernist urban planning’s co-opted position within Italian \nriformismo\n and aimed to replace it with critical cultural work achieved by a growing visual territory composed of print, critical objects, and design exhibitions. The article takes stock of the political, formal, and technical shifts offered by \ndiscorsi per immagini\n to assess the powers and limitations of Italian experimental architecture, and to speculate on its remaining relevance and possible futures.", "language": "en", "license": { "name": "", "short_name": "", "text": null, "url": "" }, "keywords": [ { "word": "Archizoom, workerism, centro-sinistra, reformism, Mario Tronti, Andrea Branzi, Manfredo Tafuri, Radical Architecture, Superarchitecture, Experimental Architecture, Radical Design, Architettura Radic.." }, { "word": "architecture" }, { "word": "Italian Studies" }, { "word": "Political Thought" } ], "section": "Post-War Italy and Beyond the Risorgimento’s 150th Anniversary", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/8dg290qj", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Amit", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Wolf", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "PhD Architecture and Urban Design, School of the Arts and Architecture, UCLA\n\nLecturer, Southern California Institute of Architecture", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2012-05-30T18:15:38-05:00", "date_accepted": "2012-05-30T18:15:38-05:00", "date_published": "2012-12-28T02:00:00-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/cisj/article/40431/galley/30391/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 43442, "title": "Eros, Thanatos: Amsterdam in Contemporary Anglophone Fiction", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "This article compares a recent American fiction set in Amsterdam (David Liss’s \nThe Coffee Trader\n, 2003) with several other Anglophone fictions set in the same city to show how several centuries of literary heterostereotypes of Amsterdam have influenced American ideas on the city in literature. Foreign spaces in fiction almost inevitably draw American projections of the American self that cannot be recognized at home, yet Amsterdam’s particular nexus of projection is perhaps one of the most striking and underexamined, with roots reaching back to the founding mythos of America as Pilgrims’ last stop in Europe and extending to today’s often negative projections of libertinism contrasted with traditional American-style Puritanism. How do the spaces of Amsterdam in a highly detailed work like Liss’s allow a range of issues pertinent to contemporary American society to play themselves out on an “othered” stage? Contemporary questioning of capitalism, sexual and ethical mores, and Americans’ relationship with death are highlighted in this space safely outside the American self, and which thus provides a more comfortable locus for their analysis and narrative development.", "language": "en", "license": null, "keywords": [ { "word": "American Studies" }, { "word": "American literature" }, { "word": "Amsterdam" }, { "word": "Comparative Imagology" }, { "word": "English Literature" }, { "word": "Arts and Humanities" } ], "section": "Articles", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/5mf394g1", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Joshua", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Parker", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "University of Salzburg", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2010-11-04T10:35:02-05:00", "date_accepted": "2010-11-04T10:35:02-05:00", "date_published": "2012-12-28T02:00:00-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/jtas/article/43442/galley/32319/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 41153, "title": "Francesco Cangiullo e il \"suo\" Teatro della Sorpresa (1921)", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "Francesco Cangiullo e il suo “Teatro della Sorpresa” (1921)\nThis article deals with Italian Futurist theater, and in particular with “Teatro della Sorpresa”, created in august 1921 by the Neapolitan poet Francesco Cangiullo (even though the final Manifesto was later signed also by Marinetti, in January 1922). It was Cangiullo's last contribution to his personal artistic research for Futurism, which he eventually abandoned in 1924, at the end of a long theatrical tour throughout Italy. The “Teatro della Sorpresa” is the ultimate peak reached by the Futurist theater research in general. This new theater is based on the incredible explosion of “Surprise” on stage, with the consequence of a revolutionary involvement of the audience. Such involvement was guaranteed by the contagious effect of laughter. This pattern of results is achieved by very short, synthetic and always unsettling texts. Not only: Cangiullo decided to use other strange and unexpected stratagems. For example: “Voice Orchestra” (musicians without instruments: the sounds of the different instruments were instead imitated by their voices), fake brawls in the hall, chairs covered with strong glue, selling of the same ticket to different spectators (to provoke chaos), etc.; all this to evoke the spontaneous laughter in audience. So the “Teatro della Sorpresa” can be considered a development and a joyful overrun of the previous “Teatro Futurista Sintetico” (1915). Moreover: for the first time in Futurist theater history, with this new experience Marinetti and Cangiullo were able to provide their “discovery” of a management structure and organizational order, creating a true theater company that was first called “Compagnia del Teatro della Sorpresa” (until 1923) and then “Nuovo Teatro Futurista” (in 1924). The company toured Italy (with fluctuating success) for more than 3 years. Its first tour begun very soon, in 1921, only a few days after the company's birth. Marinetti just decided to start this new theatrical “adventure” from Naples, as a tribute to its “inventor” Cangiullo. In fact the tour started September 30th, 1921, at the “Mercadante” theater in Naples. The last part of this article is devoted to a precise and detailed reconstruction of this unknown event, with many quotations taken by personal memories of the protagonists and by the still unknown testimony and comments of the newspapers and magazines reviewers who witnessed this event.", "language": "en", "license": { "name": "", "short_name": "", "text": null, "url": "" }, "keywords": [ { "word": "Italian Literature" } ], "section": "III. Modern and Contemporary Naples: Blurring Fiction and Non-Fiction on Stage and in Print", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/9pf7g08h", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Mario", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Musella", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "Università \"L'Orientale\", Napoli (Italy)", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2011-07-20T18:45:49-05:00", "date_accepted": "2011-07-20T18:45:49-05:00", "date_published": "2012-12-28T02:00:00-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/cisj/article/41153/galley/30779/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 40418, "title": "From Lost Laughter to Latin Philosophy: On the Beginnings of Neapolitan Humanism", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "The first part of this essay explores some of the reasons why Neapolitan humanism continued to have a difficult standing throughout the twentieth century, and how scholars of the Neapolitan Renaissance sought to overcome these difficulties. The principal argument will be that modern scholars have circumscribed the character of Neapolitan humanism mainly by adopting paradigms developed in the context of Northern Italian, and especially Florentine humanism. In the second part, a different approach is endorsed. As is argued, the intellectual outlook of Neapolitan humanism was molded rather by conflicts among the humanists than by a stance common to all of them. Therefore, the main question is not the Neapolitan “brand” of humanism, but the role of Neapolitan humanists within the humanist movement as a whole. This point is illustrated by sketches of some of the controversies involving the first generation of humanists at court, namely Antonio Beccadelli, known as Panormita, Bartolomeo Facio, and Lorenzo Valla. Their struggles heavily influenced the intellectual outlook and philosophical style of Giovanni Pontano, the key figure of Neapolitan humanism in the second half of the fifteenth century.", "language": "en", "license": { "name": "", "short_name": "", "text": null, "url": "" }, "keywords": [ { "word": "Naples" }, { "word": "humanism" }, { "word": "Giovanni Pontano" }, { "word": "Antonio Beccadelli" }, { "word": "Lorenzo Valla" }, { "word": "Bartolomeo Facio" }, { "word": "History" }, { "word": "Intellectual History" }, { "word": "Historiography" } ], "section": "I. Medieval and Renaissance Naples: Forging Neapolitan Identity through History, Literature, Philosophy, and Art", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/91x000m2", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Matthias", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Roick", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "Herzog August Bibliothek Wolfenbüttel", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2012-03-13T16:40:58-05:00", "date_accepted": "2012-03-13T16:40:58-05:00", "date_published": "2012-12-28T02:00:00-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/cisj/article/40418/galley/30384/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 42554, "title": "Gesturing beyond the Frame: Transnational Trauma and US War Fiction", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "The convergent boundary between the fields of trauma theory and US war fiction has resulted in a narrow focus on the subjectivity of the American soldier in war fiction, which partly conditions American war fiction's privileging of the soldier-author. However, this focus on American soldiers does not adequately account for the essentially interactive nature of war trauma, and it elides the experiences of nurses and noncombatants on all sides of the battle while also obscuring women's distinctive war experiences, even when the fiction itself sometimes includes these dimensions. In this essay, Lahti argues that a transnational method can counter these imbalances in trauma theory and in studies of US war fiction. She engages Tim O'Brien's highly influential \nThe Things They Carried\n from a transnational perspective by interrogating the text's figuring of the survivor author and focusing on critically neglected scenes of interaction between the American soldiers and Vietnamese civilians. In order to discern the way these scenes reveal the text's own struggle with its national US frame, she elaborates a methodology of close reading characters' bodily gestures to foreground the way that fiction offers a glimpse into war as a relational event, always involving two or more participants. In the case of \nThe Things They Carried\n, this approach brings into view a heretofore unnoticed pattern of mimicry between the American characters and Vietnamese characters that reshapes our scholarly understanding of the text's representation of war trauma.", "language": "en", "license": null, "keywords": [ { "word": "Transnational" }, { "word": "US war fiction" }, { "word": "Trauma Theory" }, { "word": "Tim O'Brien" }, { "word": "Vietnam War" }, { "word": "Gesture" }, { "word": "American Studies" } ], "section": "Articles", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/550779g5", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Ruth", "middle_name": "A. H.", "last_name": "Lahti", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "University of Massachusetts Amherst", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2012-06-02T13:45:49-05:00", "date_accepted": "2012-06-02T13:45:49-05:00", "date_published": "2012-12-28T02:00:00-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/jtas/article/42554/galley/31766/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 40415, "title": "Giambattista Della Porta's Histrionic Science", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "One of the lifelong concerns of Giambattista Della Porta (1535-1615) was the description and the production of seemingly extraordinary and hence inexplicable experiments that would testify to his amazing abilities as a natural magician. But this Neapolitan nobleman was not only one of the most renowned \"professors of secrets“ in his time, he was also the author of highly influential books on physiognomy and exercised his literary gifts in more than a dozen successful works for the theater. This paper looks into several instances where Della Porta managed the contemporary political and religious situation in order to stage his natural philosophy, thus pointing to specific examples where both the realms of theater and early modern science interacted on a literary as well as on a conceptual level. The paper relates Della Porta's writings to his ideal of a silent audience that watched \nmirabilia\n with amazement and delight.", "language": "en", "license": { "name": "", "short_name": "", "text": null, "url": "" }, "keywords": [], "section": "II. Early Modern Naples: Image/Realities from Scientific Academies and the Baroque to Enlightenment and the Grand Tour", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/5538w0qd", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Sergius", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Kodera", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2012-02-22T21:59:12-06:00", "date_accepted": "2012-02-22T21:59:12-06:00", "date_published": "2012-12-28T02:00:00-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/cisj/article/40415/galley/30382/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 40421, "title": "Goethe in Naples: a Morphology of Ordered Chaos", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "This paper examines J. W. Goethe's morphological description of Naples from a spatial perspective involving the intersection of phenomenology, geology, geography, and culture. This analysis is based on Goethe's legendary travelogue \nJourney to Italy\n [1786-1788] and aims at extricating problems inherent in the description of a complex space, such as a city. This study takes as its point of departure Goethe's theorization of the Primal Plant and his reflections on Homer, which inform his morphology in significant ways. Naples is the concrete object of this analysis of the urban space, but the observation included in this essay can be applied to other cities, particularly in the context of the Mediterranean.", "language": "en", "license": { "name": "", "short_name": "", "text": null, "url": "" }, "keywords": [ { "word": "Spatial Theories of the City" }, { "word": "Comparative Literature" } ], "section": "II. Early Modern Naples: Image/Realities from Scientific Academies and the Baroque to Enlightenment and the Grand Tour", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/35r0d620", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Denise", "middle_name": "Marina", "last_name": "Spampinato", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "UC Irvine", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2012-03-15T14:54:40-05:00", "date_accepted": "2012-03-15T14:54:40-05:00", "date_published": "2012-12-28T02:00:00-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/cisj/article/40421/galley/30386/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 40441, "title": "Il colore della statualità. Leggi suntuarie, codici estetici e modelli culturali delle \nélites\n nella Napoli della prima Età moderna", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "Il percorso euristico che s’intende sviluppare ha un duplice obiettivo. Da un lato intende mettere in luce attraverso un’analisi giuridico e politico-istituzionale della legislazione suntuaria in che modo essa fosse funzionale agl’interessi della classe dirigente; dall’altro – passando dalla prospettiva teoretica all’analisi della \npratique du systéme\n e delle mentalità sociali – il saggio intende ricostruire, servendosi degli inventari e delle cronache coeve, i modelli di consumo mettendoli in relazione con le gerarchie di valori delle \nélites\n della società napoletana della prima età moderna. Questa seconda parte del lavoro si giova non solo dell’analisi archivistica ma anche di quella iconografica. I ritratti, le sculture e alcuni rari, e per questo preziosissimi, materiali vestimentari del XVI secolo appartenenti al patrimonio artistico napoletano consentono di visualizzare con immediatezza quanto emerge dalla letteratura. Sul piano metodologico, si è ritenuto di affrontare questo tema in una prospettiva di comparazione con altre esterienze storiche europee. La scelta è dovuta a due specificità: la prima è relativa alla presenza del Regno di Napoli nel complesso sistema imperiale di Carlo V e al fondamentale ruolo geo-politico svolto dal Regno e dalle sue \nélites\n all’epoca delle guerre d’Italia; la seconda è invece legata all’evidenza che l’analisi della dinamica socio-istituzionale del Regno di Napoli può essere compresa appieno solo attraverso la comparazione con la Francia che, com’è noto, ha rappresentato il cuore propulsore del processo di civilizzazione socio-istituzionale.", "language": "it.", "license": { "name": "", "short_name": "", "text": null, "url": "" }, "keywords": [ { "word": "Regno di Napoli, Consifglio Collaterale, Don Pedro de Toledo, gens Togata, nobiltà di spada" }, { "word": "Institutional History, Cultural Studies" } ], "section": "I. Medieval and Renaissance Naples: Forging Neapolitan Identity through History, Literature, Philosophy, and Art", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/1g47m103", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Sonia", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Scognamiglio", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "Universita degli studi di Napoli 'Parthenope'", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2012-09-30T16:12:32-05:00", "date_accepted": "2012-09-30T16:12:32-05:00", "date_published": "2012-12-28T02:00:00-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/cisj/article/40441/galley/30399/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 41161, "title": "Il diritto all’immagine nella Napoli aragonese : i ritratti di Pontano e Sannazaro", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "The study of all the portraits of Giovanni Pontano and Jacopo Sannazaro aims to enlighten the process of iconographical creation in Naples in the Renaissance (fifteenth and sixteenth century). These famous humanists, very close to the Aragonese dynasty, used the same patterns but in a different way than the kings. The \"right to portrait\" at the royal court had precise codifications. The portraits of Pontano and Sannazaro are at the same time inside and outside this frame of codes. That's why their study allows a wider analysis of the question of the portrait in Aragonese Naples, the unique monarchy of the peninsula and great example for the other Italian and European courts.", "language": "en", "license": { "name": "", "short_name": "", "text": null, "url": "" }, "keywords": [ { "word": "Giovanni Pontano" }, { "word": "Jacques Sannazar" }, { "word": "Naples" }, { "word": "portrait" }, { "word": "Medals" }, { "word": "Albarelli" }, { "word": "painting" }, { "word": "Alphonse V of Aragon" }, { "word": "Ferrante of Aragon" }, { "word": "Adriano Fiorentino" }, { "word": "Guido Mazzoni" }, { "word": "Ioan Todeschino" }, { "word": "Giovan Paolo de Agostini" }, { "word": "Girolamo Santacroce" }, { "word": "Classical, Ancient Mediterranean and Near Eastern Studies and Archaeology" } ], "section": "I. Medieval and Renaissance Naples: Forging Neapolitan Identity through History, Literature, Philosophy, and Art", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/1t29z5rr", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Joana", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Barreto", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "Académie de France à Rome, Villa Medici", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2011-09-03T03:02:54-05:00", "date_accepted": "2011-09-03T03:02:54-05:00", "date_published": "2012-12-28T02:00:00-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/cisj/article/41161/galley/30786/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 41133, "title": "Il “Regno del Quasi”. Icone cinesi nelle rappresentazioni partenopee di Ermanno Rea e Roberto Saviano", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "The present article analyzes the use of Chinese icons as a frame for representing Naples in two recent non-fiction novels, \"La dismissione\" (2002) by Ermanno Rea and \"Gomorra\" (2006) by Roberto Saviano. Avoiding the pitfalls of identification (as it was trivialized in the 1970s by the political slogan “La Cina è vicina”), the space between China and Naples becomes a geographic metaphor for the many transformations re-shaping the reality of global trade.\n \nOn the one hand, the reference to China endows Naples with the typical features of post-modern space consumption (Urry 2002), be it in the form of an increasingly immaterial trade or in the more traditional form of tourism. On the other hand, the advent of Chinese firms is at odds with the crisis of steel industry in Naples. Rea describes the whole industrialization of Southern Italy as a fragile utopia, whose failure involves both political and criminal responsibilities: on the contrary, present-day China seems to accomplish the historical processes missed by Naples. However, while the Neapolitan-based heavy industry collapses, the criminal economy of camorra appears to be perfectly “wired” and “on-the-spot”, being connected to the Chinese garment industry and to the global counterfeit market, as both authors highlight in their accounts.\n \nBy no means an original invention, this spatial metaphor lays its roots in the travel journals from Communist China, such as Franco Fortini's \"Asia Maggiore\" [“Asia Maior”] (1956) and Carlo Bernari's \"Il gigante Cina\" [“China, the giant”] (1957), two examples of what Paul Hollander has named “political pilgrimages”(1992). Through this metaphor, Fortini emphasizes the misery still affecting both lands in the 1950s, whereas according to Bernari the Chinese “Land of Approximation” is strikingly similar to Naples, a city where power always depends on a series of negotiations. Despite the many continuities with the present, the meaning of this icon is totally reverted in the works by Rea and Saviano, where China embodies a rampant economic power and its morally questionable rules. Finally, the use of this spatial reference represents an implicit statement of “foreignness” and exoticism, since an Orientalist pattern is adopted to place the inner otherness of Naples within the boundaries of a blurred national identity.", "language": "en", "license": { "name": "", "short_name": "", "text": null, "url": "" }, "keywords": [ { "word": "Italian Literature" } ], "section": "III. Modern and Contemporary Naples: Blurring Fiction and Non-Fiction on Stage and in Print", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/7343m965", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Valentina", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Fulginiti", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "University of Toronto", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2011-05-16T19:02:30-05:00", "date_accepted": "2011-05-16T19:02:30-05:00", "date_published": "2012-12-28T02:00:00-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/cisj/article/41133/galley/30766/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 40420, "title": "Imaging the Angevin Patron Saint: Mary Magdalen in the Pipino Chapel in Naples", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "In 1279, the Angevin prince, Charles of Salerno, the future Charles II of Naples, discovered the body of Mary Magdalen in Provence. This inextricably linked the Angevins to the Magdalen, whom they adopted as patron saint of their dynasty. A dynasty uniquely aware of the political benefits of personal relationships with saints, the Angevins enthusiastically promoted the Magdalen’s cult. Significantly, it was in Naples, in 1295—the year the Pope authenticated the body discovered by Charles—that the earliest fresco cycle depicting the Magdalen’s life appeared. Over the subsequent half-century, two additional Magdalen cycles were commissioned in Naples. This efflorescence of Magdalen imagery in Angevin territory was directly tied to Angevin promotion of her cult. The Pipino Chapel in San Pietro a Maiella was the final Magdalen cycle painted in late medieval Naples, and presents the most iconographically sophisticated example of the Angevin impact on Neapolitan Magdalen imagery. By closely examining the Pipino Chapel in the context of Angevin promotion of the Magdalen cult, new meanings for the cycle are revealed, illustrating how the chapel’s unknown patron deployed imagery depicting the life of the Angevin patron saint to propagandize for the dynasty and declare allegiance to it.", "language": "en", "license": { "name": "", "short_name": "", "text": null, "url": "" }, "keywords": [ { "word": "Angevin" }, { "word": "Mary Magdalen" }, { "word": "Magdalen cult" }, { "word": "San Pietro a Maiella" }, { "word": "Beata stirps" }, { "word": "House of Anjou" }, { "word": "Art History" }, { "word": "Religion" } ], "section": "I. Medieval and Renaissance Naples: Forging Neapolitan Identity through History, Literature, Philosophy, and Art", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/7pz6w018", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Sarah", "middle_name": "S.", "last_name": "Wilkins", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "Rutgers University", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2012-03-14T13:40:46-05:00", "date_accepted": "2012-03-14T13:40:46-05:00", "date_published": "2012-12-28T02:00:00-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/cisj/article/40420/galley/30385/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 40448, "title": "Introduction to Volume 3, Issue 1", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "", "language": "en", "license": { "name": "", "short_name": "", "text": null, "url": "" }, "keywords": [], "section": "The Disciplines of the Arts and Sciences in Naples: Medieval, Early Modern, Contemporary. Introduction to Vol. 3 Issue 1", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/3hq820mm", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "John", "middle_name": "A.", "last_name": "Marino", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "UC San Diego", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2012-12-27T23:16:17-06:00", "date_accepted": "2012-12-27T23:16:17-06:00", "date_published": "2012-12-28T02:00:00-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/cisj/article/40448/galley/30404/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 40449, "title": "Introduction to Volume 3, Issue 2", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "", "language": "en", "license": { "name": "", "short_name": "", "text": null, "url": "" }, "keywords": [], "section": "Open Theme Issue", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/4j17t5dq", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "John", "middle_name": "A.", "last_name": "Marino", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "UC San Diego", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2012-12-27T23:54:29-06:00", "date_accepted": "2012-12-27T23:54:29-06:00", "date_published": "2012-12-28T02:00:00-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/cisj/article/40449/galley/30405/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 40423, "title": "Invisible Sea: Anna Maria Ortese's \nIl mare non bagna Napoli", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "Critical discussion of Anna Maria Ortese's controversial 1953 book on Naples, focused especially on the first story \"Un paio di occhiali\" and Ortese's parodoxical poetics of myopia. The article looks at the book in the context of the Neapolitan modern narrative tradition, seeking to explain its ambivalent reception by Neapolitan intellectuals, and why Italo Calvino was instead one of Ortese's earliest supporters and admirers.", "language": "en", "license": { "name": "", "short_name": "", "text": null, "url": "" }, "keywords": [], "section": "III. Modern and Contemporary Naples: Blurring Fiction and Non-Fiction on Stage and in Print", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/1k91d7s3", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Lucia", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Re", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "University of California - Los Angeles", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2012-03-15T19:04:57-05:00", "date_accepted": "2012-03-15T19:04:57-05:00", "date_published": "2012-12-28T02:00:00-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/cisj/article/40423/galley/30387/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 43430, "title": "Linguistic Marginalities: Becoming American without Learning English", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "People living in the United States but unable to speak English are often portrayed as \"marginal\" and \"isolated\"—socially, economically, and geographically. Such narratives present the learning of English as central to \"becoming American\" and widely claim that earlier immigrants quickly acquired English. This paper counters such stereotypes. Wilkerson and Salmons present a case study of the extent to which one group of monolingual immigrants lived literally and figuratively on the margins. They draw qualitative and quantitative data from southeastern Wisconsin, especially one township, Hustisford. In 1910, 24 percent of Hustisford residents reported being German monolingual, 35 percent of those American-born. Contrary to assumptions of economic marginality, in this region such monolinguals were not only housewives and farmhands but also craftsmen, tradesmen, teachers, and members of the clergy. Another stereotype is that monolinguals were geographically marginal, but they find them living interspersed with bilinguals and English monolinguals. Nor were they socially marginal, as church records point to a broadly German-dominant but overwhelmingly bilingual community, where numerous Anglo-Americans became highly proficient in German. Even schools were hardly the powerful tools of English learning they are often portrayed as being. Despite all this, Hustisford and similar communities presented themselves as hyperpatriotic Americans. These monolingual immigrants, in short, were not marginal in the usual senses.", "language": "en", "license": null, "keywords": [ { "word": "Immigration" }, { "word": "Language" }, { "word": "identity" }, { "word": "Geography" }, { "word": "History" }, { "word": "Wisconsin" }, { "word": "Bilingual, Multilingual, and Multicultural Education" }, { "word": "community engagement" }, { "word": "First and Second Language Acquisition" }, { "word": "Geographic Information Sciences" }, { "word": "Other Geography" }, { "word": "Quantitative, Qualitative, Comparative, and Historical Methodologies" } ], "section": "Articles", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/5vn092kk", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Miranda", "middle_name": "E.", "last_name": "Wilkerson", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "Columbia College", "department": "None" }, { "first_name": "Joseph", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Salmons", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "University of Wisconsin-Madison", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2010-05-21T02:44:49-05:00", "date_accepted": "2010-05-21T02:44:49-05:00", "date_published": "2012-12-28T02:00:00-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/jtas/article/43430/galley/32316/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 40432, "title": "Little Heroes, Epic Transformations: Giulio Cesare Cortese’s Neapolitan Mock Heroic", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "Neapolitan dialect literature made its official entrance onto Mount Parnassus in 1621. In Giulio Cesare Cortese’s \nViaggio di Parnaso\n (Voyage to Parnassus), a narrative poem published that year, the autobiographical protagonist journeys to the home of Apollo and the Muses bearing news about the latest literary developments in Naples, which the god of poetry receives with the greatest enthusiasm.\n \nThe \nViaggio\n came at a culminating moment in Cortese’s own career as a founding father of the Neapolitan tradition, a career that showcased the innovative mock heroic poems \nLa Vaiasseide\n (The Epic of the Servant Girls, 1612) and \nMicco Passaro ‘nnammorato\n (Micco Passaro in Love, 1619).\n \nAlthough the language—Neapolitan dialect—in which these works were written had been adopted by earlier authors, only in the seventeenth century did it establish itself as a rich literary idiom, primarily in the works of Cortese and his friend and colleague Giambattista Basile. These authors forged new linguistic territory, but also experimented with fresh generic paradigms (the mock heroic and the fairy tale) and promoted a poetics dedicated to excavating and representing, with proto-anthropological curiosity and critical acumen, the Kingdom of Naples in its everyday life and rituals, popular culture, and folklore. This essay investigates Cortese’s place in Parnassus through an analysis of these two poems.", "language": "en", "license": { "name": "", "short_name": "", "text": null, "url": "" }, "keywords": [], "section": "II. Early Modern Naples: Image/Realities from Scientific Academies and the Baroque to Enlightenment and the Grand Tour", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/23227040", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Nancy", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Canepa", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "Dartmouth College", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2012-06-10T14:43:02-05:00", "date_accepted": "2012-06-10T14:43:02-05:00", "date_published": "2012-12-28T02:00:00-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/cisj/article/40432/galley/30392/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 42606, "title": "Making a Home away from Home: Traveling Diasporas in María Escandón’s \nEsperanza’s Box of Saints", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "This essay was originally published in \nAmerikastudien/American Studies\n 51, no. 4 (2006): 581–93.\nMarc Priewe’s essay argues convincingly for a way of applying the term “diaspora” to Chicana/o cultural formations and consciousness by focusing on the transnational relations within the US that pervade Chicana/o life and are manifest in allegiances and nostalgias that transform ideas of ethnicity and place. Priewe’s analysis of Escandón’s text depicts how life in the “transnation” might be imagined. Echoing the language of Du Bois, Priewe examines the “zone of doubleness” and the “transnational gestalt” that characterize the experience of a living in or making a “home away from home.”", "language": "en", "license": null, "keywords": [ { "word": "American Studies" }, { "word": "Chicana/o Studies" }, { "word": "Transnational" }, { "word": "Diaspora" }, { "word": "María Escandón" } ], "section": "Reprise", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/3kj5h0qx", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Marc", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Priewe", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "University of Stuttgart", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2012-12-27T08:32:42-06:00", "date_accepted": "2012-12-27T08:32:42-06:00", "date_published": "2012-12-28T02:00:00-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/jtas/article/42606/galley/31806/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 41165, "title": "Medieval Influence in Early Modern Neapolitan Historiography: The Fortunes of the \nCronaca di Partenope\n, 1350-1680", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "This article argues for the foundational role of a fourteenth-century vernacular history of Naples (the \nCronaca di Partenope\n) in the development of Neapolitan historiography through the seventeenth century. Thrice printed, the \nCronaca\n was also frequently mined for source material by later historians; its uses illustrate the blurred boundaries between amateur and erudite printed historiography and between “foreign” and “native” accounts, as well as the evolving concerns and historical methods that informed treatments of the city’s and realm’s past over some two and one- half centuries.", "language": "en", "license": { "name": "", "short_name": "", "text": null, "url": "" }, "keywords": [ { "word": "european" }, { "word": "European Languages and Societies" }, { "word": "Italian Language and Literature" }, { "word": "Medieval and Renaissance Studies" } ], "section": "I. Medieval and Renaissance Naples: Forging Neapolitan Identity through History, Literature, Philosophy, and Art", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/2sg144x3", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Samantha", "middle_name": "L", "last_name": "Kelly", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "Rutgers University", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2011-09-18T18:20:30-05:00", "date_accepted": "2011-09-18T18:20:30-05:00", "date_published": "2012-12-28T02:00:00-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/cisj/article/41165/galley/30789/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 41140, "title": "Modelli scolastici nel Boccaccio napoletano", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "Scholastic Schemes in Boccaccio's Neapolitan Works\n \nThe aim of this article is to investigate the consistency and meaning of the logical-dialectical processes emerging in the wider context of rhetorical means in the works written by Boccaccio in Naples and immediately after his return to Florence. In these works, dialectical schemes sometimes take the more complex structure of \nquaestio disputata\n. By using the \ndisputatio\n form, a good number of medieval authors show how the \ndisputatio\n leaves the narrow university milieu, and reaches the literary context. A possible reason for the reception of the \nquaestio disputata\n within the literary context can be identified in the rediscovery of the similarities of late medieval dialectic and rhetoric, since both are “sciences of the probable,” and therefore aim at persuading rather than at demonstrating. A second reason can be found in the dramatic nature of philosophical \ndisputatio\n, a veritable tournament fought with the weapons of the mind. In Boccaccio's works, scholastic language and mental processes are widely diffused, a phenomenon that can be explained by the intermingling of philosophical and literary models. Nevertheless, it should also be noticed that the \ndisputatio\n adopted by Boccaccio is reinforced by his return to its scholastic sources. Those texts were not unknown to a writer who was in touch with the scholars of the court of King Robert the Wise in Naples, studied canon law, read and loved Dante’s works, and was acquainted with Aristotle, Boethius, the Platonic Tradition, and Thomas Aquinas. The presence of scholastic language and techniques leads us to evaluate their narrative role in Boccaccio’s literary production, their nature of prospective tools allowing the game of viewpoints. In Boccaccio’s writings, sometimes a \nquaestio\n opposing two possible positions has the task of seeking the “truth.” Boccaccian use of \ndisputatio\n hides a subtle literary strategy that both seems to give the reader the option of choice, and/or the author to take his position and direct the reading, and deserves to be analyzed more deeply.", "language": "en", "license": { "name": "", "short_name": "", "text": null, "url": "" }, "keywords": [ { "word": "Giovanni Boccaccio" }, { "word": "scholastic schemes." }, { "word": "History of Philosophy" }, { "word": "Italian Literature" } ], "section": "I. Medieval and Renaissance Naples: Forging Neapolitan Identity through History, Literature, Philosophy, and Art", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/2j06c7nz", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Concetta", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Di Franza", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "Università degli Studi di Salerno", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2011-06-25T04:26:45-05:00", "date_accepted": "2011-06-25T04:26:45-05:00", "date_published": "2012-12-28T02:00:00-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/cisj/article/41140/galley/30772/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 42605, "title": "Moroccan American Studies: Assets and Challenges", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "Mohamed El Amine Moumine’s essay, published originally in \nMoroccan American Studies\n, edited by Mohamed Benzidan (2010), as an account of the development of American Studies in Morocco, is here republished on the heels of a significant international conference held in Marrakesh, Morocco, in December 2012 on the timely topic of the Arab Spring’s impact on the teaching of American Studies in Arab universities. The conference, organized by Professor Moumine and the Moroccan American Studies faculty at Université Hassan II Mohammedia–Casablanca was a continuation of the inaugural Cairo conference in 2004, which Moumine describes as the event that opened discussions among Americanists from the US and Arab countries on the topic of American Studies. Observing that “Morocco was the first nation to recognize the newly sovereign United States in 1777,” Moumine speaks from the perspective of a long-held diplomatic bond between these two nations. Detailing the role of “comparative cultural pedagogy” in Université Hassan II Mohammedia–Casablanca’s Moroccan American Studies programs at both the undergraduate and graduate levels, Moumine’s essay offers an exciting example of transnational American Studies at work.", "language": "en", "license": null, "keywords": [ { "word": "American Studies" }, { "word": "Transnational" }, { "word": "Moroccan American Studies" }, { "word": "Morocco" }, { "word": "Arab Spring" }, { "word": "Comparative Cultural Pedagogy" } ], "section": "Reprise", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/3v17520r", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Mohamed El Amine", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Moumine", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "Université Hassan II Mohammedia–Casablanca", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2012-12-27T08:25:25-06:00", "date_accepted": "2012-12-27T08:25:25-06:00", "date_published": "2012-12-28T02:00:00-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/jtas/article/42605/galley/31805/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 40446, "title": "On Naples, 1878-1884: Six Translations", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "This set of new English-language translations of some of Matilde Serao's early writings on Naples (1878-1884) includes the following: \"What They Eat,\" \"The Lottery,\" \"More on the Lottery,\" and \"Farewell\" (all from Il ventre di Napoli); \"To the Tenth Muse\"; and \"The Legend of the Future.\" The translations are fully annotated, and a bibliography is supplied in the translator's accompanying essay.", "language": "en", "license": { "name": "", "short_name": "", "text": null, "url": "" }, "keywords": [], "section": "III. Modern and Contemporary Naples: Blurring Fiction and Non-Fiction on Stage and in Print", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/7492w5hs", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Matilde", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Serao", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2012-11-12T07:40:50-06:00", "date_accepted": "2012-11-12T07:40:50-06:00", "date_published": "2012-12-28T02:00:00-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/cisj/article/40446/galley/30401/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 41160, "title": "PONTANVS FECIT: Inscriptions and Artistic Authorship in the Pontano Chapel", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "Built between 1490 and 1492, the chapel of the humanist Giovanni Pontano is one of the most interesting and controversial cases of fifteenth-century Neapolitan architecture. The chapel has been attributed to different architects including Fra Giocondo, Francesco di Giorgio Martini, and Baccio Pontelli; however, none of these attributions can be considered conclusive. Pontano himself discourages us from trying to propose a new name in addition to those which have already been suggested, by repeatedly signing the pavement of the chapel with an unequivocal Pontanus fecit. This feature has never been remarked upon by historians, yet Pontano’s inscription should be seen as a true signature of the work and represents a central element for our understanding of the building and above all of Pontano’s relationship with the artistic culture of his time. Wishing to inform posterity about who was responsible for the chapel, he proposes himself as its only true auctor. This matches perfectly what the humanist would shortly afterwards express in his treatise \nDe magnificentia\n, in which he describes the patron as the auctor of the work of art who through his knowledge of architecture and sculpture is thereby able to show the architect and sculptor the means how they might achieve magnificence in the artistic work which they are going to carry out on his behalf. Pontano’s use of such signatures reflects a precise humanistic interest in artists’ signatures which emerged at the end of the fifteenth century and which led to the resumption of this practice in antiquarian terms. While the graphic form of the inscription in capital letters and its arrangement within a scroll show a careful observation of ancient monuments, the wording of the sentence with the name in the nominative and the verb \nfacere\n, employed in the perfect tense (\nfecit\n), reveals a precise ancient literary source. Pontano’s signature is an accurate quotation from Pliny’s preface to the first book of the \nNaturalis Historia\n. With his choice of the inscription Pontanus fecit, Pontano is consciously making a precise statement: he not only communicates his role as the author of the chapel, as well as its patron, but also expresses his conviction that he has perfected the work of art to his full satisfaction and does not have to fear the judgment of posterity.", "language": "en", "license": { "name": "", "short_name": "", "text": null, "url": "" }, "keywords": [ { "word": "Pontano" }, { "word": "Naples" }, { "word": "signature" }, { "word": "Pliny" }, { "word": "chapel" }, { "word": "Classical, Ancient Mediterranean and Near Eastern Studies and Archaeology" }, { "word": "Architectural History and Criticism" }, { "word": "Italian Literature" } ], "section": "I. Medieval and Renaissance Naples: Forging Neapolitan Identity through History, Literature, Philosophy, and Art", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/0gm779cm", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Bianca", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "de Divitiis", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "University of Naples \"Federico II\"", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2011-08-31T15:48:58-05:00", "date_accepted": "2011-08-31T15:48:58-05:00", "date_published": "2012-12-28T02:00:00-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/cisj/article/41160/galley/30784/download/" }, { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/cisj/article/41160/galley/30785/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 41138, "title": "Public Happiness as the Wealth of Nations: The Rise of Political Economy in Naples in a Comparative Perspective", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "The paper surveys the rise of political economy in eighteenth-century Naples in a comparative perspective. It presents several arguments: first, that far from being a passive receptor, Naples was a producer of ideas about political economy that complemented other currents of thought in Europe; that the contribution of Antonio Genovesi was at the core of the intellectual development in Naples; that the progress of science and arts in Naples did not constitute a sharp break with the past; and, finally, that thinkers like Genovesi created a credible alternative to both the Hobbesian view of human nature and the Scottish model of political economy associated with Adam Smith. Genovesi’s attention to how cooperation can be created to overcome collective-action dilemmas adds to our knowledge of the archeology of modern rational choice theory, while his emphasis on public happiness has been given renewed significance in light of recent recognition that increases in wealth do not necessarily produce individual happiness or life satisfaction.", "language": "en", "license": { "name": "", "short_name": "", "text": null, "url": "" }, "keywords": [ { "word": "CIVIL ECONOMY" }, { "word": "political economy" }, { "word": "Naples" }, { "word": "PUBLIC TRUST" }, { "word": "commerce" }, { "word": "International Relations and Affairs" }, { "word": "Economic History" }, { "word": "Economic Policy" }, { "word": "Economics" } ], "section": "II. Early Modern Naples: Image/Realities from Scientific Academies and the Baroque to Enlightenment and the Grand Tour", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/7db6235h", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Filippo", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Sabetti", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "McGill University", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2011-06-08T19:35:03-05:00", "date_accepted": "2011-06-08T19:35:03-05:00", "date_published": "2012-12-28T02:00:00-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/cisj/article/41138/galley/30770/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 42604, "title": "Radical Cosmopolitanism: W. E. B. Du Bois, Germany, and African American Pragmatist Visions for Twenty-First Century Europe", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "This essay originally appeared in \nRepresentation and Decoration in a Postmodern Age\n, edited by Alfred Hornung and Rüdiger Kunow (Heidelberg: Universitätsverlag Winter, 2009), 65–96.\nGünter H. Lenz’s important essay focuses on W. E. B. Du Bois’s education and experiences in Germany. Tracing Du Bois’s time in Germany, from his university years there (1892–1894) to his visits in the 1920s and 1930s, and finally to his last stay in 1958 when he received an honorary doctorate in Berlin, Lenz’s analysis of Du Bois’s work indicates how political factors and social change in Germany influenced and transformed Du Bois’s interpretation of the US but also shifted the ground of Du Bois’s critique to the larger forces of global imperialism and colonialism. Moving from a study of \nThe Souls of Black Folk\n (1903) through an analysis of the less popular \nDark Princess\n (1928) and on to essays and books such as \nColor and Democracy: Colonies and Peace\n (1945), Lenz develops an argument for reading Du Bois’s “radical cosmopolitanism” as “an open, trans (and post-)national, diasporic discourse that acknowledges and negotiates intercultural multiplicity, heterogeneous interests and positions, and hybrid publics.”", "language": "en", "license": null, "keywords": [ { "word": "American Studies" }, { "word": "African American Studies" }, { "word": "Transnational" }, { "word": "W. E. B. Du Bois" }, { "word": "Germany" }, { "word": "cosmopolitanism" } ], "section": "Reprise", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/4fc268d0", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Günter", "middle_name": "H.", "last_name": "Lenz", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2012-12-27T08:11:25-06:00", "date_accepted": "2012-12-27T08:11:25-06:00", "date_published": "2012-12-28T02:00:00-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/jtas/article/42604/galley/31804/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 42603, "title": "Reprise Editor's Note", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "Reprise Editor’s Note for \nJTAS\n 4.2", "language": "en", "license": null, "keywords": [ { "word": "American Studies" }, { "word": "Transnational" }, { "word": "Reprise" } ], "section": "Reprise", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/8rb0n1bg", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Nina", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Morgan", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "Kennesaw State University", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2012-12-27T07:58:20-06:00", "date_accepted": "2012-12-27T07:58:20-06:00", "date_published": "2012-12-28T02:00:00-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/jtas/article/42603/galley/31803/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 40416, "title": "Sleights of Hand: Black Skin and Curzio Malaparte's \nLa pelle", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "This article reconsiders Curzio Malaparte’s polemical novel \nLa pelle\n [1949]\n,\n which either has been condemned as a false historical account of post-Liberation Naples or defended as true “art.” Focusing on \nLa pelle\n’s representations of translation between the Allies and the Italians, I draw on contemporary translation theory to analyze how the text constructs these claims of “fidelity,” and to ask why they require the bodies of marginalized figures (the \nsoldato negro,\n the Moroccan \ngoumier\n and the “virgin”). While \nLa pelle\n “erases” these bodies, converting them into metaphors for art and war, my reading insists on their metaphorical \nand\n literal significance.", "language": "en", "license": { "name": "", "short_name": "", "text": null, "url": "" }, "keywords": [ { "word": "World War II" }, { "word": "censorship" }, { "word": "translation" }, { "word": "goumiers" }, { "word": "buffalo soldiers" }, { "word": "Literature" }, { "word": "History" } ], "section": "III. Modern and Contemporary Naples: Blurring Fiction and Non-Fiction on Stage and in Print", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/0xr9d2gm", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Marisa", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Escolar", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "University of California, Berkeley", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2012-03-04T17:39:01-06:00", "date_accepted": "2012-03-04T17:39:01-06:00", "date_published": "2012-12-28T02:00:00-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/cisj/article/40416/galley/30383/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 41154, "title": "The Breasts of Vittoria Colonna", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "Abigail Brundin has recently speculated that Vittoria Colonna, who was one of the most important poets of the Italian Renaissance, has received relatively little attention from women who study early modern women because of her unappealing image as a “secular nun.” If that is the case, Kenneth Gouwens’ first English translation and edition of Paolo Giovio’s Latin dialogue\n De viris ac foeminis aetate nostra florentibus \nwith its panegyrical but at times prurient portrait of Vittoria Colonna should pump new life into Colonna studies.", "language": "en", "license": { "name": "", "short_name": "", "text": null, "url": "" }, "keywords": [ { "word": "Arts and Humanities" } ], "section": "I. Medieval and Renaissance Naples: Forging Neapolitan Identity through History, Literature, Philosophy, and Art", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/13f38850", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Diana", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Robin", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "University of New Mexico - Main Campus", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2011-08-06T10:22:50-05:00", "date_accepted": "2011-08-06T10:22:50-05:00", "date_published": "2012-12-28T02:00:00-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/cisj/article/41154/galley/30780/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 41158, "title": "The Business Organization of the Bourbon Factories. Mastercraftsmen, Crafts and Families in the Capodimonte Porcelain Works and the Royal Factory at San Leucio", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "The case studies presented here, the porcelain factory at Capodimonte (1740-1759) and the textile factory at San Leucio (1789-1860), though relatively distant in time, and promoted by different governments, should be considered sequential, precisely because of their ability to impose systemic innovations. Both cases represent organizational structures using up-to-date production technologies and innovative management, with the work organized and divided according to a precise apportionment of roles, dominated by a top-down hierarchy of the different production units with a high level of interaction between the different workshops, coordinated by a director for each sector. The two royal companies had a carefully designed layout with distribution facilities positioned near the production areas. Anticipating the utopias of the Enlightenment, the two factories were equipped with buildings capable of allowing workers to live with their families in the same place as the factory by adopting a small-scale phalanstery-style solution at Capodimonte (73 units) and a larger one in San Leucio (a thousand workers at the beginning of the nineteenth century with a total of about 200 families by the mid nineteenth century). The Royal Silk Factory of San Leucio diversified its production over seventy years through the development of new technologies and new materials, extending centers to locations close to the village of San Leucio, Vaccheria, Briano, and Puccianello, thus creating a real textile production district.", "language": "en", "license": { "name": "", "short_name": "", "text": null, "url": "" }, "keywords": [ { "word": "Art and Design" }, { "word": "Arts and Humanities" }, { "word": "European Languages and Societies" }, { "word": "Art History, Criticism and Conservation" } ], "section": "II. Early Modern Naples: Image/Realities from Scientific Academies and the Baroque to Enlightenment and the Grand Tour", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/8c25c6gt", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Silvana", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Musella Guida", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "Facoltà di Lettere, Università degli Studi della Basilicata, sede di Matera", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2011-08-23T18:39:58-05:00", "date_accepted": "2011-08-23T18:39:58-05:00", "date_published": "2012-12-28T02:00:00-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/cisj/article/41158/galley/30783/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 41146, "title": "Trade Unions and the Origins of the Union-Based Welfare State in Italy (1950s-1970s)", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "During the second half of the twentieth century, Italy, like many other European countries, experienced the birth and growth of a specific kind of welfare state. It was the consequence of various international influences in the context of the Cold War as well as the result of controversial actions of different internal actors. The purpose of this article is to explore the actions of some of these internal actors and their consequences for the definition of the Italian welfare state.\n \nSpecifically, the object of this essay is to identify the role played by trade unions in defining the Italian model of state social policy in the period following World War II. This essay proposes an interpretation which identifies trade unions as main actors in the consolidation, albeit difficult and slow, of the welfare system in Italy. Consequently, this enquiry into the “Italian way” also discusses some traditional explanations and classifications proposed in the literature about the welfare state, welfare regimes, and the welfare society. In particular, this essay introduces the concept of a “Union Based Welfare State” in order to describe the Italian experience and as a descriptive category useful for comparative analyses generally.\n \nFollowing this working hypothesis, this article assesses one particular aspect of the complex framework of the Italian trade union experience after World War II. It offers a reconstruction of the debate and actions regarding the welfare state questions that feature the two most important Italian trade unions, the \nConfederazione Generale Italiana del Lavoro \n(Italian General Council of Labor) (CGIL) and the \nConfederazione Italiana Sindacati Lavoratori \n(Italian Confederation of Workers’ Unions) (CISL).\n \nMoreover, in the essay, a description of the actions of the \nIstituto Nazionale di Assistenza Sociale \n(National Institute of Social Assistance) (INAS) and \nIstituto Nazionale Confederale di Assistenza \n(Confederated National Institute of Assistance) (INCA) also assists in the investigation of CISL and CGIL’s roles in the welfare state. INAS and INCA are the \nPatronati \n(trade union aid societies) of the CISL and CGIL and the tools by which trade unions deal with daily assistance and social security issues.\n To summarize, the final goal of this essay is to show how the Italian welfare state experience represents, in the European postwar context, an original “union way” which questions traditional descriptions of the Italian welfare state. In particular, it challenges the description of Italian social policy that uses only the categories of clientelism and familism and instead highlights elements of discontinuity and the central role of trade unions in social policy implementation.", "language": "en", "license": { "name": "", "short_name": "", "text": null, "url": "" }, "keywords": [ { "word": "Welfare State" }, { "word": "Trade Unions" }, { "word": "Social Policy" }, { "word": "european" }, { "word": "History" } ], "section": "Post-War Italy and Beyond the Risorgimento’s 150th Anniversary", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/6xz0x8qj", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Stefano", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Agnoletto", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "Kingston University, London (UK)", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2011-06-28T22:27:19-05:00", "date_accepted": "2011-06-28T22:27:19-05:00", "date_published": "2012-12-28T02:00:00-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/cisj/article/41146/galley/30775/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 41150, "title": "Umanesimo politico. La monarchia organicista nel IV libro del \nDe obedientia\n di Giovanni Pontano", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "Political Humanism, of which Pontano’s \nDe obedientia\n (1470) is one of the reference texts, possessed the rational and technical elements to outline the features of the Absolutist State with a refined theoretical apparatus. But it also had a secular and humanistic dimension that is lost in the subsequent developments of political theory, marked by the Reason of State and the return of the great military and ecclesiastical aristocracies. The main doctrinal axis on which hinges political humanism is the concept of organicism, namely the representation of society as an organic body inside which every member performs a specific function and the king is its visible representative, a reflection of the \nunitas\n that should be the basis for all social and political structure. In \nDe obedientia\n’s fourth book, Pontano argues in favor of monarchy as the form of government that most closely meets the needs and issues of an organicist society and he outlines the features of the monarchical state. For this purpose, he uses the classical and medieval doctrine (mostly legal) to define the concept of obedience, and thus building it around the concepts of \nliberalitas\n and fides, and then loyalty to the sovereign and to the homeland, which is a real focal point in the construction of the new humanistic state. Finally, it tackles the problem of disobedience and rebellion, especially with reference to the great feudal lords.", "language": "en", "license": { "name": "", "short_name": "", "text": null, "url": "" }, "keywords": [ { "word": "Arts and Humanities" } ], "section": "I. Medieval and Renaissance Naples: Forging Neapolitan Identity through History, Literature, Philosophy, and Art", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/6ct9b8w1", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Guido", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Cappelli", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "Universidad de Extremadura, Spain", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2011-07-10T13:45:52-05:00", "date_accepted": "2011-07-10T13:45:52-05:00", "date_published": "2012-12-28T02:00:00-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/cisj/article/41150/galley/30776/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 41168, "title": "Un modello beneventano per il Virgilio altomedievale di Napoli (ms ex vind. 58. Lat.6)", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "The Neapolitan Virgil (Naples, B.N., ms ex vindob, lat.6) was written and illuminated in Naples about 950 and was part of the library of the Duke John III and his wife Theodora. The manuscript derives from a model of lateantiquity, but the closeness of its drawings to the wall paintings in the church of S. Sophia in Benevento can assume the existence of an intermediate model that was written and illuminated for the wife of duke Arechi II, Adelperga, who was Paul the Deacon’s student.", "language": "en", "license": { "name": "", "short_name": "", "text": null, "url": "" }, "keywords": [ { "word": "Medieval manuscript drawings" }, { "word": "Virgil" }, { "word": "Beneventan painting" }, { "word": "Arts and Humanities" } ], "section": "I. Medieval and Renaissance Naples: Forging Neapolitan Identity through History, Literature, Philosophy, and Art", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/6qw5b2z8", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Alessandra", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Perriccioli", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "Seconda Università di Napoli", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2011-10-08T03:10:30-05:00", "date_accepted": "2011-10-08T03:10:30-05:00", "date_published": "2012-12-28T02:00:00-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/cisj/article/41168/galley/30792/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 40436, "title": "Which and Whose Italy? Responding to Paul Ginsborg’s \nSalviamo l’Italia", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "A response to Paul Ginsborg's \"Salviamo l'Italia\". \nSalviamo l'Italia", "language": "en", "license": { "name": "", "short_name": "", "text": null, "url": "" }, "keywords": [], "section": "Back to the Future (Again): Further Comments on the Risorgimento", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/23z4f74d", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Norma", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Bouchard", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "University of Connecticut", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2012-07-06T00:06:52-05:00", "date_accepted": "2012-07-06T00:06:52-05:00", "date_published": "2012-12-28T02:00:00-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/cisj/article/40436/galley/30394/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 43821, "title": "Brucellosis Beyond Borders", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "", "language": "eng", "license": { "name": "", "short_name": "", "text": null, "url": "" }, "keywords": [ { "word": "Clinical Vignette" } ], "section": "Article", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/6047k9xn", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Judy", "middle_name": "Y", "last_name": "Choi", "name_suffix": "MD", "institution": "University of California, Los Angeles", "department": "Medicine" }, { "first_name": "Joseph", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Zaky", "name_suffix": "MD", "institution": "", "department": "" } ], "date_submitted": null, "date_accepted": null, "date_published": "2012-12-26T14:35:32-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "PDF", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/ucladom_proceedings/article/43821/galley/32624/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 43852, "title": "Incretin Based Therapy – Another Risky Behavior?", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "", "language": "eng", "license": { "name": "", "short_name": "", "text": null, "url": "" }, "keywords": [ { "word": "Clinical Vignette" } ], "section": "Article", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/8mg6f5zp", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Janet", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Winikoff", "name_suffix": "MD", "institution": "University of California, Los Angeles", "department": "Medicine" } ], "date_submitted": null, "date_accepted": null, "date_published": "2012-12-25T15:40:42-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "PDF", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/ucladom_proceedings/article/43852/galley/32655/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 5868, "title": "A Case Study of the Effects of Participation in an Organization in the Lives of Women: Post-Conflict Ayacucho, Peru", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "This paper examines the effects of participation and the importance of organizational ties in the lives of Andean women in Ayacucho, Peru. For over two decades (1980-2000) the country of Peru went through an internal conflict that entailed serious crimes mostly committed by the Shining Path and the Peruvian Army. Ayacucho was the most affected region during the conflict, leaving poverty and dramatic consequences throughout the region. Today, the economic development of Ayacucho is slow yet a number of grass roots of organizations have allowed different segments of the population to improve their quality of life. This paper focuses on the women members of the National Association of the Relatives and Disappeared of Peru (ANFASEP), paying special attention to the importance of the organizational ties that have emerged within the organization and the reproduction of social capital. Using the data collected through forty-eight in-depth interviews, I claim that the more women participate in the organization, the better their quality of life and economic well-being is. My findings suggest that organizations have allowed them to access resources that affect their quality of life in a positive manner as long as the members of an organization remain active. In this way, organizations have become access routes for active members to resources that are otherwise hard to access. This paper makes an important contribution to the literature on women’s movements in Latin America, using Peru as a case study, offering key insights about the evolution of women’s movements into institutionalized organizations.", "language": "en", "license": { "name": "All rights reserved", "short_name": "Copyright", "text": "© the author(s). All rights reserved.", "url": "https://creativecommons.org/licenses/authors" }, "keywords": [ { "word": "Social capital" }, { "word": "Women's Movements" }, { "word": "Post Conflict" }, { "word": "Peru" }, { "word": "sociology" } ], "section": "Articles", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/08c5470s", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Sandra", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Portocarrero", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "UC Berkeley", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2012-09-06T22:50:32-05:00", "date_accepted": "2012-09-06T22:50:32-05:00", "date_published": "2012-12-22T02:00:00-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/our_buj/article/5868/galley/3609/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 5872, "title": "Five-Year-Old Children Integrate Jointly Across Probabilistic and Social Domains When Inferring Preferences in Others", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "Human learners regularly face the challenging task of inferring unobservable psychological states in others. Sensitivity to relevant cues when inferring a psychological state –such as another’s preference—is an invaluable skill: accurate inference of underlying states allows one to understand and predict another's behavior. Research has shown that 18-month-old children can use affective cues when asked to infer an agent’s preference (Repacholi & Gopnik, 1997). Recent studies have also demonstrated that children from 16 months to 4 years can also use probabilistic cues to infer another's preference (Kushnir, Xu & Wellman, 2010; Ma & Xu, 2011). However, single cues are limited in the kinds of inference they allow and the inferential certainty they provide. While there is reasonable evidence that children can use a variety of single cues to infer preference, less attention has been paid to children’s ability to integrate across multiple cues. The current study investigated whether children could rationally integrate both probabilistic and social cues to predict an agent's preference. 64 three- to five-year-old children were presented with probabilistic and social cues through a puppet agent who picked toys out of a jar. After watching the agent sample objects out of a jar and express either joy or disgust, the child was asked to offer the agent one toy he liked to play with. We found that children's toy choices were sensitive to both types of cues, suggesting that by five years of age children can integrate across multiple cues to support their social reasoning.", "language": "en", "license": { "name": "All rights reserved", "short_name": "Copyright", "text": "© the author(s). All rights reserved.", "url": "https://creativecommons.org/licenses/authors" }, "keywords": [ { "word": "Bayesian modeling" }, { "word": "Children" }, { "word": "preference" }, { "word": "probabilistic inference" }, { "word": "social cognition" }, { "word": "psychology" }, { "word": "Cognitive Science" } ], "section": "Articles", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/7kx152fb", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Vidya", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Balakrishnan", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "UC Berkeley", "department": "None" }, { "first_name": "Brian", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Waismeyer", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "", "department": "None" }, { "first_name": "Fei", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Xu", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2012-09-13T03:41:50-05:00", "date_accepted": "2012-09-13T03:41:50-05:00", "date_published": "2012-12-22T02:00:00-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/our_buj/article/5872/galley/3611/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 4051, "title": "Law Courts", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "Egyptian law courts originated as councils of officials, which, besides acting as judges, also had other administrative tasks. Accordingly, they were known by the rather unspecific terms DADAt (Old Kingdom and Middle Kingdom) or qnbt (Middle Kingdom until the beginning of the Late Period), which simply means “committee.” Their members are usually referred to as srw, “officials,” although more specific designations also occur. From the 26th Dynasty onwards, the members of the courts seem to have been mainly, if not exclusively, priests with a specific juridical education, called wptjw, “judges.” From the New Kingdom onwards, a division into smaller local courts and great courts located in the capital(s) can be observed. Local courts dealt with minor cases of disputed property and petty crimes, which were punished with beatings, while the great courts attended to trials about land ownership, cases concerning officials, and crimes entailing heavier punishments like mutilation or the death penalty. This double system probably remained in action until the Ptolemaic Period when the local courts were integrated into a new system and the great courts were finally abolished and their role was taken over by Greek officials. Native Egyptian judicature fast declined under the Roman rule. Legal procedure changed little over time. Several laws about court procedure survive, which show that the conduct of cases was established in detail and that the judges had little scope for arbitrariness.", "language": "en", "license": null, "keywords": [ { "word": "Near Eastern Languages and Societies" } ], "section": "Individual and Society", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/4136j3s7", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Sandra", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Lippert", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "Universität Tübingen", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2008-02-28T15:11:02-06:00", "date_accepted": "2008-02-28T15:11:02-06:00", "date_published": "2012-12-22T02:00:00-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/nelc_uee/article/4051/galley/2610/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 5869, "title": "Narrative, Speech, and Action: Gandhi’s Satyagraha and the Constant Becoming of Truth", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "In this paper, I explore Gandhi's philosophy of nonviolence, specifically his articulation and understanding of the conception of truth. For Gandhi, truth in the political sphere is not merely a correspondence between a representation and external phenomena, but is constantly in the process of becoming as the political actor \"experiments\" with different notions of truth and the actions which are derived from them. I use the notion of a narrative as opposed to scientific mode of thought in order to highlight the open-ended, constant becoming nature of Gandhi's understanding of truth in political action. I conclude by arguing that Gandhi's notion of truth widens the sphere of political action to a plurality of individual contributions and voices towards a truly nonviolent and engaged society.", "language": "en", "license": { "name": "All rights reserved", "short_name": "Copyright", "text": "© the author(s). All rights reserved.", "url": "https://creativecommons.org/licenses/authors" }, "keywords": [ { "word": "Gandhi" }, { "word": "nonviolence" }, { "word": "Satyagraha" }, { "word": "Arendt" }, { "word": "Bakhtin" }, { "word": "narrative" }, { "word": "Political Theory" }, { "word": "Peace and Conflict Studies" }, { "word": "Social Theory" }, { "word": "Cultural Theory" } ], "section": "Articles", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/37d539hn", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Justine", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Parkin", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "UC Berkeley", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2012-09-07T22:40:13-05:00", "date_accepted": "2012-09-07T22:40:13-05:00", "date_published": "2012-12-22T02:00:00-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/our_buj/article/5869/galley/3610/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 5878, "title": "Needy Narrator and Sympathetic Reader: The Critique of Gender Convention and Narrator-Reader Tradition in Charlotte Brontë’s Villette", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "This thesis addresses how Charlotte Brontë’s \nVillette\n creates a sympathetic economy that challenges nineteenth-century English gender convention and first-person novelistic narrator-reader tradition. It posits that Brontë’s social critique of gender convention in nineteenth-century England is related to her novelistic critique of narrator-reader tradition in first-person novels. In the same way that gender convention dictates the context in which social sympathy should be felt thereby perpetuating gendered power relationships, novelistic tradition also dictates the context in which readerly sympathy should be felt and also endorses a power relationship between narrator and reader. However, this thesis concludes that Brontë’s creation of a contentious and oppositional narrator in \nVillette\n ultimately reverses this latter power relationship between narrator and reader.", "language": "en", "license": { "name": "All rights reserved", "short_name": "Copyright", "text": "© the author(s). All rights reserved.", "url": "https://creativecommons.org/licenses/authors" }, "keywords": [ { "word": "Charlotte Bronte" }, { "word": "Villette" }, { "word": "gender convention" }, { "word": "readly sympathy" }, { "word": "English Literature" } ], "section": "Articles", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/7dw305v9", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Stephanie", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Lo", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "UC Berkeley", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2012-09-21T11:07:33-05:00", "date_accepted": "2012-09-21T11:07:33-05:00", "date_published": "2012-12-22T02:00:00-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/our_buj/article/5878/galley/3612/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 5882, "title": "The American University and the Establishment of Neoliberal Hegemony: The Persistence of Institutional Habits", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "An intervention on neoliberal-centric narratives of university privatization, this study explores the historical forces that instilled a propensity for market hegemony in universities by the start of the 1970s. This paper identifies institutional habits as the conservative agent that determines change in the university, specifically its habit—and responsibility—of promoting civic duty and the later-developed habit of performing applied scientific research. By tracing redefinitions of civic duty from the Progressive Era through the Cold War, the process of academic privatization is revealed to be dependent on the emerging association of democratic behavior with the promotion of national defense—an effort that became highly market oriented through competition with the Soviet Union. Moreover, defense research grants during the wars fashioned the model for applied research that private industries would adopt following a decrease in federal funding to universities in 1968. Finally, this paper will redefine the 1970s, as a period not of “neoliberal revolution” on campuses, but rather one of convergence—where the social, academic, and business interests consented to the market hegemony that currently prevails on American campuses.", "language": "en", "license": { "name": "All rights reserved", "short_name": "Copyright", "text": "© the author(s). All rights reserved.", "url": "https://creativecommons.org/licenses/authors" }, "keywords": [ { "word": "Neoliberal Revolution" }, { "word": "University Privatization" }, { "word": "UC Berkeley" }, { "word": "Pragmatism" }, { "word": "Lewis F. Powell" }, { "word": "John Dewey" }, { "word": "Clark Kerr" }, { "word": "Cultural Studies" }, { "word": "Intellectual History" }, { "word": "education" } ], "section": "Articles", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/6cw4h5q3", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Luis", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Flores", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "UC Berkeley", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2012-09-21T19:10:00-05:00", "date_accepted": "2012-09-21T19:10:00-05:00", "date_published": "2012-12-22T02:00:00-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/our_buj/article/5882/galley/3613/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 43871, "title": "Persistent Dyspnea After Pulmonary Embolism", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "", "language": "eng", "license": { "name": "", "short_name": "", "text": null, "url": "" }, "keywords": [ { "word": "Clinical Vignette" } ], "section": "Article", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/91g1d8bn", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": " M. Iain", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Smith", "name_suffix": "MD", "institution": "University of California, Los Angeles", "department": "Medicine" }, { "first_name": "Spencer", "middle_name": "R", "last_name": "Adams", "name_suffix": "MD", "institution": "", "department": "" }, { "first_name": "Roger", "middle_name": "M.", "last_name": "Lee", "name_suffix": "MD", "institution": "", "department": "" } ], "date_submitted": null, "date_accepted": null, "date_published": "2012-12-21T17:08:32-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "PDF", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/ucladom_proceedings/article/43871/galley/32674/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 62601, "title": "Delta Flow Factors Influencing Stray Rate of Escaping Adult San Joaquin River Fall-Run Chinook Salmon (\nOncorhynchus tshawytscha\n)", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "Adult salmon that stray when they escape into non-natal streams to spawn is a natural phenomenon that promotes population growth and genetic diversity, but excessive stray rates impede adult abundance restoration efforts. Adult San Joaquin River (SJR) Basin fall-run Chinook salmon (\nOncorhynchus tshawytscha\n) that return to freshwater to spawn migrate through the San Francisco Bay and Sacramento–San Joaquin River Delta (Delta). The Delta has been heavily affected by land development and water diversion. During the fall time-period for the years 1979 to 2007 Delta pumping facilities diverted on average 340% of the total inflow volume that entered the Delta from the SJR. The hypothesis tested in this paper is that river flow and Delta exports are not significantly correlated with SJR salmon stray rates. Adult coded-wire-tagged salmon recoveries from Central Valley rivers were used to estimate the percentage of SJR Basin salmon that strayed to the Sacramento River Basin. SJR salmon stray rates were negatively correlated (\nP \n= 0.05) with the average magnitude of pulse flows (e.g., 10 d) in mid- to late-October and positively correlated (\nP \n= 0.10) with mean Delta export rates. It was not possible to differentiate between the effects of pulse flows in October and mean flows in October and November on stray rates because of the co-linearity between these two variables. Whether SJR-reduced pulse flow or elevated exports causes increased stray rates is unclear. Statistically speaking the results indicate that flow is the primary factor. However empirical data indicates that little if any pulse flow leaves the Delta when south Delta exports are elevated, so exports in combination with pulse flows may explain the elevated stray rates. For management purposes, we developed two statistical models that predict SJR salmon stray rate: (1) flow and export as co-independent variables; and (2) south Delta Export (E) and SJR inflow (I) in the form of an E:I ratio.", "language": "en", "license": { "name": "Creative Commons Attribution 4.0", "short_name": "CC BY 4.0", "text": "Attribution — You must give appropriate credit, provide a link to the license, and indicate if changes were made. You may do so in any reasonable manner, but not in any way that suggests the licensor endorses you or your use.\n\nNo additional restrictions — You may not apply legal terms or technological measures that legally restrict others from doing anything the license permits.", "url": "https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0" }, "keywords": [ { "word": "Fall-run" }, { "word": "Chinook" }, { "word": "Salmon" }, { "word": "Stray" }, { "word": "Delta" }, { "word": "San Joaquin" }, { "word": "Sacramento" }, { "word": "Exports" }, { "word": "Age" }, { "word": "Hatchery" }, { "word": "Aquaculture and Fisheries" }, { "word": "Biostatistics" }, { "word": "Hydrology" }, { "word": "Population Biology" }, { "word": "Probability" } ], "section": "Research Article", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/6f88q6pf", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Dean", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Marston", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "California Department of Fish and Game", "department": "" }, { "first_name": "Carl", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Mesick", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service", "department": "" }, { "first_name": "Alan", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Hubbard", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "University of California, Berkeley", "department": "" }, { "first_name": "Dale", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Stanton", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "California Department of Fish and Game", "department": "" }, { "first_name": "Scott", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Fortmann-Roe", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "University of California, Berkeley", "department": "" }, { "first_name": "Steve", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Tsao", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "California Department of Fish and Game", "department": "" }, { "first_name": "Tim", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Heyne", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "California Dept. of Fish and Game", "department": "" } ], "date_submitted": "2011-06-29T13:43:22-05:00", "date_accepted": "2011-06-29T13:43:22-05:00", "date_published": "2012-12-19T02:00:00-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/jmie_sfews/article/62601/galley/48330/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 62593, "title": "Downscaling Future Climate Projections to the Watershed Scale: A North San Francisco Bay Case Study", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "We modeled the hydrology of basins draining into the northern portion of the San Francisco Bay Estuary (North San Pablo Bay) using a regional water balance model (Basin Characterization Model; BCM) to estimate potential effects of climate change at the watershed scale. The BCM calculates water balance components, including runoff, recharge, evapotranspiration, soil moisture, and stream flow, based on climate, topography, soils and underlying geology, and the solar-driven energy balance. We downscaled historical and projected precipitation and air temperature values derived from weather stations and global General Circulation Models (GCMs) to a spatial scale of 270 m. We then used the BCM to estimate hydrologic response to climate change for four scenarios spanning this century (2000–2100). Historical climate patterns show that Marin’s coastal regions are typically on the order of 2 °C cooler and receive five percent more precipitation compared to the inland valleys of Sonoma and Napa because of marine influences and local topography. By the last 30 years of this century, North Bay scenarios project average minimum temperatures to increase by 1.0 °C to 3.1 °C and average maximum temperatures to increase by 2.1 °C to 3.4 °C (in comparison to conditions experienced over the last 30 years, 1981–2010). Precipitation projections for the 21st century vary between GCMs (ranging from 2 to 15% wetter than the 20th-century average). Temperature forcing increases the variability of modeled runoff, recharge, and stream discharge, and shifts hydrologic cycle timing. For both high- and low-rainfall scenarios, by the close of this century warming is projected to amplify late-season climatic water deficit (a measure of drought stress on soils) by 8% to 21%. Hydrologic variability within a single river basin demonstrated at the scale of subwatersheds may prove an important consideration for water managers in the face of climate change. Our results suggest that in arid environments characterized by high topo-climatic variability, land and water managers need indicators of local watershed hydrology response to complement regional temperature and precipitation estimates. Our results also suggest that temperature forcing may generate greater drought stress affecting soils and stream flows than can be estimated by variability in precipitation alone.", "language": "en", "license": { "name": "Creative Commons Attribution 4.0", "short_name": "CC BY 4.0", "text": "Attribution — You must give appropriate credit, provide a link to the license, and indicate if changes were made. You may do so in any reasonable manner, but not in any way that suggests the licensor endorses you or your use.\n\nNo additional restrictions — You may not apply legal terms or technological measures that legally restrict others from doing anything the license permits.", "url": "https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0" }, "keywords": [ { "word": "climate change" }, { "word": "watershed hydrology" }, { "word": "downscaling" }, { "word": "San Pablo Bay" }, { "word": "Basin Characterization Model" }, { "word": "stream flow" }, { "word": "aquifer recharge" }, { "word": "climatic water deficit" }, { "word": "Hydrology" }, { "word": "Water Resource Management" } ], "section": "Research Article", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/01n4z228", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Elisabeth", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Micheli", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "Dwight Center for Conservation Science at Pepperwood", "department": "" }, { "first_name": "Lorraine", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Flint", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "U.S. Geological Survey", "department": "" }, { "first_name": "Alan", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Flint", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "U.S. Geological Survey", "department": "" }, { "first_name": "Stuart", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Weiss", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "Creekside Center for Earth Observation", "department": "" }, { "first_name": "Morgan", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Kennedy", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "Dwight Center for Conservation Science at Pepperwood", "department": "" } ], "date_submitted": "2011-03-03T10:22:39-06:00", "date_accepted": "2011-03-03T10:22:39-06:00", "date_published": "2012-12-19T02:00:00-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/jmie_sfews/article/62593/galley/48325/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 62609, "title": "Managing California’s Water: Insights from Interviews with Water Policy Experts", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "This paper presents insights from interviews with over 100 California water policy experts, who answered open-ended questions regarding California’s long-term water policy challenges and potential solutions. Interviews were conducted in the spring and summer of 2010, and interviewees were selected from a range of sectors and regions within California. Top long-term policy problems cited include management of the Sacramento–San Joaquin Delta, dysfunctional institutions and water governance, unsustainable water supplies and flood management, poor environmental protection, and problems with water rights and valuing water. In addition to a range of specific management solutions, respondents emphasized the importance of public education, incentivized cooperation, more holistic water management, local innovation, and removal of regulatory obstacles as primary solutions to California’s long-term water challenges. There was little emphasis on new surface storage projects, except from politicians. Other respondents preferred local and regional approaches to improve water supply, such as conservation, groundwater banking, recycling, or stormwater management. Despite differences in opinion on the problems with implementation of the Endangered Species Act, there was broad agreement that environmental management approaches need to shift away from single-species, piecemeal approaches toward ecosystem-based, multi-species approaches.", "language": "en", "license": { "name": "Creative Commons Attribution 4.0", "short_name": "CC BY 4.0", "text": "Attribution — You must give appropriate credit, provide a link to the license, and indicate if changes were made. You may do so in any reasonable manner, but not in any way that suggests the licensor endorses you or your use.\n\nNo additional restrictions — You may not apply legal terms or technological measures that legally restrict others from doing anything the license permits.", "url": "https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0" }, "keywords": [ { "word": "water policy, water management, California, interview" }, { "word": "Water policy, Water resource management" } ], "section": "Policy and Program Analysis", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/9x0062wn", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Sarah", "middle_name": "E.", "last_name": "Null", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "Utah State University", "department": "" }, { "first_name": "Eleanor", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Bartolomeo", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "University of California, Davis", "department": "" }, { "first_name": "Jay", "middle_name": "R.", "last_name": "Lund", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "University of California, Davis", "department": "" }, { "first_name": "Ellen", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Hanak", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "Public Policy Institute of California", "department": "" } ], "date_submitted": "2012-03-27T12:21:35-05:00", "date_accepted": "2012-03-27T12:21:35-05:00", "date_published": "2012-12-19T02:00:00-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/jmie_sfews/article/62609/galley/48335/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 62598, "title": "Pre-Screen Loss and Fish Facility Efficiency for Delta Smelt at the South Delta's State Water Project, California", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "Water exports have been implicated in the decline of fish populations in the upper San Francisco Estuary, California. We evaluated the relation between delta smelt salvage at the John E. Skinner Delta Fish Protective Facility (SFF) and underlying entrainment losses at the State Water Project (SWP, south Delta). We used cultured delta smelt in mark–recapture experiments in February and March 2009 (adults) and June 2009 (juveniles) to estimate: (1) the percent of fish recaptured at the SFF of the total released at the entrance of the SFF (fish facility efficiency), (2) the percent of fish recaptured at the SFF of the total released in Clifton Court Forebay (CCF), a reservoir for SWP exports, and (3) the fish losses in CCF and before the SFF (pre-screen loss). Mean fish facility efficiency was lower in successive releases: February (53.2%), March (44.0%) and June (24.0%). The mean percent recapture of fish released at the CCF entrance was also lower over time: February (3.01%); March (0.41%) and June (0.03%). Correspondingly higher mean pre-screen losses occurred over time: February (94.3%); March (99.1%) and June (99.9%). We concluded that: (1) entrainment losses of delta smelt could be higher at times, compared to other species previously studied at the SWP; (2) pre-screen loss was the largest source of mortality for delta smelt; (3) increased release distance from the SFF and residence time in CCF—and decreased exports—resulted in a lower percentage of recaptured fish at the SFF; and (4) salvage of delta smelt at the SWP does not seem to be a consistent index of entrainment.", "language": "en", "license": { "name": "Creative Commons Attribution 4.0", "short_name": "CC BY 4.0", "text": "Attribution — You must give appropriate credit, provide a link to the license, and indicate if changes were made. You may do so in any reasonable manner, but not in any way that suggests the licensor endorses you or your use.\n\nNo additional restrictions — You may not apply legal terms or technological measures that legally restrict others from doing anything the license permits.", "url": "https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0" }, "keywords": [ { "word": "fish entrainment" }, { "word": "Hypomesus transpacificus" }, { "word": "mark-recapture" }, { "word": "salvage" }, { "word": "calcein" }, { "word": "photonic" }, { "word": "water diversion" }, { "word": "reservoir" }, { "word": "predation" }, { "word": "temperature" }, { "word": "Aquaculture and Fisheries" }, { "word": "Ecology and Evolutionary Biology" }, { "word": "Other Physiology" } ], "section": "Research Article", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/28m595k4", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Gonzalo", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Castillo", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service, Lodi, CA", "department": "" }, { "first_name": "Jerry", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Morinaka", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "California Department of Fish & Game, Stockton, CA", "department": "" }, { "first_name": "Joan", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Lindberg", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "University of California, Davis, CA", "department": "" }, { "first_name": "Robert", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Fujimura", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "California Department of Fish & Game, Stockton, CA", "department": "" }, { "first_name": "Bradd", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Baskerville-Bridges", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service, Carlsbad, CA", "department": "" }, { "first_name": "James", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Hobbs", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "University of California, Davis, CA", "department": "" }, { "first_name": "Galen", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Tigan", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "University of California, Davis, CA", "department": "" }, { "first_name": "Luke", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Ellison", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "University of California, Davis, CA", "department": "" } ], "date_submitted": "2011-05-29T16:31:47-05:00", "date_accepted": "2011-05-29T16:31:47-05:00", "date_published": "2012-12-19T02:00:00-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/jmie_sfews/article/62598/galley/48327/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 62627, "title": "San Francisco Estuary and Watershed Science\n 2012: Participating in the Journey", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "Abstract are not presented with Editorials. -SFEWS Editors", "language": "en", "license": { "name": "Creative Commons Attribution 4.0", "short_name": "CC BY 4.0", "text": "Attribution — You must give appropriate credit, provide a link to the license, and indicate if changes were made. You may do so in any reasonable manner, but not in any way that suggests the licensor endorses you or your use.\n\nNo additional restrictions — You may not apply legal terms or technological measures that legally restrict others from doing anything the license permits.", "url": "https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0" }, "keywords": [ { "word": "scholarly publication" }, { "word": "open access" }, { "word": "publication milestones" }, { "word": "journal impact factor" }, { "word": "Ecology" }, { "word": "Hydrology" }, { "word": "Fisheries Biology" }, { "word": "Environmental Restoration" }, { "word": "Watershed Management" }, { "word": "Environmental Policy" } ], "section": "Editorial", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/9vj6m5nk", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Samuel", "middle_name": "N.", "last_name": "Luoma", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "Editor-in-Chief\nSan Francisco Estuary and Watershed Science\nJohn Muir Institute of the Environment\nUniversity of California, Davis", "department": "" }, { "first_name": "Lauren", "middle_name": "D.", "last_name": "Muscatine", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "Managing Editor\nSan Francisco Estuary and Watershed Science\nJohn Muir Institute of the Environment\nUniversity of California, Davis", "department": "" } ], "date_submitted": "2012-12-17T12:29:57-06:00", "date_accepted": "2012-12-17T12:29:57-06:00", "date_published": "2012-12-19T02:00:00-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/jmie_sfews/article/62627/galley/48347/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 43895, "title": "Vitamin D Deficiency and Obesity at a Tertiary Care Center", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "", "language": "eng", "license": { "name": "", "short_name": "", "text": null, "url": "" }, "keywords": [ { "word": "Clinical Vignette" } ], "section": "Article", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/1f1163nd", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Gina", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Nguyen ", "name_suffix": "MD", "institution": "University of California, Los Angeles", "department": "Medicine" }, { "first_name": "Jasmine", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Ahdout ", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "", "department": "" }, { "first_name": "Chrisandra", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Shufelt", "name_suffix": "M.D., M.S", "institution": "", "department": "" }, { "first_name": "Alexis", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Peraino", "name_suffix": "MD", "institution": "", "department": "" }, { "first_name": "Adrienne", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Youdim ", "name_suffix": "MD", "institution": "", "department": "" } ], "date_submitted": null, "date_accepted": null, "date_published": "2012-12-16T17:56:54-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "PDF", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/ucladom_proceedings/article/43895/galley/32698/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 4541, "title": "Coptos", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "The modern city of Quft is the location of the ancient town of Coptos, which was a major religious and trade center in Upper Egypt, at the crossroad between the Nile Valley and Eastern Desert routes to the Red Sea. The site was settled from Predynastic times (as witnessed by the Coptos colossi) and remained important until Late Antiquity. The principal buildings currently visible at the site are of Ptolemaic and Roman date: the main temple (dedicated to Min and Isis), the middle temple also called “Osiris” temple, and the southern temple belonging to Geb. The last two were enclosed by their own temenos, as was the main temple, and a huge late Pharaonic wall surrounded the whole sacred area. The remains of the Roman domestic buildings are still poorly known. The elaborate Coptic baptistery and the adjacent structures reuse blocks from Pharaonic and late Ptolemaic buildings. The recent campaigns by the French mission have collected new information mainly about the city’s general layout and development.", "language": "en", "license": null, "keywords": [ { "word": "Min" }, { "word": "Amun" }, { "word": "ISIS" }, { "word": "Osiris" }, { "word": "Hapocrates" }, { "word": "Red Sea trade" }, { "word": "Eastern Desert" }, { "word": "Mining" }, { "word": "Arts and Humanities" }, { "word": "Near Eastern Languages and Societies" } ], "section": "Geography", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/2sx1v5nh", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Laure", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Pantalacci", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "Université Lyon 2", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2009-03-05T19:09:57-06:00", "date_accepted": "2009-03-05T19:09:57-06:00", "date_published": "2012-12-16T02:00:00-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/nelc_uee/article/4541/galley/2651/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 4547, "title": "Qau el-Kebir", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "Qau el-Kebir, called Tjebu in ancient Egyptian and Antaeopolis in Greek, was a village in Middle Egypt and the capital of the 10th Upper Egyptian nome. The main deity of the town was Nemtywy. At the beginning of the nineteenth century, substantial parts of a Ptolemaic temple were still preserved, but they were destroyed by a change of the Nile\n’\ns streambed. The cemeteries in the deserts east of the town include tombs of almost all periods of Egyptian history beginning from the Badarian Period. Those of the First Intermediate Period are especially well equipped and are an important source for burial customs of that period in a provincial town. The three large, rock-cut tombs of Middle Kingdom governors belong to the biggest private tombs built in the Middle Kingdom. However, because of the destruction of the tombs, the dating and sequence of the governors during the 12th Dynasty remains problematic. In the New Kingdom, the tomb of the governor May equipped with a sarcophagus and datable to Thutmose III was built. Several New Kingdom hippopotami bone deposits are perhaps connected with the cult of Nemtywy and Seth. The Ptolemaic temple dates to Ptolemy VI. Its pronaos with 3 x 6 columns is known from depictions in the Description de l\n’\nÉgypte.", "language": "en", "license": null, "keywords": [ { "word": "village" }, { "word": "Middle Egypt" }, { "word": "Antaepolis" }, { "word": "Nemtywy" }, { "word": "Seth" }, { "word": "governor" }, { "word": "Arts and Humanities" }, { "word": "Archaeology" }, { "word": "Near Eastern Languages and Cultures" }, { "word": "Egyptology" } ], "section": "Geography", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/5xm3202h", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Wolfram", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Grajetzki", "name_suffix": "", "institution": "University College London", "department": "None" } ], "date_submitted": "2009-03-05T19:15:03-06:00", "date_accepted": "2009-03-05T19:15:03-06:00", "date_published": "2012-12-16T02:00:00-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "", "type": "", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/nelc_uee/article/4547/galley/2653/download/" }, { "label": "", "type": "", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/nelc_uee/article/4547/galley/2654/download/" } ] }, { "pk": 43814, "title": "Antiphospholipid Syndrome", "subtitle": null, "abstract": "", "language": "eng", "license": { "name": "", "short_name": "", "text": null, "url": "" }, "keywords": [ { "word": "Clinical Vignette" } ], "section": "Article", "is_remote": true, "remote_url": "https://escholarship.org/uc/item/7qq6t216", "frozenauthors": [ { "first_name": "Anita", "middle_name": "", "last_name": "Kaul", "name_suffix": "MD", "institution": "University of California, Los Angeles", "department": "Medicine" } ], "date_submitted": null, "date_accepted": null, "date_published": "2012-12-15T20:58:12-06:00", "render_galley": null, "galleys": [ { "label": "PDF", "type": "pdf", "path": "https://journalpub.escholarship.org/ucladom_proceedings/article/43814/galley/32618/download/" } ] } ] }