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Mieke BalL'invention de l'Europe par les langues et les cultures (chaire annuelle 2022-2023)Collège de FranceAnnée 2022-2023Colloque - La solitude dans la foule : La sérialité selon Sartre et l'aliénation socialeCette intervention tente d'explorer comment le concept sartrien de « la sérialité », tel que ce concept s'élabore dans son ouvrage Critique de la raison dialectique, peut éclairer les débats sur l'aliénation sociale à l'ère d'Internet et des médias sociaux. Les célèbres exemples quotidiens de sérialité selon Sartre sont des descriptions vivantes d'une atomisation qui fait obstacle au rassemblent en groupe authentique (la praxis) : « la solitude de l'organisme comme impossibilité de s'unir avec les Autres dans une totalité organique se découvre à travers la solitude vécue comme négation provisoire par chacun des rapports réciproques avec les autres ». L'auto-aliénation que j'éprouve dans des situations comme faire la queue pour l'autobus, ou encore plus révélateur dans le rassemblement indirect de l'émission de radio, est le résultat d'une « intériorisation » de l'altérité. Je ne peux, en effet, être « isolé » qu'avec les autres – « la solitude dans la foule » selon l'expression de notre organisatrice. La sérialité sartrienne définit ainsi tout une manière d'être social : « il y a des comportements sériels, des sentiments sériels et des pensées sérielles ». Dans l'esprit de ce colloque, nous examinerons comment la sérialité peut définir et nous aider à mieux comprendre la condition du réfugié.Robert DoranProfesseur de littérature comparée à l'université de Rochester et membre affilié du département de Théorie musicale à l'école de musique Eastman. Titulaire d'un doctorat de l'université de Stanford et de la Sorbonne Nouvelle-Université de Paris 3, il est l'auteur de deux monographies The Theory of the Sublime from Longinus to Kant (Cambridge, 2015, traduction espagnole, 2021), et The Ethics of Theory: Philosophy, History, Litterature (Bloomsbury, 2017) ; et le directeur de six recueils, dont les plus récents sont Liszt and Virtuosity (2020) et deux volumes des derniers essais de Hayden White sous le titre The Ethics of Narrative (2022-23).
This time around we're joined by Steve Hayes, Host of Podcast of the universe. We talk a bit about his podcast and decided to do things a little differently and more in the vein of his show to make him feel at home. We each pick a random topic and try to educate the other on it. That being said, we discuss the history of sex dolls and The Mystery of the Circleville Letters. This is our longest episode yet, coming in at 3 parts. There are few glitches in the audio here and there, so we apologise for that. As always we also have some great tunes lined up for you as well! The music you'll hear on this episode: Cassette Tapes - Like a Title Fight, Internal night - The Unseen, Tooth and the Fang - Lady of a Thousand Clouds, Jaclyn Reinhart - For Now, Ryan Marino - Fabric of Reality, TheWayouts - Join the Workforce, Death X Disco - Family Man, Hayden White – Neverbe, Wet Box – Master You can Find Podcast of the Universe by Clicking Here or anywhere you find podcasts. Of course you can follow the Instagram feed as well. A huge thanks to Well Well Well for the use of their song 'Coldsnap' for our theme. Also thanks to Frank James and Adrian the Intern. If you like what we do you can find us all over the place: Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter. Of course where ever you find your podcasts. Thanks to Ryan McIntyre for the shout out. He's one of our past guests and you can check out part 1 of his episode Right Here
[Re-uploaded October 24, 2022]: In this episode, I go a little bit beyond what I discussed in the last entry. Last time, I used Hayden White's literary framework to try and categorize an old Russian history textbook. Today I critique White's framework a bit further. I also talk more broadly about two types of historical works - historical research and historical fiction. I argue that, contrary to White's position, historians are different from novelists. I also give some cautions that must be considered when crafting or reading historical fiction. I re-uploaded this episode because in my first upload, I made a mistake at about 26:00-27:00. I had mentioned a film that I believed was making an anachronism, but I later found out it wasn't. Hence, I decided to change that part and put the episode up again to correct my mistake. And apologies for another mistake at about timestamp 16:14, where I called a history book "A History of Europe Under Roman Rule." It should have been "A History of Egypt Under Roman Rule."
Today I analyze one of my old Russian history textbooks, A History of Russia, the Soviet Union, and Beyond: Sixth Edition, 2002, written by David MacKenzie and Michael W. Curran. I use the literary framework of Hayden White to categorize the textbook, and I give some of my thoughts on it.
There is no more contentious and perennial issue in the history of modern Western thought than the vexed relationship between the genesis of an idea and its claim to validity beyond it. Can ideas or values transcend their temporal origins and overcome the sin of their original context, and in so doing earn abiding respect for their intrinsic merit? Or do they inevitably reflect them in ways that undermine their universal aspirations? Are discrete contexts so incommensurable and unique that the smooth passage of ideas from one to the other is impossible? Are we always trapped by the limits of our own cultural standpoints and partial perspectives, or can we somehow escape their constraints and enter into a fruitful dialogue with others? These persistent questions are at the heart of the discipline known as intellectual history, which deals not only with ideas, but also with the men and women who generate, disseminate, and criticize them. The essays collected in Genesis and Validity: The Theory and Practice of Intellectual History (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2021), by Martin Jay, one of the most recognized figures in the field, address them through engagement with leading intellectual historians—Hans Blumenberg, Quentin Skinner, Hayden White, Isaiah Berlin, Frank Ankersmit—as well other giants of modern thought—Max Weber, Emile Durkheim, Georg Simmel, Walter Benjamin, Theodor Adorno, and Georg Lukács. They touch on a wide variety of related topics, ranging from the heroism of modern life to the ability of photographs to lie. In addition, they explore the fraught connections between philosophy and theory, the truth of history and the truthfulness of historians, and the weaponization of free speech for other purposes. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/intellectual-history
There is no more contentious and perennial issue in the history of modern Western thought than the vexed relationship between the genesis of an idea and its claim to validity beyond it. Can ideas or values transcend their temporal origins and overcome the sin of their original context, and in so doing earn abiding respect for their intrinsic merit? Or do they inevitably reflect them in ways that undermine their universal aspirations? Are discrete contexts so incommensurable and unique that the smooth passage of ideas from one to the other is impossible? Are we always trapped by the limits of our own cultural standpoints and partial perspectives, or can we somehow escape their constraints and enter into a fruitful dialogue with others? These persistent questions are at the heart of the discipline known as intellectual history, which deals not only with ideas, but also with the men and women who generate, disseminate, and criticize them. The essays collected in Genesis and Validity: The Theory and Practice of Intellectual History (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2021), by Martin Jay, one of the most recognized figures in the field, address them through engagement with leading intellectual historians—Hans Blumenberg, Quentin Skinner, Hayden White, Isaiah Berlin, Frank Ankersmit—as well other giants of modern thought—Max Weber, Emile Durkheim, Georg Simmel, Walter Benjamin, Theodor Adorno, and Georg Lukács. They touch on a wide variety of related topics, ranging from the heroism of modern life to the ability of photographs to lie. In addition, they explore the fraught connections between philosophy and theory, the truth of history and the truthfulness of historians, and the weaponization of free speech for other purposes. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/history
There is no more contentious and perennial issue in the history of modern Western thought than the vexed relationship between the genesis of an idea and its claim to validity beyond it. Can ideas or values transcend their temporal origins and overcome the sin of their original context, and in so doing earn abiding respect for their intrinsic merit? Or do they inevitably reflect them in ways that undermine their universal aspirations? Are discrete contexts so incommensurable and unique that the smooth passage of ideas from one to the other is impossible? Are we always trapped by the limits of our own cultural standpoints and partial perspectives, or can we somehow escape their constraints and enter into a fruitful dialogue with others? These persistent questions are at the heart of the discipline known as intellectual history, which deals not only with ideas, but also with the men and women who generate, disseminate, and criticize them. The essays collected in Genesis and Validity: The Theory and Practice of Intellectual History (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2021), by Martin Jay, one of the most recognized figures in the field, address them through engagement with leading intellectual historians—Hans Blumenberg, Quentin Skinner, Hayden White, Isaiah Berlin, Frank Ankersmit—as well other giants of modern thought—Max Weber, Emile Durkheim, Georg Simmel, Walter Benjamin, Theodor Adorno, and Georg Lukács. They touch on a wide variety of related topics, ranging from the heroism of modern life to the ability of photographs to lie. In addition, they explore the fraught connections between philosophy and theory, the truth of history and the truthfulness of historians, and the weaponization of free speech for other purposes. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/new-books-network
Guest: Hayden WhiteTopics: Hayden's Football JourneySunday League Round UpThe Return of CR7Fraudwatch plus moreYouTube #NoTekkersPodcastIG :@NOTEKKERSPODCAST@_BRAZZIUS_@COURTNEY.J.RICHARDS@KRYSTIANPEARCE@HAYDENWH1TE
In March of 2020, a year ago, we started a podcast, intending to capture and build upon a discussion of history we'd been having for years. It was a discussion mostly in short bursts, often in passing, outside our classrooms, in the doorways of our offices, and frequently in the hallways and stairwells of the building where we teach. Our intent was to use the calmer space afforded us by a podcast to discuss what Hayden White called in his seminal 1973 book Metahistory, the “nature and function of historical knowledge.” Apparently the podcast gods had another design, and calm would play no part. Just as we settled in for a fuzzy friendly little chatfest, a relentless historical tide began building outside our windows, and swept us all along on a course we're still trying to understand. Let's call it history in real time: a global pandemic, and mutinous quarantine, a racial justice moment with death and truth, a brooder's coup d'etat with a brokered insurrection, statues tumbling like bowling pins, shock troops, city streets, and a moment of reckoning for the stories we tell ourselves and the stories yet to be told. We called it History Against the Grain, so maybe we didn't really expect calm after all, but after our year of living historically, a little calm reflection in our 39th episode will have to suffice.
This is a special episode of Nobody’s Safe with Brady Laber as we dedicate the show to a season preview for the Thomas More University Saints women’s basketball team. We begin the show by interviewing head coach Jeff Hans (https://twitter.com/coachjeffhans) about how last season ended, summer workouts after the quarantine ended and breaks down roster and the return of Sydney Moss (https://twitter.com/sydneym40) as an assistant coach. Thomas More began the season with a 94-71 win over the IU-East Werewolves… We have coverage of the post game press conference in which Coach Hans is joined by players Hayden White (https://twitter.com/haydennnwhite) and Courtney Hurst (https://twitter.com/HurstCourtney) addressing the media. The Saints picked up a game against the #7 ranked Southeastern University Fire that was not previously scheduled. In the pregame interview with Coach Hans, I asked him to walks us through the process of bring Southeastern to the Connor Convocation Center on short notice. As it turned out the Saints were more than prepared to extinguish the Fire by a score of 85-47. Coach Hans along with Zoie Barth (https://twitter.com/zoiebarth) and Emily Simon (https://twitter.com/emily23bball) provide us with their postgame thoughts. Thomas More finished it’s busy week with a Saturday afternoon game against Indiana Wesleyan. The Saints recognized its three seniors in order to take advantage of the opportunity and not risk that something happens down the road and not be able to have the ceremony. Before the game Coach Hans reflected back on the career and contributions of Kylie Anderson, Hayden White and Briana McNutt. The Saints won a 67-59 dog fight over Indiana Wesleyan to complete the week with a 3-0 start to the season. Afterwards Coach Hans, Briana McNutt (https://twitter.com/McnuttBriana) and Courtney Hurst look back on the victory over the Wildcats. The Voice of the Thomas More Saints Nate Metz (https://twitter.com/NateMetz) joins me on the show. We summarize the first week of the regular season, evaluate the Mid South Conference preseason poll (https://www.mid-southconference.org/article/8953)and take a look at the NAIA national rankings (https://www.mid-southconference.org/article/8965). To keep up to date on everything that involves Thomas More University Athletics (https://www.thomasmoresaints.com) visit the website thomasmoresaints.com or follow the women’s basketball program on Twitter and Instagram @TMWBasketball Please credit Thomas More University Athletics for cover art picture. Also wants to give thanks to Don Owen (https://twitter.com/dontribunesport) from the NKY Tribune (https://www.nkytribune.com) for helping ask questions during the press conferences. You can follow Brady Laber on Twitter @BradyLaber1 (https://twitter.com/BradyLaber1) please use the hashtag #NobodysSafe Check out the Nobody’s Safe website at nobodysssafe.fireside.fm (https://nobodysssafe.fireside.fm) For more information on Stove Leg Media go the website StoveLeg.com (https://www.stoveleg.com) or send an email to Podcasts@stoveleg.com Intro music for the podcast was provided by bensoud.com (https://www.bensound.com)
Fictional Facts or Factual Fiction? Lucia Galli's talk on self-representation and the social reality behind two Tibetan memoirs Cultural meanings and socio-historical realities hide in the interstices between literature and history, and narrative indisputably plays a central part in both fictional and factual writings. While the role of historians as “fiction-makers” has been theorised by Hayden White as far back as 1974, the question of whether a novel gives us access – albeit in its own peculiar way – to the same kind of truth that we express in our assertions about states of affairs in the world is still a much disputed ground. This presentation deals with questions of narrative's truth by analysing and comparing two different Tibetan texts, namely Kha stag ʼDzam yag's Diary (nyin deb) and Lhag pa Don grub's novel The Life of a Muleteer (Drel paʼi mi tshe). In questioning the arbitrary categorisation that will have these texts placed at the opposite ends of an imaginary clear-cut “fiction”- “nonfiction” divide, I will first bring to the fore the fictional aspects of the diary narrative and their function in increasing our understanding of indigenous representations of the self, and then examine the factual nature of Lhag pa Don grub's work, largely based on the author's memories and personal experiences.
Fictional Facts or Factual Fiction? Lucia Galli's talk on self-representation and the social reality behind two Tibetan memoirs Cultural meanings and socio-historical realities hide in the interstices between literature and history, and narrative indisputably plays a central part in both fictional and factual writings. While the role of historians as “fiction-makers” has been theorised by Hayden White as far back as 1974, the question of whether a novel gives us access – albeit in its own peculiar way – to the same kind of truth that we express in our assertions about states of affairs in the world is still a much disputed ground. This presentation deals with questions of narrative's truth by analysing and comparing two different Tibetan texts, namely Kha stag ʼDzam yag's Diary (nyin deb) and Lhag pa Don grub's novel The Life of a Muleteer (Drel paʼi mi tshe). In questioning the arbitrary categorisation that will have these texts placed at the opposite ends of an imaginary clear-cut “fiction”- “nonfiction” divide, I will first bring to the fore the fictional aspects of the diary narrative and their function in increasing our understanding of indigenous representations of the self, and then examine the factual nature of Lhag pa Don grub's work, largely based on the author's memories and personal experiences.
Heads up Vanuatu, History Against the Grain is on its way! Chris and Josh play a very special game of Love/Love, Chris discusses the massive impact of intellectual historian Hayden White on how we think about and engage with the past, and Josh interviews Lingnan University's Vincent Leung about his remarkable and extremely relevant book, The Politics of the Past in Early China.
Hayden White is an Ironman from the South Coast of New South Wales, a hot bed for some of Australia's top athletes. Listen in as we discuss how to cook steak, gruelling training sessions, competing in big surf, the future of Ironman and much more. Instagram: @hyperformancepodcast Twitch: twitch.tv/hyperformance_podcast Email: hyperformancepodcast@gmail.com
We sit down with SOS Round 1 winner Hayden White and talk about everything except Surf Lifesaving.... Love, Engineering, Toads and Trout.. Enjoy one of the best blokes in Surf, Mr Hayden White...
Nesse primeiro episódio responderemos a pergunta "O que é história?". Uma das grandes dificuldades em se falar em história é que a maioria das pessoas não sabe o que é e qual a função da ciência histórica. Venha conferir esse podcast que traz para ao debate Marc Bloch, Hayden White e Carlo Ginzburg. Ouça, curta, compartilhe e, principalmente, mande suas sugestões e críticas para nosso email. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/historiaoral/message
"We treated Reagan, we treated Bush, and we treat Trump too often as if they're idiots. I have no idea whether they are or not, but I don't think that it's a good strategy to assume your opponent is an idiot."Buy @notapipepodcast a coffee!Lawrence Grossberg discusses his book Under the Cover of Chaos: Trump and the Battle for the American Right with Chris Richardson. Grossberg is the Morris Davis Distinguished Professor of Communication and Cultural Studies at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (since 1994), and he has held additional appointments in American Studies, Anthropology and Geography. He studied at the University of Rochester (with Hayden White and Richard Taylor), the Centre for Contemporary Cultural Studies (Birmingham, England, with Stuart Hall and Richard Hoggart) and completed his Ph.D. at the University of Illinois (with James W. Carey) in 1976.He was the editor of the journal Cultural Studies from 1990 through 2018. He has published ten books and edited another eleven, as well as over 250 essays and dozens of interviews, in English. His work has been translated into twenty languages and additionally, he has published numerous original books and essays in other languages, and lectures all over the world. He has advised over fifty doctoral students, and been honored for his scholarship, teaching and mentorship by the International Communication Association, the (U.S.) National Communication Association, the Association for Cultural Studies, and the University of North Carolina.His work has addressed a wide range of questions especially the specificity of cultural studies, developments in contemporary theory, the affective nature of the popular, and the changing political culture of the U.S. He has approached these in writings on: U.S. popular music, youth culture and politics; the construction of kids as a political field; value theory: struggles over modernities; the state of progressive oppositions and countercultures; and post-war reconfigurations of the conservative and reactionary rights.In 2019, Under the Cover of Chaos won the National Communication Association’s Diamond Anniversary Book Award. His other recent books include Cultural Studies In the Future Tense, We All Want to Change the World (available free online), Under the Cover of Chaos, and (co-edited) Stuart Hall, Cultural Studies 1983.
There’s an old saying that pride comes before a fall – and that’s certainly true where Mansfield Town are concerned this week. A proud victory on the road to Carlisle backed up by an immense 45 minutes against Leyton Orient – but perfection doesn’t quite happen for the Stags, who went on to surrender a cast-iron 2-0 lead, to lose 3-2 and send the pendulum swinging back into negativity avenue. And if the defensive woes weren’t enough for Dempster to contend with, he’s got an injury list which is growing at a rapid rate, with Neal Bishop and Nicky Maynard definitely missing Saturday’s home class with Stevenage – and defenders Kellan Gordan and Hayden White also looking very doubtful. This week we reflect on what can only be described as a display of beautiful woefulness – as we try and figure out what caused the self-destruct button to be pressed, and try and scramble a side together for Saturday with just one fit striker, who on the Brightside has enjoyed a phenomenal start to the season. As always we’ll have your comments and questions from the live feed, plus tentatively head inside the dressing room to hear from boss John Dempster and long-serving defender, Sir Mal Benning .. www.mtfcmatters.co.uk Additional Media | iFollow Stags
Mike & Jason are joined by Greg and Hayden White from Bentonville West (AR) High School to discuss their experience at Snow Valley Basketball School in at Wartburg College in Waverly, Iowa. Support this podcast
Mansfield Town's three goal turnaround was, in some eyes, the start of a beautiful journey towards League One as the season picks up pace - but for Hayden White, the road came to an end with a broken leg. This week Craig & Nathan talk all about the comebacks and setbacks, hotly debating who fill will void left by White's absence. The Danny Rose debate returns, whilst there's also praise for the Stags' on loan stars and stars of the future. As always we get your comments and questions in the live feed, plus hear from David Flitcroft, Ben Futcher, Sir Mal Benning and more! www.mtfcmatters.co.uk - Follow us on social media www.facebook.com/mtfcmatters www.twitter.com/mtfcmatters Host: Craig Priest Panel: Nathan Edge, Cam Felton (Absent), Simon Mercer (Absent) Additional Media: Mansfield Town FC / iFollow
Nossa bancada faz um balanço desse ano bizarro que foi 2018, então vem com o Bruno, o Gustavo, a Laiz e o Victor relembrar de alguns episódios que marcaram 2018. 1. Abertura do Programa. 2. Mestre dos Memes 3. Bloco principal - Janeiro: Ofensiva militar turca contra os curdos; Superlua azul de sangue (fenômeno astronômico raro, primeira vez em 150 anos) - Fevereiro: SpaceX lança o Falcon Heavy, seu mais potente foguete até agora; Jogos Olímpicos de Inverno em Pyeongchang; Jacob Zuma renúncia à presidência da África do Sul - Março: Execução de Marielle Franco e Anderson Gomes; reeleição de Vladimir Putin; morte de Sudán, último rinoceronte-branco-do-norte macho do mundo, no Quênia; renúncia de Pedro Pablo Kuczynski à presidência do Peru; expulsão de diplomatas e fechamento de embaixadas russas pelos governos do Canadá, EUA e 14 países europeus por conta da tentativa de assassinato do ex-espião Sergei Skripal - Abril: Prisão do ex-presidente Lula; ataque de gás Sarin em Duma, Síria; pela primeira vez desde 1983, uma sala de cinema é autorizada a funcionar na Arábia Saudita, exibindo o filme “Pantera Negra”; Miguel Diaz-Canel é empossado presidente de Cuba, o primeiro presidente cubano após a Revolução que não é da família Castro; Kim Jong-un atravessa a zona desmilitarizada e entra na Coréia do Sul para encontrar o presidente Moon Jae-in, ambos anunciam um esforço para assinar um tratado pondo fim às hostilidades entre as duas Coreias - Maio: Queda do edifício Wilton Paes de Almeida, no Largo do Paiçandu em São Paulo; casamento do príncipe Harry e a atriz Meghan Markle; Greve dos Caminhoneiros - Junho: o grupo separatista basco ETA anuncia a sua dissolução após 40 anos de atividade; dissolução do governo de Mariano Rajoy na Espanha; Copa do Mundo de futebol na Rússia; liberação da maconha para fins recreativos no Canadá; mulheres são autorizadas a dirigir na Arábia Saudita; governo Trump anuncia a saída dos EUA do Conselho da ONU para os Direitos Humanos - Julho: Resgate dos Javalis Selvagens, time juvenil de futebol, na Tailândia; reunião de cúpula da OTAN em Bruxelas; descoberta de gelo em Marte; ações do Facebook caem 20% após o escândalo do vazamento de dados de usuários - Agosto: Surto de ebola na República Democrática do Congo; governo Trump volta a impor sanções ao Irã; governo Maduro lança a nova moeda venezuelana, o Bolívar Supremo - Setembro: Incêndio do Museu Nacional; lançamento do ClioCast (yey!); Suprema Corte Indiana descriminaliza a homossexualidade; atentado contra o então candidato Jair Bolsonaro - Outubro: assassinato do jornalista Jamal Khashoggi, do Washington Post, na Arábia Saudita; IPCC lança emite um comunicado avisando que o aquecimento global tem crescido mais do que o esperado; Eleições gerais no Brasil; 700.000 pessoas protestam em Londres contra o Brexit - Novembro: Centenário da Primeira Guerra Mundial; Ucrânia declara lei marcial após forças russas terem tomado três navios no estreito de Kerch, disputado entre os dois países; ponte do Jaguaré cede São Paulo; cientista chinês He Jiankui anuncia que conseguiu alterar DNA humano em bebês tornando-os imunes ao vírus HIV - Dezembro: Movimento dos Coletes Amarelos na França, maiores protestos desde o Maio de 1968; atentado suicida na Catedral Metropolitana de Campinas; prisão do médium João de Deus, acusado por mais de 330 mulheres de assédio e abuso sexuais; mais de 200 países concordam em adotar as medidas do Acordo de Paris na Conferência de Mudanças Climáticas em Katowice; assassinato João Maria Figueiredo da Silva - RIP 2018: Carlos Heitor Cony, Dolores O'Riordan, Tônia Carrero, Hayden White, Marielle Franco, Stephen Hawking, Miranda, Winnie Madikizela-Mandela, Milos Forman, Paul Singer, Dona Ivone Lara, Philip Roth, Alberto Dines, Maria Ester Bueno, Steve Ditko, Hélio Bicudo, Aretha Franklin, Kofi Anan, Zé Béttio, Beatriz Segall, Mr. Catra, Angela Maria, Paul Allen, Gil Gomes, Stan Lee, Bernardo Bertolucci, George H. W. Bush - Impressão Geral de 2018 e Expectativa para 2019 4. Barraca do Beijo 5. Rolê Cultural __________________________________________________________ Campanha de Financiamento Coletivo: https://www.catarse.me/clio Financiadores desse episódio: Humberto Athayde Jr., Rosana Athayde Vecchia, Letícia Alves Não se esqueça de deixar seu like e compartilhar esse post, de se inscrever no canal, ou assinar o feed, e ativar as notificações Siga o Clio nas redes sociais: YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/cliohistoriaeliteratura Instagram: http://instagram.com/cliohistoriaeliteratura Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ClioHistoriaELiteratura Twitter: https://twitter.com/cliohistelit Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4ozjK7hTFAnlml5ElWtdVV Medium: https://medium.com/@cliohistoria
Getting out of your high school job is tough, but the boys and guest Hayden White have tips on how you can get through it! We share some fun stories from our previous jobs and all of the good times that have come from them, and why getting a new job isn't as stressful as you might think.
Ewa Domanska is Professor of the Human Sciences at the Department of History at Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznan. The podcast interview has been created at the third INTH-Conference in Stockholm, where Ewa Domanska organized a panel to Hayden White and held a talk about the forensic turn. Answering five interesting questions from Lars Deile and Zoltán Boldizsár Simon in this podcast she gives interesting insights in her ideas about history and theory.
The transfer window slammed shut at 5pm with Lee Angol joining Shrewsbury Town, delighting our Nathan. But what about the future of star-man Danny Rose after he failed to secure a move elsewhere? Craig, Cam, Simon and Nathan chew the fat over that, all hoping that the Rose can come into bloom in the Stags garden. Also this week we talk about the future of Calum Butcher, Paul Anderson and the youngsters, discus the addition of Ryan Sweeney and look back on the opening day victory over Newport County. Plus we hear from David Flitcroft on his relation with Rose, goal scorers Otis Khan and Tyler Walker on their contributions to three points, new boy Ryan Sweeney gives his thoughts on becoming a late arrival - and Hayden White talks about THAT goal line clearance. Also this week, Cam defaces Craig's Paul Digby photo and Nathan gets a bit over excited.... This is the show for the fans, by the fans - why, Because Mansfield Matters!
Adviser Success - Hayden White by Riskinfo
Historiansplaining: A historian tells you why everything you know is wrong
All of history is, to one degree or another, mythology -- the weaving of a coherent, usable narrative out of the chaos of people's lives. We consider how societies all over the world, since before the beginning of civilization, have developed myths to explain the world that they experience. We also trace some of the major schools of academic history, which have tried to fashion overarching storylines to give meaning to human struggles -- from Biblical providential history to Marxism to postmodernism. We begin by examining the most central myth of the origins of American society: the "first Thanksgiving." Please contribute what you can in the spirit of knowledge and inquiry! -- www.patreon.com/user?u=5530632 Suggested further reading: Giambattista Vico, "The New Science"; Marc Bloch, "The Historian's Craft"; Hayden White, "Metahistory"
It's the turn of fellow podcaster and documentary film maker Sam Gonçalves this week. We chat about some of the ins and outs of podcasting as well as going into depth about the theme of his film Lifespan of Utopias. I think I can safely say this is one of the most laid back and enjoyable chats I've had so far. Everything mixtape - https://soundcloud.com/everythingmixtape Everything mixtape twitter - https://twitter.com/mixtapeofthings Sam's Twitter - https://twitter.com/sidlingbears Sam's Website - http://samgoncalves.com/ Lifespan of Utopias - https://vimeo.com/179655338 Coletivo , Sam’s Brasil based documentary - https://vimeo.com/118875059 Sam’s Pecha Kucha - http://creativedundee.com/2015/03/sam-goncalves-pkn/ Hot Chocolate - http://www.hotchocolate.org.uk/ Adam Curtis - http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0193231/ Mark Cousins - http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0184108/ Hayden White - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hayden_White Your idea is worthless - https://seanwes.com/tv/053-your-idea-is-worthless/ Where is Richard Simmons podcast - https://www.missingrichardsimmons.com/ Brain Pickings - https://www.brainpickings.org/ Mike Haines - http://theforgivenessproject.com/stories/mike-haines-scotland/
Welcome to Mere Rhetoric the podcast for beginners and insiders about the people, ideas and movement that have shaped rhetorical history. I’m Mary Hedengren and the University of Texas’ Humanities Media Project supports the podcast and A few weeks ago I was at an excellent lecture by Collin Brooke here at the university of Texas and he was talking about applying the master tropes to different models of networks. Then I thought--by Jove, the Master Tropes! What a brilliant idea for a podcast! So with all deference to Dr. Brooke, let’s dive into these four beauties of the world of tropes. A trope, you may or not know, is a way of presenting thought in language. A trope is different from what’s called a figure because it doesn’t deal with arranging words, but rather arranging thought. For example, a figure might be something like hyperbaton, which is the the way that Yoda talks: “Patience you must have” just means “you must have patience” there’s not change in the thought behind the words, but the refiguring of the words creates interest, so Yoda says things like “Miss them do not” instead of do not miss them, but the ideas aren’t changed at all. That’s figures. Occasionally, though, Yoda will use a trope. For example, once he said ““In a dark place we find ourselves, and a little more knowledge lights our way.” This is, as it turns out, a metaphor: knowledge doesn’t actually cast a glow, but it does make things metaphorically clear. The words transform the ideas: light equals knowledge. It’s not that Yoda changed the words around--all considered this is pretty syntactically straight-forward for the sage-green sage--but he’s presented the ideas in a different way. This is a trope, not a figure. It is, as a matter of fact, one of the four master tropes: Metaphor, Synecdoche, Metonymy and Irony. It’s possible that these terms aren’t familiar to you, or only in a vague, AP English sort of way, so let me provide examples and definitions. Metaphor is the trope that is most familiar to us: knowledge is light, the Force is a river, many Storm troupers are a wall. So I’m going to skip over that. Synecdoche is--aside from being difficult to pronounce, using the part to represent the whole. I always think of that movie Synecdoche New York, where the guy builds a replica of New York for a movie. The standard examples include things like “earning your bread and butter” when you’re hopefully earning much more than that or “putting boots on the ground” when the military often needs soldiers, too, to fill those boots. I used to joke with my Mormon comedy group since everyone prays to “bless the hands that prepared this food,” if there was a terrible accident in the kitchen and everyone died, at least the hands would be preserved. So you get the idea. Metonymy can sometimes be a little more confusing, because it, like Synecdoche, involves using a word associated with the idea to stand in for the idea itself. We say things like “the White House has issued a statement” when the building itself has done no such thing, or “Hollywood is corrupt” to represent the movie business generally. Some people will say that synecdoche is just a specific kind of metonymy, like how simile is a specific kind of metaphor. Finally, irony may seem like a simple, straightforward trope, but it can be notoriously complex, as Wayne Booth describes in greater detail in The Rhetoric of Irony. How we we know when someone is being ironic? How much is irony dependent on understanding cultural cues? Why do we say the opposite of what we mean as a way to say what we want? Tricky stuff all around. The four master tropes are probably most familiar to rhetoricians as the essay found way in the back of Kenneth Burke’s Grammar of Methods, way way back as an appendix. There, Burke equates these over-arching tropes with different epistemic perspectives: metaphor correlates with perspective, metonymy with reduction, synecdoche with representation, and irony with dialectic. The way that we construct thought depends on how we use these four master tropes. Remember when we talked about the Metaphors we live by? Well, Burke says that we don’t just live by metaphors individually, but also by the idea of metaphor, or by reduction, representation or dialectic. The tropes, instead of just being a way to make your writing more flowery, can be a critical part of invention, and how you see the world more generally. Are you inclined to think inductively, looking at a couple of examples of Sith lords and there after making generalizations about the group as a whole and their capacity to run a competent daycare? It’s possible to think in terms of irony, transpositioning one view of truth with an anti-thetical perspective: can Anikin be both on the dark side and not on the dark side? Can you both do and do not if you only try? These master tropes are not just ways of expressing ideas about the world, but coming to make ideas as well. I’m a huge fan of Burke, but I’m afraid that I can’t give him credit for coming up with the idea of four master tropes that encompass other ways of figuring ideas. I’m sorry to say that that distinction goes to--ew--Petrus Ramus. Yes, Ramus, the mustache-twirling villain of rhetoric himself. Back when we did our series on the villains of rhetoric, Ramus was public enemy number one, removing invention from rhetoric and diminishing the whole affair to a series of branching “yes and no” questions and needless ornamentation. And yet it was Ramus, in his eagerness to classify everything into categories and subcategories who coined the idea of the master tropes back in 1549. Fortunately the idea was taken up by a more palatable figure of rhetorical history, Giambattista Vico, who in the 18th century, identified the master tropes as basic tropes, or fundamental tropes, being those to which all others are reducible. Since Burke, though, others have taken up the idea that these tropes of arranging ideas might become ways to think about the world in general. Hayden White, for instance, saw the master tropes as representing something about literature. Trope Genre ('mode of emplotment') Worldview ('mode of argument') Ideology ('mode of ideological implication') Metaphor romance formism anarchism Metonymy comedy organicism conservatism Synecdoche tragedy mechanism radicalism Irony satire contextualism liberalism He constructed a table where each trope has its own genre, worldview and ideology. Metaphor, for instance, was about romance--or we might say fantasy--and was associated with formism and an ideology of anarchism because anything might apply as a metaphor. Metonymy was associated with comedy, organicism and conservatism--presumably because if you assume that “the White House” speaks for the country, you’re putting a lot of stock in the traditional power that dominates. Conversely, synecdoche was associated with tragedy, mechanism and radicalism. Irony, naturally enough, was the trope of satire and its world view of contextualism and liberalism. Once White had come up with this tidy table, he because to think about the tropes not just statically, but how they might evolve temporally, both in terms of an individual child’s development and in a civilization. Metaphor was the earliest stage, corresponding to infants up to two years old and aligned with Foucault’s conceptualization of the Renaissance. Then metaphor gives way to metonymy, the domain of children from 2-7, which White lines up with the Classical period and the Enlightenment--very conservative and fond of straight-forward comedy. Next comes synecdoche of tweens and the modernist period--radically breaking from the past and finally, in crowning achievement, irony, the stage of teenagers and adults, corresponding to the post-modernist era, with its love of counterintuitive and contradictory thought. Hayden White's Sequence of Tropes Piagetian stages of cognitive development White's alignment of Foucault's historical epochs Metaphor sensorimotor stage (birth to about 2 years) Renaissance period (sixteenth century) Metonymy pre-operational stage (2 to 6/7 years) Classical period (seventeenth and eighteenth centuries) Synecdoche concrete operations stage (6/7 to 11/12 years) Modern period (late eighteenth to early twentieth century) Irony formal operations stage (11/12 to adult) Postmodern period Others have highlighted the philosophical or historiographical possibilities of the mastertropes, including Jakobson and Foucault himself. Which brings me back to this fascinating, exploratory lecture by Collin Brooke. Brooke suggested another correlation for the master tropes: not ways of thinking or periods of time, but networks of connection. Networks are a big stinking deal for digital humanists and new media rhetoricians like Brooke, and some of the different types of networks, brooke proposes, may correlate to the master tropes: hierarchies, for instance, are like metaphors, which correspond across groups--the padowan learner doesn’t really tell us much about the Jedi master who trains her, but you expect the role of that padowan learner to be similar to the role of another padowan who studies under another master. Synecdoche, though, can be seen in truly random networks. A network of 200 that is truly random, is representative of a network of 2000, or of 2 million. Some networks are neither analogous like metaphor or random like synecdoche. In situations that produce what’s been called the long tail--citations for example, some groups or people are more popular because they are more popular. the more people who fear Jabba the hut--peons, bounty hunters-- the more he is feared. It creates a snowball effect that is similar to metonymy. Brooke’s ideas are inchoate and he admits that he’s not sure what network might correlate to irony--it’s all a work in progress, afterall, but it goes to show that the organization appeal of the master tropes continues. The idea of tropes that rule all the other tropes and say something meaningful about the ways in which we construct and understand the world around us is a timeless appeal that goes all the way back to Vico--er, let’s just say Vico, okay. Until next week--miss us you must not because patience you must have.
During part 2 of Infinite Gestation’s two part series entitled “Graphic Novels as Literature”, special guest Matt Bird delves into the Big Three (The Dark Night Returns by Frank Miller, Maus by Art Spiegelman & Watchmen by Alan Moore). Across the decades, comic books have evolved into a form to be reckoned with and deserve a closer look. In tandem, a selection of authors and illustrators have pushed the medium to its limits (and beyond), often presenting themes, social issues and the hard questions — without the legitimacy that prose fiction has enjoyed for many years. Perhaps now is the time to give graphic novels the chance to be called literature. The 1980's saw comic books come into their own with mature themes and subject matter aimed primarily at an adult audience. This ultimately led to a trend in graphic narrative whereby creators and readers began to favor quality writing alongside the talent of illustrators. This era brought about the publications of the Big Three (along with a selection of other works) that sought to utilize the medium to explore contemporary social issues. Follow @Infin8Gestation on Twitter • Visit InfiniteGestation.com Matt Bird curated an exhibit in the fall of 2011 at IU-Bloomington’s Lilly Library titled “The Character of Ernest Hemingway.” The exhibit utilized Hemingway’s letters, photographs, typed manuscripts with edits, and artifacts of the Army’s investigation into EH’s activities during World War II to foster a discussion of Hemingway’s personal curation and control of his image. Matt holds an MLS, specializing in Rare Books and Manuscripts, from IU-Bloomington and is currently finishing an MA in Literature at Indiana State University. His reading interests, at the moment (fiction, non-fiction, etc), touch on graphic novels as literature (Alan Moore, Neil Gaiman, Brian K. Vaughan), book culture and printing/book-selling history (Umberto Eco, Arturo Perez-Reverte, Nicholas Basbanes), the Lost Generation and the fiction produced by them (Hemingway, Fitzgerald) and catching up on the O. Henry Prize Stories. Matt taught courses over the last two years at Indiana State University on the subjects of classical mythology, the history of the physical book and its use in fiction, and the history/evolution of libraries. Show Notes & Links The Dark Knight Returns by Frank Miller Maus by Art Spiegelman Watchmen by Alan Moore The Sandman by Neil Gaiman Superman: Red Son by Mark Millar Aleister Crowley The Hero with a Thousand Faces by Joseph Campbell Arthur Conan Doyle Vertigo (DC Comics) "Ozymandias" (1818 poem) by Percy Bysshe Shelley "The Historical Text as Literary Artifact" (1978 essay) by Hayden White 300 (comic series) by Frank Miller Herodotus - The Battle of Thermopylae American Splendor by Harvey Pekar American Splendor (2003 film) - Shari Springer Berman & Robert Pulcini The first Green Lantern character was Alan Scott. Northstar Preacher (comics) V for Vendetta Alan Moore
Often described as one of the most important historical theorists of our times, Hayden White discusses the ethical and aesthetic implications for discourses dealing with the Holocaust, genocide and industrialized death.
Often described as one of the most important historical theorists of our times, Hayden White discusses the ethical and aesthetic implications for discourses dealing with the Holocaust, genocide and industrialized death.