Academic literature on the topic 'Marginal voices'

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Journal articles on the topic "Marginal voices"

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Mitra, A. "Marginal voices in cyberspace." New Media & Society 3, no. 1 (March 1, 2001): 29–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/14614440122225976.

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MITRA, ANANDA. "Marginal Voices in Cyberspace." New Media & Society 3, no. 1 (March 2001): 29–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1461444801003001003.

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Hamenoo, Emma Seyram, and Siv Oltedal. "Listen to marginal voices." Journal of Comparative Social Work 18, no. 1 (June 6, 2023): 1–4. http://dx.doi.org/10.31265/jcsw.v18i1.666.

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Nemoianu, Virgil. "Marginal Voices, Marginal Forms: Diaries in European Literature and History (review)." Comparative Literature Studies 40, no. 4 (2003): 439–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/cls.2003.0034.

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S. Baviskar, Ghansham. "MARGINAL VOICES IN ALICE WALKERS STRONG HORSE TEA." International Journal of Advanced Research 9, no. 07 (July 31, 2021): 910–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.21474/ijar01/13191.

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The dominant forces, the torchbearers of civilizations in America, have always silenced marginal voices.Thereligious books have always been the instrumental foundationsfor the whites to retaindominance across the world. Ruthlesswhites like the Aryansdefeated the nativesand enslaved them in their trap. They enforced slavery and imbibed the superstitious notions and outdated religious rituals that never allowed the oppressed to question its authorityon the base of reason and science. In the twentieth century, the emergence of revolutions and the movements for the human rights of the African Americans forced the imperialists to accept democratic values, implement, and administer them in the countries. Under the influence of the dominant oppressive forces, thewhiteskept the downtrodden and oppressed people ignorant about it. The pains and problems of the people did not end with the abolition of slavery and untouchability in both the countries but continuedhorribly in racist, classist, and sexist society. The vintages of slavery resulted from the race and caste are still on display in the slums.The humble dwellers in the slumsstruggle never ending problems caused by the elite dominated industrialism and capitalism in the metropolitan citieswhere there is hardly any room and scope for their growth and emancipation. Alice Walkers Strong Horse Tea voicesthe margins who were rejected and dejected for ages. This paper is an attempt to throw light on the margins within the margins and voice the miserable livesof the oppressed, those who struggle against the oppressionandare silenced meticulously by the hypocritical ruthless masters.
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Stice, Elizabeth. "Literary journalism and world war I marginal voices." First World War Studies 10, no. 1 (January 2, 2019): 158–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/19475020.2019.1667611.

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Sun, YuXiang, Lili Ming, Jiamin Sun, FeiFei Guo, Qiufeng Li, and Xueping Hu. "Brain mechanism of unfamiliar and familiar voice processing: an activation likelihood estimation meta-analysis." PeerJ 11 (March 13, 2023): e14976. http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.14976.

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Interpersonal communication through vocal information is very important for human society. During verbal interactions, our vocal cord vibrations convey important information regarding voice identity, which allows us to decide how to respond to speakers (e.g., neither greeting a stranger too warmly or speaking too coldly to a friend). Numerous neural studies have shown that identifying familiar and unfamiliar voices may rely on different neural bases. However, the mechanism underlying voice identification of individuals of varying familiarity has not been determined due to vague definitions, confusion of terms, and differences in task design. To address this issue, the present study first categorized three kinds of voice identity processing (perception, recognition and identification) from speakers with different degrees of familiarity. We defined voice identity perception as passively listening to a voice or determining if the voice was human, voice identity recognition as determining if the sound heard was acoustically familiar, and voice identity identification as ascertaining whether a voice is associated with a name or face. Of these, voice identity perception involves processing unfamiliar voices, and voice identity recognition and identification involves processing familiar voices. According to these three definitions, we performed activation likelihood estimation (ALE) on 32 studies and revealed different brain mechanisms underlying processing of unfamiliar and familiar voice identities. The results were as follows: (1) familiar voice recognition/identification was supported by a network involving most regions in the temporal lobe, some regions in the frontal lobe, subcortical structures and regions around the marginal lobes; (2) the bilateral superior temporal gyrus was recruited for voice identity perception of an unfamiliar voice; (3) voice identity recognition/identification of familiar voices was more likely to activate the right frontal lobe than voice identity perception of unfamiliar voices, while voice identity perception of an unfamiliar voice was more likely to activate the bilateral temporal lobe and left frontal lobe; and (4) the bilateral superior temporal gyrus served as a shared neural basis of unfamiliar voice identity perception and familiar voice identity recognition/identification. In general, the results of the current study address gaps in the literature, provide clear definitions of concepts, and indicate brain mechanisms for subsequent investigations.
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Ariani, Mega Fransiska, and Eggy Fajar Andalas. "SUARA-SUARA MASYARAKAT PINGGIRAN DALAM KUMPULAN CERPEN <em>ORANG-ORANG PINGGIRAN</em> KARYA LEA PAMUNGKAS." Alayasastra 17, no. 2 (November 30, 2021): 279–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.36567/aly.v17i2.796.

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ABSTRAKPenelitian ini bertujuan untuk mengungkap suara-suara masyarakat yang dimarginalkan dalam kumpulan cerpen Orang-Orang Pinggiran karya Lea Pamungkas. Penelitian ini menggunakan teori sosiologi sastra dengan metode penelitian deskripsi kualitatif hermeneutik. Sumber data penelitian ini adalah karya sastra berupa kumpulan cerpen Orang-Orang Pinggiran karya Lea Pamungkas. Data pada penelitian ini berupa teks yang memperlihatkan suara-suara masyarakat pinggiran. Hasil penelitian ini berupa marginalisasi terhadap perempuan dan kelompok masyarakat. Marginalisasi pada perempuan, yaitu perempuan dianggap hanya sebagai subjek pemuas nafsu kaum laki-laki. Marginalisasi terhadap kelompok masyarakat ini berupa suara yang diabaikan dalam memenuhi kebutuhan sehingga menyebabkan kemiskinan Indonesia.Kata kunci: kumpulan cerpen, marginal, masyarakat pinggiran, sosiologi sastra ABSTRACT This study aims to reveal the voices of the marginalized in a collection of short stories Orang-Orang Pinggiran by Lea Pamungkas. This research uses sociology of literature theory with hermeneutic qualitative description research method. The Source of this research is a literary work in the form of a collection of short stories from Orang-Orang Pinggiran by Lea Pamungkas. The data in this study are in the form of texts that show the voices of marginalized communities. The result of this research is the marginalization of women and community groups. Marginalization of women, women are considered only as a subject to satisfy the lust of men. The marginalization of this community groups is in the form of their a voice that is ignored in meeting their needs, causing poverty in Indonesia.Keywords: a collection of short stories, marginal, marginal societ, literary sociology
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Subba, Rathika. "Voices of the Marginal: Comparative Analysis of Mahasweta Devi’s “Draupadi” and Asit Rai’s Yantrana." New Literaria 04, no. 01 (2023): 74–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.48189/nl.2023.v04i1.010.

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Postcolonialism has ushered in creating possibilities to locate the voices of the marginalized. In this light Mahasweta Devi is one of the prolific writers who has championed the cause of the suppressed and the marginalized sections of the society. Her works seek to rewrite and represent their history and reality as they are the ones who actually contribute towards history writing. “Draupadi” (1981) is about individual courage, determination and resilience. The protagonist of the story cuts across class, caste and gender barriers and protests against the brutality of state-sponsored violence, atrocity and inhumanity. She breaks the shackles of confinement of patriarchy and state-aided cruelty as it specifically decides the punishment for her because she is an ‘insurgent’, ‘culprit’ and above all a woman. Similar echoes are found in a Nepali novel Yantrana (1980) by Asit Rai. It brings out the plight and torture of Chandrabahadur, a tea garden worker, who dares to speak against the inhuman system of the ‘maliks’ who have usurped all the power to keep the workers subordinated. It is about his fight against the inhuman treatment and management in the tea garden. The plantation system in the tea garden on the other hand has the indirect support of the government to crush any voice of dissent and discord. Both in Mahasweta Devi’s “Draupadi” and Asit Rai’s Yantrana the marginalized voices spring out of the intended and extended exclusion and suppression.
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Herbst, Christian T., and Brad H. Story. "Computer simulation of vocal tract resonance tuning strategies with respect to fundamental frequency and voice source spectral slope in singing." Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 152, no. 6 (December 2022): 3548–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.1121/10.0014421.

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A well-known concept of singing voice pedagogy is “formant tuning,” where the lowest two vocal tract resonances ([Formula: see text]) are systematically tuned to harmonics of the laryngeal voice source to maximize the level of radiated sound. A comprehensive evaluation of this resonance tuning concept is still needed. Here, the effect of [Formula: see text] variation was systematically evaluated in silico across the entire fundamental frequency range of classical singing for three voice source characteristics with spectral slopes of –6, –12, and –18 dB/octave. Respective vocal tract transfer functions were generated with a previously introduced low-dimensional computational model, and resultant radiated sound levels were expressed in dB(A). Two distinct strategies for optimized sound output emerged for low vs high voices. At low pitches, spectral slope was the predominant factor for sound level increase, and resonance tuning only had a marginal effect. In contrast, resonance tuning strategies became more prevalent and voice source strength played an increasingly marginal role as fundamental frequency increased to the upper limits of the soprano range. This suggests that different voice classes (e.g., low male vs high female) likely have fundamentally different strategies for optimizing sound output, which has fundamental implications for pedagogical practice.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Marginal voices"

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Bhattacharya, Amit. "The Poetics of resistance: a study of marginal voices in the poetry of Kamala Das." Thesis, University of North Bengal, 2007. http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1172.

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Jardine, Aziezah. "Affirming marginal voices : a study of a group of primary school children in an asymmetrical multilingual setting." Master's thesis, University of Cape Town, 2008. http://hdl.handle.net/11427/10939.

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Includes bibliographical references (leaves 82-89).
The aim of my teaching intervention, dialogue journal writing, was to counter these deficit perceptions by affirming the marginal home language at school. More importantly, I aimed to give children who do not often get the opportunity to do so, the space to voice themselves in writing. My research, therefore, aimed at investigating the dialogue journal writing process as a means of raising the status of Xhosa at school, as well as to affirm the voices of children in asymmetrical multilingual settings.
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Pakhomova, Natalia. "Marginal voices : Sergei Dovlatov and his characters in the context of the Leningrad literature of the 1960s and 70s." Thesis, McGill University, 2001. http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=38255.

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In spite of the growing interest of Russian and Western scholars in Sergei Dovlatov and his art, his place in Russian literature has not yet been clearly defined. His position as a writer in Russia in the 1960s and early 70s was ambiguous due to his opposition to the traditional Soviet canon and rejection by the current literary establishment. However, he later gained recognition and popularity as an emigre writer in the United States. The concept of 'marginality' colours his biography and art, for his life itself was a succession of marginal experiences and marginality is the key topic of his writings.
Marginality unifies Dovlatov's art. This is evident in his marginal status as a writer in and outside the Soviet Union, and in his writing which uses the underappreciated short form of narration (the novella and short story), develops a non-traditional conversational style, pursues the themes of non-conventional behaviour and introduces eccentric characters.
However, it is not possible to discuss Dovlatov's status as a marginal writer without contextualizing his life and art in the ambience of the entire generation of Leningrad writers of the sixties. Writers and poets such as Brodskii, Goliavkin, Gubin, Vakhtin and Ufliand do not only represent the culture of Leningrad's artistic non-conformists, they are also Dovlatov's prototypes and protagonists. Apart from their marginal status, all these writers shared the determination to make independent choices in life and in art. They refused to be viewed as marginal authors by the dominant canon, which disregarded their works as insignificant. Here as well marginality emerges as a literary concept and a behavioural model, shaped by societal norms (the positive type of citizen or official Soviet writer) and traditional canons (the Russian didactic tradition or Soviet ideological writing). This literary concept includes an orientation towards American literature, the creation of marginal characters and themes as well as an exploration of different styles.
The works of writers of the Leningrad circle laid the foundation for the emergence of a literary phenomenon such as Dovlatov. It is in delineating this context that this dissertation demonstrates Dovlatov's original approach to marginality, as well as the way he turned his life experience into literature and became a spokesman for neglected fellow writers and citizens.
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Kitano, Yuuko. "Dramatic Functions of Ballad Performances in Shakespeare’s Tragedies." Kyoto University, 2018. http://hdl.handle.net/2433/232368.

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Kyoto University (京都大学)
0048
新制・課程博士
博士(人間・環境学)
甲第21167号
人博第839号
新制||人||202(附属図書館)
29||人博||839(吉田南総合図書館)
京都大学大学院人間・環境学研究科共生文明学専攻
(主査)教授 水野 眞理, 教授 髙谷 修, 准教授 桒山 智成, 教授 丸橋 良雄
学位規則第4条第1項該当
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Reichert, Jorge Alberto. "Crossing borders : voices from the "margins"." reponame:Biblioteca Digital de Teses e Dissertações da UFRGS, 2011. http://hdl.handle.net/10183/35074.

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Em um mundo cada vez mais transnacional e multicultural, a identidade cultural é formada por meio de um processo constante de mobilidade e deslocamentos, resultando na formação de identidades culturais diaspóricas. Tais identidades culturais híbridas e heterogêneas se caracterizam por travessias de fronteiras e limitações impostas à construção da subjetividade. O presente estudo consiste em uma análise interpretativa de representações de identidades culturais diaspóricas em dois escritos autobiográficos ficcionais: Borderlands/La Frontera: The New Mestiza (1987), de Gloria Anzaldúa e Zami A New Spelling of my Name, a biomythography (1982), de Audre Lorde. As representações de identidades culturais diaspóricas desenvolvidas em ambos os textos produzem efeitos que desestabilizam a política de representação da identidade cultural articulando identificações e desejos informados por hibridismo e diferença bem como reconstruindo a categoria da experiência e a produção do conhecimento através da ficcionalização da construção da identidade. O objetivo é investigar como as vozes narrativas projetam representações de identidades culturais diaspóricas simultaneamente resistentes e marginais em relação à cultura hegemônica. Tais representações são analisadas à luz do seguinte referencial teórico: a reconstrução da categoria da experiência de Joan Scott; a teoria dos conhecimentos situados de Donna Haraway; e uma estratégia crítica que propõe uma intersecção entre argumentos advindos do pensamento feminista e pós-moderno, que postulam a identidade como um constructo fluído, múltiplo, e instável, sustentada em The Politics of Postmodernism, de Linda Hutcheon; a coleção de ensaios editada por Linda Nicholson, Feminism/Postmodernism; e The Postmodern Condition, de Jean-François Lyotard. O referencial teórico oferece uma perspectiva privilegiada para a investigação de representações de identidades culturais que questionam a concepção de identidade como fixa autônoma e anterior ao contexto sócio-histórico no qual a identidade e sua representação são formadas.
In an increasingly transnational and multicultural world, cultural identities are shaped through a constant process of mobility and displacements, resulting in the formation of diasporic cultural identities. These hybrid heterogeneous cultural identities are characterized by multiple crossings of borders and limitations imposed on the construction of a sense of subjectivity. The present study consists of an interpretative analysis of representations of diasporic cultural identities in two fictional autobiographical writings: Gloria Anzaldúa’s Borderlands/La Frontera: The New Mestiza (1987) and Audre Lorde’s Zami A New Spelling of my Name, a biomythography (1982). The representations of diasporic cultural identities developed in both texts produce disruptive effects on the politics of representation of cultural identity by articulating identifications and desires informed by hybridity and difference as well as reconstructing the category of experience and the production of knowledge through the fictionalization of the construction of identity. The objective is to investigate how the narrative voices project representations of diasporic cultural identities simultaneously resistant and “marginal” to the hegemonic culture. These representations are analyzed under the following theoretical framework: Joan Scott’s reconceptualization of the category of experience; Donna Haraway’s theory of situated knowledges; and a critical strategy that proposes an intersection of arguments derived from feminist and postmodern thinking, which posit identity as a fluid, multiple, and unstable construct, supported on Linda Hutcheon’s The Politics of Postmodernism; the collection of essays edited by Linda Nicholson, Feminism/Postmodernism; and Jean-François Lyotard’s The Postmodern Condition. The theoretical framework provides a privileged perspective to investigate representations of cultural identity that question the conception of identity as fixed, autonomous, and prior to the social-historical context in which identity and its representation are shaped.
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Clarke, Gillian Margaret. "Voices from the margins : lesbian teachers in physical education." Thesis, Leeds Beckett University, 1998. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.264711.

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Simavi, Zeynep. "Tezer Ozlu: A Marginal Voice Against The Approved Notion Of The Intellectual." Master's thesis, METU, 2006. http://etd.lib.metu.edu.tr/upload/3/12607697/index.pdf.

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This thesis analyzes both Tezer Ö
zlü
&rsquo
s life as an intellectual and her novels, The Chilly Nights of Childhood and Journey to the End of Life, in order to demonstrate Ö
zlü
&rsquo
s portrayal of the inner life of the intellectual in her works and her unique way of expressing the effects of the political circumstances of the time on the individual intellectual. Through an analysis of her works from the standpoint of trauma theory, this study aims to demonstrate that Ö
zlü
is engaged with the political problems of the era that she lives in although she does not express it explicitly in her works.
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Singer, Sonya E. "Voices from the margins, lesbian teachers in Nova Scotia's schools." Thesis, National Library of Canada = Bibliothèque nationale du Canada, 1997. http://www.collectionscanada.ca/obj/s4/f2/dsk2/ftp01/MQ37836.pdf.

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Bollig, Benjamin Alexander Francis. "The poetic search for an Argentine marginal voice in the work of Nestor Perlongher." Thesis, King's College London (University of London), 2004. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.407890.

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Malik, F. H. "Coming in from the margins : migrant voices, community broadcasting and social inclusion." Thesis, Nottingham Trent University, 2010. http://irep.ntu.ac.uk/id/eprint/189/.

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This study provides fresh insights into the process of social exclusion by comparing it with the discourse of developmentalism to offer a wider theoretical understanding of the issues related to marginalisation and powerlessness. The study argues that people experiencing exclusion from the social and economic processes are further left out in a media environment largely biased against minorities, driven by commercial considerations and protected by tight regulatory regimes. As an alternative to this media situation, the thesis explores the role of small-scale and community-based media in developing a contextual approach to communication that can help to validate marginalised points of view, and develop a dynamic link between people‘s experiences and expression. These arguments are illustrated through a participatory action research project, using an interdisciplinary framework informed by a variety of emancipatory, spiritual and critical perspectives. Looking specifically at the pertinent issue of inequalities in health faced by the members of the Mirpuri community in the UK, the thesis examined the role of Radio Ramzan, a faith-based community broadcasting initiative, in facilitating a communicative interaction during a multi-agency health education campaign. The study established that peoples‘ reference to cultural practices and experiential knowledge empowers them to counter their situated, stigmatized and essentialised existences. Within this discourse, the study demonstrated that a community radio station can provide a socio-cultural context to develop and promote a holistic approach to deal with exclusion.
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Books on the topic "Marginal voices"

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Ribeyro, Julio Ramón. Marginal voices: Selected stories. Austin, TX: University of Texas Press, 1993.

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1969-, Langford Rachael, and West Russell, eds. Marginal voices, marginal forms: Diaries in European literature and history. Amsterdam: Rodopi, 1999.

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Asian literary voices: From marginal to mainstream. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2010.

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Statham, Anne. The rise of marginal voices: Gender balance in the workplace. Lanham: University Press of America, 1996.

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Marginal voices: Studies in converso literature of medieval and golden age Spain. Leiden: Brill, 2012.

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Robin, Ostle, ed. Marginal voices in literature and society: Individual and society in the Mediterranean muslim world. Strasbourg: European Science Foundation in collaboration with Maison Méditerranéenne des Sciences de l'Homme d'Aix-en-Provence, 2000.

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Pollacchi, Elena. Wang Bing's Filmmaking of the China Dream. NL Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.5117/9789463721837.

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This volume offers an organic discussion of Wang Bing's filmmaking across China’s marginal spaces and against the backdrop of the state-sanctioned 'China Dream'. Wang Bing's cinema gives voice to the subaltern. Focusing on contemporary China, his work testifies to a set of issues dealing with inequality, labour, and migration. His internationally awarded documentaries are considered masterpieces with unique aesthetics that bear reference to global film masters. Therefore, this investigation goes beyond the divides between Western and non-Western film traditions and between fiction and documentary cinema. Each chapter takes a different articulation of space (spaces of labour, history, and memory) as its entry point, bringing together film and documentary studies, Chinese studies, and globalization studies. This volume benefits from the author's extensive conversations with Wang Bing and insider observations of film production and the film festival circuit.
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Ribeyro, Julio Ramón, and Dianne Douglas. Marginal Voices: Selected Stories. de Gruyter GmbH, Walter, 2013.

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The Rise of Marginal Voices. University Press of America, 2002.

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Williams, Philip F. Asian Literary Voices: From Marginal to Mainstream. Amsterdam University Press, 2010.

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Book chapters on the topic "Marginal voices"

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Palmer, Jerry. "Marginal Voices." In Memories from the Frontline, 49–68. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-78051-1_3.

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Di Padova, Elena. "Women’s ‘marginal voices’." In Women, Peace and Security in Myanmar, 108–21. Abingdon, Oxon ; New York, NY : Routledge, 2019.: Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429286605-9.

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Vergote, Antoine. "Casting a Psychological Look on Jesus the Marginal Jew." In Hearing Visions and Seeing Voices, 133–51. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4020-5939-1_13.

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Desblache, Lucile. "From Minor to Major: Accessing Marginal Voices Through Music. New Ways for Translation?" In Second Language Learning and Teaching, 143–55. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-04978-2_9.

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Naik, Mohon Kumar, and Devendraraj Madhanagopal. "Land Acquisition and a Question of “Justice”: Voices of the Unheard Marginal Groups in the Interior Odisha, India." In Environment, Climate, and Social Justice, 323–48. Singapore: Springer Nature Singapore, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-19-1987-9_16.

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Guzzetti, Barbara J. "Voices From the Margins." In Genders, Cultures, and Literacies, 164–78. New York: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003158011-15.

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Naz, Farah, and Dieter Bögenhold. "Unheard Voices: Globalization Stories from Invisible Margins." In Unheard Voices, 157–79. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-54363-1_7.

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Horsfall, Debbie, and Lynne Adamson. "Writing in Marginalised Voices." In Professional Practice Discourse Marginalia, 171–78. Rotterdam: SensePublishers, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-6300-600-2_20.

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Taylor, Pauline, and Katelin Sutton. "Hearing the Marginalised Voices." In Professional Practice Discourse Marginalia, 189–96. Rotterdam: SensePublishers, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-6300-600-2_22.

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Roy, Carole. "Amplifying Voices." In Working the Margins of Community-Based Adult Learning, 51–60. Rotterdam: SensePublishers, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-6300-483-1_5.

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Conference papers on the topic "Marginal voices"

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Stade, Ekkehard. "The Experiences From the First Rounds of Offshore Wind Farm Installation in the German EEZ (Both Baltic and North Sea) and Lessons Learnt to Achieve Serial Production Status: A Consultant’s Perspective." In ASME 2014 33rd International Conference on Ocean, Offshore and Arctic Engineering. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/omae2014-24682.

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Offshore wind farms present a lesser safety risk to operators and contractors than traditional oil and gas installations. In the post Macondo world this does not come as a surprise since the risks involved in construction, operation and maintenance of an offshore wind farm are by far lower. Even with higher probability of incidents and near misses (due to serial construction) the severity/ impact of those is considerably lower. On the other hand projects are complex, profit margins are what they are called: marginal. Hence there is no room for errors, perhaps in form of delays. If, for example, the installation completion of the turbines and the inner array cabling/ export cables are not perfectly in tune, the little commercial success that can be achieved is rapidly diminishing by costly compensation activities. The paper will try to present solutions to the most pressing challenges and elaborate on the effect those would have had, had they been implemented at the beginning of the projects. How can a sustainable new industry evolve by learning from established industries? Presently, there is a view that offshore wind is a short-lived business. Particularly representatives of the oil and gas industry raise such concern. Apart from the obvious bias of those voices, this controversy is also caused by the fact that offshore wind seems to have a tendency to try and re-invent the wheel rather than using established procedures. Even with a relatively stable commitment to the offshore wind development regardless of the respective government focus within European coastal states the industry suffers from financing issues, subsidies, over-regulation due to lack of expertise within authorities and other challenges. The avoidance of those is key to a successful development for this industry in other areas of the planet. In conjunction with a stable commitment this is essential in order to attract the long lead-time projects and to establish the complex supply chains to achieve above goals. The paper will look at the short but intensive history of the industry and establish mitigation to some of the involved risks of offshore wind farm EPCI.
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Munteanu-Iorga, Ionuta-Natalia. "Perspectives on a Philologic and Academic Cannon on Virgil Nemoianu’s Theories." In Conferință științifică internațională "Filologia modernă: realizări şi perspective în context european". “Bogdan Petriceicu-Hasdeu” Institute of Romanian Philology, Republic of Moldova, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.52505/filomod.2022.16.07.

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The problem of the Literary Canon is stated by the Romanian theorist Virgil Nemoianu several times and from different critical perspectives of the time – each perspective is seeking to reflect an era and its influences, a certain cultural and artistic typology, the cultural projects and products of a canonical era, the spirituality and politics of the time, as well as the ideological disputes that re-establish from one century to another great canonical European literatures. Systematized thematically and through editorials published between 1967 and 2011, the Romanian professor’s concerns related to the canon are written with great precision – enlightening philological and historical details. Into the same unison with the educated voices of the great universities in Europe and America, Virgil Nemoianu will start the discussion about the phenomenology of the literary Canon by using the tools of referring to the European literary details and referring to the European cultural studies. As a framework, within his academic concerns, there is the idea of complexities and cultural continuities, which together with the ideas of aesthetic and moral emergences, both creates veritable encyclopedic studies that the Romanian theorist he dedicated to Minor European Romanticism, then to Structuralism, and finally to Postmodernism and cultural Globalism. By discussing the importance of the canonical lists, as well as by proposing provocative ideas supposed to aim at the correct understanding of the academic curriculum, Virgil Nemoianu initiates a debate that even gives us the opportunity to discuss the cultural phenomena that determine the modification of the canon. In particular, the Romanian professor gives interest to a canon in perpetual transformation – The Hospitable Canon – a hospitable canon, which involves transitions from a rigidity of the interpretation of literature – to an interpretive plurality. Therefore, these methodological filters have a catalytic role, becoming reagents that lead to a new interpretive synthesis. They also manage to lead to the theoretical core of Professor V. Nemoianu’s reflections: the canon and canonicity allow the observation of the secondary, the marginal, the interdependencies and the intertextualism within the canonical literatures – towards to redefine the social, art and spirituality.
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Kim, Isaac I., Joseph Koontz, Harel Hakakha, Prasanna Adhikari, Ron Stieger, Carter Moursund, Micah Barclay, et al. "Measurement of scintillation and link margin for the TerraLink laser communication system." In Voice, Video, and Data Communications, edited by Paul Christopher, Leland Langston, and G. Stephen Mecherle. SPIE, 1998. http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.301021.

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Pohl, Bernardo, and John Kelly. "SPECIAL EDUCATION AT THE MARGINS OF SOCIAL JUSTICE: VOICES FROM THE FIELD." In 11th annual International Conference of Education, Research and Innovation. IATED, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.21125/iceri.2018.2597.

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Kharisov, Evgeny. "Improving Stability Margins of Rotational Vibration Feed-Forward Compensator." In ASME 2014 Conference on Information Storage and Processing Systems. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/isps2014-6951.

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This work focuses on stability analysis and design for rotational vibration feed-forward (RVFF) compensator for hard disk drive (HDD) servo control system. We consider the effect of the coupling phenomenon between the voice coil motor (VCM) control current and the rotational vibration acceleration measurements. The coupling creates an undesirable feedback loop, which affects stability of the RVFF compensator as well as it limits the achievable system performance. In this work we present a method for the parasitic coupling mitigation. This method uses self-induced coupling vibration prediction to remove the coupling signal component from the rotational vibration (RV) acceleration measurements. We consider linear time invariant coupling estimator, which is more appealing for analysis in frequency domain, as well as its nonlinear adaptive version, which is more suitable for robust operation in uncertain environment.
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Prado, Yenda. "Voices on the Margins: Inclusive Education at the Intersection of Language, Literacy, and Technology." In 2021 AERA Annual Meeting. Washington DC: AERA, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.3102/1692577.

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De Leon, Phillip, and Salvador Sanchez. "Voice activity detection using a sliding-window, maximum margin clustering approach." In ICASSP 2013 - 2013 IEEE International Conference on Acoustics, Speech and Signal Processing (ICASSP). IEEE, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icassp.2013.6638953.

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De Medeiros Pereira, Matheus, and Lucas Debatin. "Acessibilidade em Jogo Digital via Comandos de Voz para Pessoas com Deficiência Motora." In Computer on the Beach. Itajaí: Universidade do Vale do Itajaí, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.14210/cotb.v13.p103-110.

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ABSTRACTEnsuring accessibility is a mandatory issue by law, both in everyday life and in the context of recreational activities. In electronic games this is no different, to ensure accessibility for people with disabilities (PwD), developers and research are constantly seeking to innovate in technical and methodological issues. This work will present an electronic game of the 2D platform genre for the computer, which offers the user the possibility of controlling through voice commands, generating a form of accessibility for motor PwD. During testing, the API achieved an average margin of error of 14.72% per reconition. Tests were carried out with 21 people without disabilities, who differed by their intimacy with digital games. Based on the results obtained, it was possible to verify that the players performance when using the standard control was superior to the performance using voice controls. This allowed us to analyze that, although voice control is an accessibility option, it is not efficient when compared to the standard options (mouse and keyboard), as the performance of users was superior.
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Sumrall, Jonathan B., and E. B. Larson. "GEOMORPHIC CONSTRAINTS USING FLANK MARGIN CAVES AND REMNANT VOIDS FROM THE CARIBBEAN." In 52nd Annual GSA South-Central Section Meeting - 2018. Geological Society of America, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/abs/2018sc-310256.

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Sun, Zongjian, Tomasz Jannson, Joe Ingold, and Joe Oleksa. "Inter-LAN WDM single-fiber bridge for multimedia communication." In OSA Annual Meeting. Washington, D.C.: Optica Publishing Group, 1991. http://dx.doi.org/10.1364/oam.1991.thmm8.

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We propose a novel inter-Lan communication architecture based on multi-mode fiber optics and wavelength division multiplexers (WDMs), in the form of an inter-Lan WDM single-fiber bridge for multi-media communication. The new passive fiber optic system consists of a pair of multi-mode WDMs connected through (1–10 km) multi-mode (62.5/125 µm) single fiber with multiwavelength (3–6) multi-longitudinal mode (MLM) and single-longitudinal mode (SLM) laser diodes (LDs), and avalanche photodiode (APD) receivers. It has been demonstrated that the speed of the MLM-LD 780 nm channel is limited only by the fiber’s multi-mode dispersion (~500 MHz • 1 km). Thus, it can be used for RGB-video transmission. For example, while the SLM-LD channels (750 nm, 810 nm, 840 nm) are used for voice, computer data, and sensor-reporting systems, respectively, because of the APD receivers, the power margin is extended by at least 10 dB. This provides a higher bandwidth and longer distance communication than currently available fiber optic multi-mode links. In this communication, we present experimental results demonstrating transmission capabilities of the WDM system. An inter-Lan medium distance (1–10 km) WDM (wavelength division multiplexing) multimode (62.5/125 µm) (RGB-video, voice, computer-data. sensor-data) single-fiber bridge multimedia communication system is presented.
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Reports on the topic "Marginal voices"

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Kawalkar, Aisha, Himanshu Srivastava, and Ruchi Shevade. Voices from the Margins: Exploring Possibilities of Connecting Formal Education to the Funds of Knowledge owned by Adivasi Communities in the Kesla Block of Madhya Pradesh. Indian Institute for Human Settlements, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.24943/tesf0405.2023.

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The Adivasis or the Scheduled Tribes (STs) are a significant segment of the Indian population, not just because they form a sizeable proportion of it, but also as a group with rich and varied cultural heritage. Despite constitutional provisions for their welfare and development, and protection against violence to their languages and cultures, they are historically the most marginalised communities in the country and lag way behind in terms of various socio-economic indicators, including health and education. Ironically, the Indian education system has been a significant factor in the marginalisation and invisibilisation of Adivasi interests.
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Uche, Chidi, Zita Ekeocha, Stephen Robert Byrn, and Kari L. Clase. Retrospective Study of Inspectors Competency in the Act of Writing GMP Inspection Report. Purdue University, December 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.5703/1288284317445.

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The research was a retrospective study of twenty-five Good Manufacturing Practice (GMP) inspection reports (from March 2017 through to December 2018) of a national medicine regulatory agency, drug Inspectorate, in West Africa, designed to assess the inspectors’ expertise in the act of inspection report writing. The investigation examined a paper-based tool of thirteen pre-registration Inspection reports and twelve GMP reassessment reports written prior and following an intervention program by external GMP trainers to enhance inspectors’ skill in pharmaceutical cGMP inspection. The study made use of quantitative analysis to investigate each team’s expertise in the act of writing GMP inspection report. Likewise, each report’s compliance with the requirements of three regulatory standards on GMP inspection report writing was ascertained. Impact of intervention program on lead inspectors’ competence was assessed. Lastly, gap in each team writing effectiveness, and lead inspectors’ abilities to deliver an effective report were determined. The results showed one of the inspection team (4.0%) wrote an excellent report. Two (8.0%) of the twenty-five inspection teams penned good inspection reports. Eleven (44.0%) teams drafted needs improvement reports and the remaining eleven teams (44.0%) prepared unacceptable reports. The excellent report and the two good reports had report format that meet expectation. One (50.0%) of the good reports showed the authors possess excellent knowledge of cGMP technical areas. The remain good report (50.0%) revealed the writers’ knowledge.as good. The excellent report showed the authors displayed partial mastery in the use of objective evidence while the two good reports disclosed theirs as having partial and evolving abilities. One of the teams (50.0%) that wrote good reports displayed good use of third person narrative past tense in report writing whereas the other team used the same tense and voice excellently. Generally, a sort of marginal level of performance was prominent among the inspection teams. A gap, if not tackled, will slow down regulatory process through increase report review, litigations that query report factual accuracy (AIHO, 2017) and delay in issuance of marketing authorization. In conclusion, trainings on quality attributes, such as technical content (Quality Management System (QMS) and Site), the use of objective evidence, assignment of risk levels to GMP violations and citing of applicable laws, regulation and guidelines that substantiate GMP observations, were recommended, to enhance knowledge sharing and regulators’ performance in the act of writing inspection report.
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Lewis, Dustin, Radhika Kapoor, and Naz Modirzadeh. Advancing Humanitarian Commitments in Connection with Countering Terrorism: Exploring a Foundational Reframing concerning the Security Council. Harvard Law School Program on International Law and Armed Conflict, December 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.54813/uzav2714.

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The imperative to provide humanitarian and medical services on an urgent basis in armed conflicts is anchored in moral tenets, shared values, and international rules. States spend tens of billions of dollars each year to help implement humanitarian programs in conflicts across the world. Yet, in practice, counterterrorism objectives increasingly prevail over humanitarian concerns, often resulting in devastating effects for civilian populations in need of aid and protection in war. Not least, confusion and misapprehensions about the power and authority of States relative to the United Nations Security Council to set policy preferences and configure legal obligations contribute significantly to this trajectory. In this guide for States, we present a framework to reconfigure relations between these core commitments by assessing the counterterrorism architecture through the lens of impartial humanitarianism. We aim in particular to provide an evidence base and analytical frame for States to better grasp key legal and policy issues related to upholding respect for principled humanitarian action in connection with carrying out the Security Council’s counterterrorism decisions. We do so because the lack of knowledge regarding interpretation and implementation of counterterrorism resolutions matters for the coherence, integrity, and comprehensiveness of humanitarian policymaking and protection of the humanitarian imperative. In addition to analyzing foundational concerns and evaluating discernible behaviors and attitudes, we identify avenues that States may take to help achieve pro-humanitarian objectives. We also endeavor to help disseminate indications of, and catalyze, States’ legally relevant positions and practices on these issues. In section 1, we introduce the guide’s impetus, objectives, target audience, and structure. We also describe the methods that we relied on and articulate definitions for key terms. In section 2, we introduce key legal actors, sources of law, and the notion of international legal responsibility, as well as the relations between international and national law. Notably, Security Council resolutions require incorporation into national law in order to become effective and enforceable by internal administrative and judicial authorities. In section 3, we explain international legal rules relevant to advancing the humanitarian imperative and upholding respect for principled humanitarian action, and we sketch the corresponding roles of humanitarian policies, programs, and donor practices. International humanitarian law (IHL) seeks to ensure — for people who are not, or are no longer, actively participating in hostilities and whose needs are unmet — certain essential supplies, as well as medical care and attention for the wounded and sick. States have also developed and implemented a range of humanitarian policy frameworks to administer principled humanitarian action effectively. Further, States may rely on a number of channels to hold other international actors to account for safeguarding the humanitarian imperative. In section 4, we set out key theoretical and doctrinal elements related to accepting and carrying out the Security Council’s decisions. Decisions of the Security Council may contain (binding) obligations, (non-binding) recommendations, or a combination of the two. UN members are obliged to carry out the Council’s decisions. Member States retain considerable interpretive latitude to implement counterterrorism resolutions. With respect to advancing the humanitarian imperative, we argue that IHL should represent a legal floor for interpreting the Security Council’s decisions and recommendations. In section 5, we describe relevant conduct of the Security Council and States. Under the Resolution 1267 (1999), Resolution 1989 (2011), and Resolution 2253 (2015) line of resolutions, the Security Council has established targeted sanctions as counterterrorism measures. Under the Resolution 1373 (2001) line of resolutions, the Security Council has adopted quasi-“legislative” requirements for how States must counter terrorism in their national systems. Implementation of these sets of resolutions may adversely affect principled humanitarian action in several ways. Meanwhile, for its part, the Security Council has sought to restrict the margin of appreciation of States to determine how to implement these decisions. Yet international law does not demand that these resolutions be interpreted and implemented at the national level by elevating security rationales over policy preferences for principled humanitarian action. Indeed, not least where other fields of international law, such as IHL, may be implicated, States retain significant discretion to interpret and implement these counterterrorism decisions in a manner that advances the humanitarian imperative. States have espoused a range of views on the intersections between safeguarding principled humanitarian action and countering terrorism. Some voice robust support for such action in relation to counterterrorism contexts. A handful call for a “balancing” of the concerns. And some frame respect for the humanitarian imperative in terms of not contradicting counterterrorism objectives. In terms of measures, we identify five categories of potentially relevant national counterterrorism approaches: measures to prevent and suppress support to the people and entities involved in terrorist acts; actions to implement targeted sanctions; measures to prevent and suppress the financing of terrorism; measures to prohibit or restrict terrorism-related travel; and measures that criminalize or impede medical care. Further, through a number of “control dials” that we detect, States calibrate the functional relations between respect for principled humanitarian action and countering terrorism. The bulk of the identified counterterrorism measures and related “control dials” suggests that, to date, States have by and large not prioritized advancing respect for the humanitarian imperative at the national level. Finally, in section 6, we conclude by enumerating core questions that a State may answer to help formulate and instantiate its values, policy commitments, and legal positions to secure respect for principled humanitarian action in relation to counterterrorism contexts.
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