Books on the topic 'Societal gaze'

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1

Nach Gaza: Zivilgesellschaft und internationale Politik. Berlin: AphorismA, 2011.

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2

Hermes, Stefan, and Sebastian Kaufmann. Der ganze Mensch - die ganze Menschheit: Völkerkundliche Anthropologie, Literatur und Ästhetik um 1800. Berlin: De Gruyter, 2014.

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3

Gina, Alphonso, ed. New game, new rules: Jobs, corporate America, and theinformation age. New York: Garland Publ, 1996.

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4

Gray, Adele. New game, new rules: Jobs, corporate America, and the information age. New York: Garland, 1996.

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5

Das unmögliche Ganze: Zur literarischen Kritik der Kultur. Paderborn: Wilhelm Fink, 2009.

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6

Conference, International Simulation and Gaming Association International. Bridging the information and knowledge societies: Proceedings, 2-6 July 2000. Tartu, Estonia: Printed by Tartu University Press, 2001.

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7

United Nations Research Institute for Social Development., ed. Civil society, NGDOs and Social Development: Changing the rules of the game. Geneva: UNRISD, 2000.

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8

King, Ross. The Judgment of Paris: The revolutionary decade that gave the world Impressionism. New York, USA: Walker & Co., 2005.

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9

McKinney, Collin S. Mapping the social body: Urbanisation, the gaze, and the novels of Galdós. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2009.

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10

McKinney, Collin S. Mapping the social body: Urbanisation, the gaze, and the novels of Galdós. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2009.

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11

McKinney, Collin S. Mapping the social body: Urbanisation, the gaze, and the novels of Galdós. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2009.

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12

Shawwā, Salmá. Adapting to change: The case study of four Palestinian NGOs in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, 1994-1998. Jerusalem: Forum for Social and Economic Policy Research in Palestine, 2000.

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13

Mapping the social body: Urbanisation, the gaze, and the novels of Galdós. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2009.

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14

The judgment of Paris: The revolutionary decade that gave the world Impressionism. New York: Walker & Co., 2006.

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15

The judgment of Paris: The revolutionary decade that gave the world impressionism. Toronto: Bond Street Books, 2006.

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16

The judgment of Paris: The revolutionary decade that gave the world impressionism. [Toronto]: Anchor Canada, 2006.

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17

Society, American Pheasant and Waterfowl. 70th anniversary: American Pheasant and Waterfowl Society, 1936-2006. [United States: The Society, 2007.

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18

Salvarani, Renata. The Body, the Liturgy and the City. Venice: Edizioni Ca' Foscari, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.30687/978-88-6969-364-9.

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The body and the space are the fulcrums of dynamic relationships creating cultures, identities, societies. In the game of interactions between individuals, groups and space, religions play a crucial role. During a ritual performance takes place a true genesis of a sacred space. This work analyzes the theme from a historical point of view, with a focus on Christian medieval Latin liturgies. Indeed, for Christian theology, related with the dogma of the Incarnation, the chair is itself the place of the manifestation of the sacred. Liturgy makes present and gives with life a new body. Together it generates a space, that interacts with the entire urban society, inside the eschatological dialectic between earthly and heavenly city.
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19

Suter, Beat, René Bauer, and Mela Kocher, eds. Narrative Mechanics. Bielefeld, Germany: transcript Verlag, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.14361/9783839453452.

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What do stories in games have in common with political narratives? This book identifies narrative strategies as mechanisms for meaning and manipulation in games and real life. It shows that the narrative mechanics so clearly identifiable in games are increasingly used (and abused) in politics and social life. They have »many faces«, displays and interfaces. They occur as texts, recipes, stories, dramas in three acts, movies, videos, tweets, journeys of heroes, but also as rewarding stories in games and as narratives in society - such as a career from rags to riches, the concept of modernity or market economy. Below their surface, however, narrative mechanics are a particular type of motivational design - of game mechanics.
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20

King, Ross. The judgment of Paris: The revolutionary decade that gave the world impressionism. New York: Walker & Company, 2007.

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21

Newell, Stephanie. Literary culture in colonial Ghana: 'how to play the game of life'. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2002.

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22

Literary culture in colonial Ghana: How to play the game of life. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2002.

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23

Mujer Palestina En Gaza (Coleccion Politica y Sociedad). Ediciones del Oriente y del Mediterraneo, 2001.

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24

Fuks, Abraham. The Language of Medicine. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780190944834.001.0001.

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The words that physicians use with patients have the power to heal or harm. The practice of medicine is shaped by the potent metaphors that are prevalent in clinical care, and military metaphors and the words of war bring with them unfortunate consequences for patients and physicians alike. Physicians who fight disease turn the patient into a passive battlefield. Patients are encouraged to remain stoic, blamed for “failing” chemotherapy and sadly remembered in heroic obituaries of lost battles. The search for disease as enemy shifts the doctor’s gaze to the computer and imaging technologies that render the patient transparent, unseen and unheard. Modern treatments save lives but patients can be the victims of collateral damage and friendly fire. In The Language of Medicine, Abraham Fuks, physician, medical educator and former Dean of Medicine, shows us how words are potent drugs that must be tailored to the individual patient and applied in carefully chosen and measured doses to offer benefits and avoid toxicity. The book shines a light on our culture that deprecates the skill of listening that is, paradoxically, the attribute that patients most desire of their doctors. Societal metronomes beat rapidly and compress clinic visits into stroboscopic encounters that leave patients puzzled, fearful and uncertain. Building on research about physicians in practice, the experiences of patients, stories of medical students as well as the history of medicine, Dr. Fuks promotes an ideal of clinical practice that is achieved by humble physicians who provide time and space for listening, select words with care, and choose metaphors that engender healing.
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25

Kaufmann, Sebastian, and Stefan Hermes. Ganze Mensch - Die Ganze Menschheit: Völkerkundliche Anthropologie, Literatur und Ästhetik Um 1800. de Gruyter GmbH, Walter, 2014.

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26

Kaufmann, Sebastian, and Stefan Hermes. Ganze Mensch - Die Ganze Menschheit: Völkerkundliche Anthropologie, Literatur und Ästhetik Um 1800. de Gruyter GmbH, Walter, 2014.

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27

The Culture Game. University of Minnesota Press, 2004.

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28

The Culture Game. University of Minnesota Press, 2004.

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29

Stahl, Roger. Through the Crosshairs: War, Visual Culture, and the Weaponized Gaze. Rutgers University Press, 2018.

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30

Stahl, Roger. Through the Crosshairs: War, Visual Culture, and the Weaponized Gaze. Rutgers University Press, 2018.

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31

Stahl, Roger. Through the Crosshairs: War, Visual Culture, and the Weaponized Gaze. Rutgers University Press, 2018.

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32

Stahl, Roger. Through the Crosshairs: War, Visual Culture, and the Weaponized Gaze. Rutgers University Press, 2018.

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33

Buskens, Vincent, Vincenz Frey, and Werner Raub. Trust Games. Edited by Eric M. Uslaner. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780190274801.013.38.

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This article offers an overview of different variants of trust games and shows how game-theoretic modeling can contribute to an analysis of conditions for placing and honoring trust in such games. The focus is on explaining trust rather than on explaining consequences of trust for individual behavior or for outcomes such as societal cohesion or economic prosperity. Specifically, game-theoretic modeling allows for analyzing how the “embeddedness” of trust games in long-term relations between actors and in networks of relations can be a basis for informal norms and institutions of trust. Game-theoretic modeling also allows for analyzing actors’ incentives to modify embeddedness characteristics so that informal norms and institutions of trust become feasible. We discuss how game-theoretic models can be used to derive testable predictions for experiments with trust games and sketch empirical evidence from such experiments.
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34

Friedenthal, Andrew J. Retcon Game. University Press of Mississippi, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.14325/mississippi/9781496811325.001.0001.

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This book argues that the narrative/world-building technique known as retroactive continuity, often overlooked by literary scholars and media historians alike, has become a naturalized and ubiquitous part of popular culture. A careful look at the history of retroactive continuity–or retconning– reveals how its growing acceptance as a part of popular narratives has led to a complex, complicated understanding of the ways in which history and story can interact, ultimately creating a cultural atmosphere that is increasingly accepting of revisionist historical narratives. This can be seen most potently in the way that the editable hyperlink, rather than the stable footnote, has become the de facto source of information in America today. The groundwork for this major cultural shift has been laid for decades via our modes of entertainment. To embrace the concept of retroactive continuity in fictional media means accepting that the past, itself, is not a stable element, but rather something that is constantly in contentious flux. Thus retconning, on the whole, has a positive impact on society, fostering a sense of history itself as a constructed narrative and engendering an acceptance of how historical narratives can and should be recast to allow for a broader field of stories to be told in the present.
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35

Nathanson, Mitchell. A Game of Their Own. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252036804.003.0001.

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This chapter discusses how baseball and America have been, in a symbolic sense, virtually synonymous. Very quickly, it felt natural to speak of baseball and America interchangeably, using one as a metaphor for the other, ascribing values to the game and the men who played and administered it that seemingly rang true on the larger canvas of the expanding nation as well. Baseball achieved this status on behalf of a group of status-conscious Americans who attempted to emulate the small-town values of the Protestant (WASP) establishment of the early and mid-nineteenth century, in an effort to increase their societal standing. For these men, who would eventually be known as baseball club owners, the goal was acculturation into the closed world of the respected WASP elites, a club they otherwise could never hope to join merely through accumulation of wealth alone.
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36

Ober, Josiah, and Barry R. Weingast. The Sparta Game. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190649890.003.0007.

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In this chapter, Ober and Weingast find the roots of some of the most unusual features of Archaic/Classical-era Sparta in the “proportionality principle.” That principle holds that the stability of a regime in which ruling elites extract revenues from nonelites through violence (or its threat) requires that each elite receive a share of rents proportionate to his potential to employ disruptive violence. When proportionality is respected, no one with the power to disrupt society has an incentive to do so. This equilibrium situation helps explain the high degree of stability in Sparta’s sociopolitical system, but it also held the seeds of Sparta’s demise. Proportionality meant that rents could not be redistributed in ways that would have been more economically productive, and the Spartans’ failure to redistribute rents led to the regular demotion of the least successful Spartiates from the ruling class and hence to demographic and military collapse.
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37

Qarmout, Tamer. Delivering Aid Without Government: International Aid and Civil Society Engagement in the Recovery and Reconstruction of the Gaza Strip. Springer International Publishing AG, 2017.

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38

Qarmout, Tamer. Delivering Aid Without Government: International Aid and Civil Society Engagement in the Recovery and Reconstruction of the Gaza Strip. Springer, 2017.

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39

Wainwright, Michael. Game Theory and Postwar American Literature. Palgrave Macmillan, 2016.

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40

Wainwright, Michael. Game Theory and Postwar American Literature. Palgrave Macmillan, 2016.

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41

Wainwright, Michael. Game Theory and Postwar American Literature. Palgrave Macmillan, 2090.

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42

Starkman, Dean. Confidence Game: The Limited Vision of the News Gurus. Columbia University Press, 2011.

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43

Starkman, Dean. Confidence Game: The Limited Vision of the News Gurus. Columbia University Press, 2011.

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44

Southeast Asia and the Civil Society Gaze: Scoping a Contested Concept in Cambodia and Vietnam. Taylor & Francis Group, 2013.

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45

Waibel, Gabi, Judith Ehlert, and Hart N. Feuer. Southeast Asia and the Civil Society Gaze: Scoping a Contested Concept in Cambodia and Vietnam. Taylor & Francis Group, 2017.

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46

Christopher, Hawthorne, Szántó András, and National Arts Journalism Program, eds. The new gate keepers: Emerging challenges to free expression in the arts. New York: National Arts Journalism Program, Columbia University, 2003.

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47

The new gate keepers: Emerging challenges to free expression in the arts. New York, NY: National Arts Journalism Program, Columbia Univers, 2005.

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48

(Editor), Carol A. Kolmerten, Stephen M. Ross (Editor), and Judith Bryant Wittenberg (Editor), eds. Unflinching Gaze: Morrison and Faulkner Re-Envisioned. University Press of Mississippi, 1997.

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49

(Editor), Carol A. Kolmerten, Stephen M. Ross (Editor), and Judith Bryant Wittenberg (Editor), eds. Unflinching Gaze: Morrison and Faulkner Re-Envisioned. University Press of Mississippi, 1997.

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50

Unflinching gaze: Morrison and Faulkner re-envisioned. Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 1997.

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