Littérature scientifique sur le sujet « Discourse on Nature »

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Articles de revues sur le sujet "Discourse on Nature"

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Widyana, Maulida Rita, Ayna Jamila Salsabila et Herry Pragus Yeuyanan. « Environmentalism for Nature to Environmentalism for Profit ». PCD Journal 11, no 1 (30 janvier 2024) : 149–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.22146/pcd.v11i1.7602.

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This research discusses the discourse related to the mining of andesite stone for the construction of the Bener Dam in Purworejo, Central Java, as part of the National Strategic Project. The discourse constructed among actors is highly diverse. The dominant discourse is led by the government, which views the use of the forest for environmentalism for profit, while local residents see the forest as environmentalism for nature. Michel Foucault's discourse theory on the production of knowledge and power underscores the discourses brought forth by the government, the community, and NGOs. Meanwhile, Anja Nygren's concept of environmental discourse complements the various discourses that have emerged. The objective of this research is to observe the dynamics and discourse constructed by pro and contra actors regarding the construction of the Bener Dam. The research utilizes both primary and secondary data, with primary data obtained through direct interviews with sources such as Indonesian Forum for the Environment of Yogyakarta, Community Movement for Environmental Care in Wadas Village (GEMPADEWA), and Legal Aid Institute of Yogyakarta. The conclusion drawn from this research is that the dominant discourse constructed by the government can influence public opinion, especially through negotiations that lead to mutually beneficial agreements.
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Arshad, Sadia. « A Discourse with Nature ». Visual Communication Quarterly 27, no 2 (2 avril 2020) : 110–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15551393.2020.1732219.

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Krebs, Angelika. « Discourse Ethics and Nature ». Environmental Values 6, no 3 (1 août 1997) : 269–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.3197/096327197776679095.

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Krebs, Angelika. « Discourse Ethics and Nature ». Environmental Values 6, no 3 (août 1997) : 269–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/096327199700600302.

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The question this paper examines is whether or not discourse ethics is an environmentally attractive moral theory. The answer reached is: no. For firstly, nature has nothing to gain from the discourse ethical shift from mono-logical moral reflection to discourse, as nature cannot partake in discourse. And secondly, nature (even sentient animal nature) has no socio-personal integrity, which, according to discourse ethics, it is the function of morality to protect. Discourse ethics is a thoroughly anthropocentric moral theory.
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Petukhova, T. I., et N. M. Timchenko. « NATURE : ANTHROPOCENTRIC CONCEPT IN ANGLOPHONE DISCOURSE ». Voprosy Kognitivnoy Lingvistiki, no 4 (2018) : 47–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.20916/1812-3228-2018-4-47-57.

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Jane Anna Gordon. « The Nature of Political Heroes : Some Aesthetic Considerations ». Discourse 39, no 2 (2017) : 253. http://dx.doi.org/10.13110/discourse.39.2.0253.

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Liseev, Igor K. « Nature in Modern Philosophical Discourse ». Dialogue and Universalism 18, no 11 (2008) : 123–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.5840/du20081811/1211.

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Damyanova, Dessislava. « The Daoist Discourse on Nature ». Journal of Daoist Studies 15, no 1 (2022) : 139–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/dao.2022.0005.

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Christiansen, Erling A. N. « Negative externalities of food production : discourses on the contested Norwegian aquaculture industry ». Journal of Political Ecology 20, no 1 (1 décembre 2013) : 180. http://dx.doi.org/10.2458/v20i1.21747.

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The concern of this article is the language and ontology of negative externalities. Four discourses on the financially successful industry of salmon farming in Norway are critically analyzed and deconstructed. The discourses are: "high turnover discourse", "technology optimism discourse", "first nature discourse" and "traditionalist discourse". Groups defending various discourses differ in their interpretations of a) human/nature relations i.e. either ecocentric, anthropocentric or biocentric, and b) in their respective approach to either a transformative, adaptive or reactive logic. By linking interpretations, concepts and logic inherent to these discourses, it is possible to make conclusions on their degree of coherency. The leading discourses are maintained in language through strategic framing and overdetermination. These linguistic mechanisms are revealed in the discursive application of the concepts of sustainability and wild fish. Rather than to surrender to relativism, the article recommends integration of realism and deconstruction.Key words: Atlantic salmon farming, food production, critical discourse analysis, negative externalities, soft constructionism, parsimony, political ecology, sustainability.
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Aimoldina, А., et D. Akynova. « Kazakh-Language Business Discourse : Nature and Linguistic Features ». Bulletin of L.N. Gumilyov Eurasian National University. Philology Series 130, no 1 (2020) : 69–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.32523/2616-678x-2020-130-1-69-76.

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Thèses sur le sujet "Discourse on Nature"

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Vicas, Astrid. « The nature of fictional discourse ». Thesis, McGill University, 1992. http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=39800.

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This dissertation presents an account of fictional discourse which is teleological. According to it, questions about what is said in fiction and how it ought to be said are answerable in terms of the goals and methods belonging specifically to fiction-making as a practice. Viewed in such a way, it is argued that the incompleteness of fictional discourse and its apparent tolerance of inconsistency are distinctive of it. Moreover, it is argued that there is a sense in which one can produce true statements in fiction without thereby committing one self to the thesis that words made use of in fiction are endowed with reference. Throughout the dissertation, the view espoused in it is contrasted with rival positions on the issues of what fiction is about, and whether it can be true. It is argued that a teleological account of fictional discourse can present a coherent alternative to these.
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Murad, Hasan Sohaib. « Synthesis of human nature and leadership : a multifaceted discourse ». Thesis, University of Wales Trinity Saint David, 2001. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.503582.

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King, Helen Paula. « People in nature and nature in people : a constructivist exploration of ecosystem cultural services ». Thesis, Cranfield University, 2012. http://dspace.lib.cranfield.ac.uk/handle/1826/7627.

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The ecosystem services approach is a set of institutional practices which aim to improve natural resource management and policy making, by highlighting the relationship between well-functioning ecosystems and human wellbeing. Within the approach, cultural services (CS) signify the psycho-social aspects of people-nature interrelations. This concept is an understudied area, and is recognised to exhibit high levels of complexity which make it difficult to evaluate. This thesis deconstructs, explores, clarifies and enhances the CS concept. A flexible, phased research design explores cultural services in relation to a specific case-study site, 'Aspley Woods and Heaths' (England). Cultural services are examined through a series of lenses: as an interdisciplinary construct, as an experience of place, as context, as a resource regime, as a discursive resource and as a personal discourse. Mixed qualitative methods identify how CS is constructed through action, speech and text; via an in depth analysis of primary data from semi-structured visitor and expert interviews, unstructured key informant interviews, and marginal participant observation. Additional data informs the enquiry, from a discourse analysis of key study site documents, and a review of site-related historic, ecological, land management, and policy documents. Results from this thesis subsequently challenge the current published definition and subcategorisation of cultural services. The notion that cultural services are nonmaterial is disputed due to the centrality of physical activities, physical sensations, and access management regimes which require material inputs. The benefits premise is challenged since CS experiences included references to anxiety, injury and conflict. The notion that CS are obtained is disputed due to the reciprocal nature of information exchange between people and features of the environment. The idea that CS are solely from ecosystems is challenged due to the part played by interpretative socio-cultural contexts, and natural and social processes which occur outside site boundaries and specified time frames. Instead, this thesis recommends that cultural services be redefined as the ways that humans use discourse to construct and communicate perceptions of nature. CS arise from processes of interaction (activities) and reciprocal information exchange (information functions) with ecosystems. CS subcategories are hence a series of cognitive, retrospective, intuitive, creative, communicative and regenerative interpretative repertoires, which form the basis of social practices such as designation, restoration and policy. The propensity of environments to embody discourse is concluded to be crucial in defining what is valuable about natural ecosystems, and how these contribute to wellbeing.
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Nielsen, Sigurd Solhaug. « Negotiating nature on display– Discourse and ideology in naturalhistory museums ». Thesis, Norges teknisk-naturvitenskapelige universitet, Geografisk institutt, 2006. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:no:ntnu:diva-25472.

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This thesis considers exhibitions in natural history museums as a process of negotiation between three parties: the museum as an institution, the museum staff, and the visitors. These represent different interests that shape exhibitions relating to nature. The thesis asks the following main question: In what way do discourses play a role in the staff’s work within natural history museums? The empirical sources are based on interviews conducted with staffmembers from eight different natural history museums: six in Austria and two in Norway. The interviews are analysed based on the principles of discourse psychology and critical discourse analysis. The theoretical framework is based on postmodernism as a reaction and countermovement to modernism. Kant’s theory of knowledge, the concept of representation and discourse theory are considered in relation to one another and form an ontological departure for the epistemology. The methodology combines critical discourse analysis and discourse psychology as applied to conversational text. The discourse analysis reveals different discourses concerning the museum as institution, professional museum staff, and the visitors. The thesis concludes that the museum as institution is characterised by a knowledge culture/tradition that was particularly substantiated during the Enlightenment. In turn, the knowledge tradition is characterised by discourse that places expectations regarding the procedures of the employee, but also through the visitors’ expectations as to what a museumis and what the exhibitions provide them with. The employees meet the museum understood as discourse through mainly three different strategies for how exhibitions should function. I call these strategies ‘action promotion’, ‘communication focus’ and ‘political context’. In this way, the identities and actions of the employees depend considerably on their personal relationship to the museum as a concept and discourse, as well as to the visitors’ presumptions, expectations and experiences concerning museums.
Diese Master-Arbeit betrachtet die Ausstellung eines naturgeschichtlichen Museums als Ergebnis eines Verhandlungsprozesses zwischen drei Parteien mit unterschiedlichen Interessen: dem Museumspersonal, dem Museum als Institution sowie dem Publikum. Die Hauptfragestellung der Arbeit lautet: In welcher Weise spielen Diskurse in der Arbeit derwissenschaftlichen Angestellten naturgeschichtlicher Museen eine Rolle? Der theoretische Rahmen der Arbeit basiert auf dem Postmodernismus als einer Reaktion auf und Gegenbewegung zum Modernismus. Kants Erkenntnistheorie, das Konzept der Repräsentation sowie die Diskurstheorie bilden zusammen die ontologische Grundlage der Epistemologie. Die Methodologie kombiniert gesprächsbezogene kritische Diskursanalyse und Diskurspsychologie. Das empirische Material besteht aus Interviews mit wissenschaftlichen Angestellten acht naturgeschichtlicher Museen, davon sechs in Österreich und zwei in Norwegen. Die Diskursanalyse deckt unterschiedliche Diskurse hinsichtlich des Museums als Institution, der wissenschaftlichen Angestellten sowie des Publikums auf. Die Arbeit schlussfolgert, dass das Museum als Institution von einer Wissenskultur gekennzeichnet ist, die insbesondere in der Zeit der Aufklärung begründet ist. Diese Kultur ist insofern diskursgeprägt, als dass sie bestimmte Erwartungen an die Arbeit des Museumspersonals beinhaltet, aber auch durch die Erwartungen des Publikums an ein Museum und seine Ausstellungen. Die Angestellten nähern sich dem Museum als Diskurs, in dem sie hauptsächlich drei verschiedene Strategien im Hinblick auf die Funktion von Ausstellungen verfolgen: Inspiration zu eigenständigem Handeln (”Handlungspromotion”),auf das Publikum zugeschnittene Kommunikation (”Kommunikationsfokus”) sowie Einbeziehung politischen Kontexts. Insofern hängen Identität und Handeln der Angestellten stark von ihrer persönlichen Beziehung zum Museum als Konzept und Diskurs ab, ebenso wie von ihren Annahmen bezüglich der Erwartungen des Publikums und dessen Erfahrungen mit Museen.
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Place, Belinda Mary. « Nature doesn't grow on trees : an analysis of environmental discourse ». Thesis, Loughborough University, 1996. https://dspace.lboro.ac.uk/2134/7162.

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This thesis examines the issue of environmentalism through a study of the construction of the environment or the 'natural world' in contemporary society. It tackles the issue through a close analysis of a selection of material which engages with the environment in different ways. This material has been selected in order to identify methods of organisation and strategies of argument which are present across a range of texts and also to investigate the way in which environmentalism is entwined with other issues in society, such as science, feminism and consumerism. After exploring theories of discourse in the work of Raymond Williams, Claude Levi-Strauss, Roland Barthes and Judith Williamson, a framework of analysis is worked out. This is then used and modified in an examination of how representations of the environment feature in advertisements, eco-feminist texts and popular scientific discourse, and the way in which they become the focus of various discursive practices and techniques.
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Naidu, Sam. « Crimes against nature : ecocritical discourse in South African crime fiction ». UNISA Press Journals - NISC, 2014. http://hdl.handle.net/10962/53754.

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Heeding Patrick Murphy's call to critics, in his book, Ecocritical explorations in literary and cultural studies: fences, boundaries and field, to study “nature-oriented mystery novels … in order to understand the degree to which environmental consciousness and nature awareness has permeated popular and commercial fiction” (2009: 143), this article examines how highly successful author, Deon Meyer, has employed crime fiction to popularize ecological issues and debates in South Africa. In this article, Meyer's first “nature-oriented” novel, the crime thriller, Blood safari (2009), is analysed. The main question asked is whether South African crime fiction deploys ecocritical discourse for mercenary reasons or whether its engagement with environmental issues constitutes a bona fide sub-category of ecocritical literature. The same rationale – understanding how “environmental consciousness and nature awareness” manifest in one of the most popular and commercially viable genres of fiction in South Africa today – informs the broader study from which this article is drawn. Some of the findings of this study, which includes a reading of Meyer's second “nature-oriented” novel, Trackers (2011), Jane Taylor's Of wild dogs, Margaret von Klemperer's Just a dead man, and Ingrid Winterbach's literary detective novel, The book of happenstance, are referred to briefly. To conclude, the contribution of “nature-oriented” crime fiction to a “localised ecocriticism” is assessed
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Homan, Jacqueline. « Realism, social constructionism and 'natural' hazards : a study of people-nature relations in Egypt and the U.K ». Thesis, University of Liverpool, 1998. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.366403.

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Recent literature in the social sciences has emphasized the socially constructed nature of knowledge. Consequently, this has had a bearing upon the understanding of science; interpretations of the natural world; and issues associated with understanding 'the Other'. The relevance of these wider social debates can be extended into a consideration of 'natural' hazards in different cultural contexts. This thesis attempts to develop a 'middle ground', drawing on theories of critical realism, that appreciates the socially constructed nature of scientific practice, but that retains the empancipatory, positive potential of science and that allows intervention in other cultural contexts. The remainder of the thesis attempts to put some of these ideas into practice and to develop the implications of these arguments for those interested in understanding and mitigating 'natural' hazards in other cultures. Two case studies are used, relating to Egypt and the U.K., which explore the scientific understandings of 'natural' hazard events in two different cultural contexts. Fundamental to the approach adopted is the need to acknowledge science as a social practice and how it functions within different societies. Examples are given, pertaining to both Egypt and the U.K., of what this might mean in 'practice'. In summary, therefore, there is an appreciation of the implications of recent social science literature for hazards research and the development of a practical approach to hazards with a social and philosophical justification
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MacDonald, Margaret Ellen. « Expectations the cultural construction of nature in midwifery discourse in Ontario / ». Thesis, National Library of Canada = Bibliothèque nationale du Canada, 1999. http://www.collectionscanada.ca/obj/s4/f2/dsk2/ftp02/NQ39285.pdf.

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Williams, Donald A. « The Nature of Discourse in Small Group Discussions During Reflective Teaching / ». The Ohio State University, 1995. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1382449356.

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Talbot, Carl. « The myths of environmentalism : nature, discipline and the class struggle ». Thesis, Cardiff University, 1995. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.363250.

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Livres sur le sujet "Discourse on Nature"

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1945-, JanMohamed Abdul R., et Lloyd, David, 1955 Dec. 20-, dir. The Nature and context of minority discourse. New York : Oxford University Press, 1990.

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The nature and context of minority discourse. USA : OUP, 1991.

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1970-, Weisser Christian R., dir. Natural discourse : Toward ecocomposition. Albany : State University of New York Press, 2002.

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Rapport, Nigel. Human nature as capacity : Transcending discourse and classification. New York : Berghahn Books, 2010.

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1942-, Fischer Frank, et Hajer Maarten A. 1962-, dir. Living with nature : Environmental politics as cultural discourse. New York : Oxford University Press, 1999.

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1956-, Rapport Nigel, dir. Human nature as capacity : Transcending discourse and classification. New York : Berghahn Books, 2010.

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Devitt, Seán. Classroom discourse : Its nature and its potential for languagelearning. (Dublin, Ireland) : University of Dublin, Trinity College, 1989.

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Sacred language : The nature of supernatural discourse in Lakota. Norman : University of Oklahoma Press, 1986.

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R, Sarbin Theodore, dir. Narrative psychology : The storied nature of human conduct. New York : Praeger, 1986.

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Religion in modern Islamic discourse. New York, N.Y : Columbia University Press, 2009.

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Chapitres de livres sur le sujet "Discourse on Nature"

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Hultgren, John. « Discourse, nature and critical political economy ». Dans Critical Methods in Political and Cultural Economy, 64–69. Abingdon, Oxon ; New York, NY : Routledge, 2017. | : Routledge, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315677811-8.

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Miles, Suzanna. « The changing nature of tourism discourse ». Dans Teaching English for Tourism, 93–113. London ; New York, NY : Routledge, 2019. : Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429032141-4.

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Elsey, Christopher, Lynn Monrouxe et Andrew Grant. « Chapter 3. The reciprocal nature of trust in bedside teaching encounters ». Dans Trust and Discourse, 45–70. Amsterdam : John Benjamins Publishing Company, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/dapsac.56.03els.

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Broecker, Hannah. « On the Origins and Nature of Meaning ». Dans Securitisation as Hegemonic Discourse Formation, 11–44. Cham : Springer International Publishing, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-16206-0_2.

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Szwedek, Aleksander. « The Antonymous Nature of Even and Only ». Dans Language Learning, Discourse and Communication, 261–66. Cham : Springer International Publishing, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-00419-8_18.

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Koslowski, Peter. « Nature and Technology in the Religions ». Dans A Discourse of the World Religions, 1–17. Dordrecht : Springer Netherlands, 2001. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-017-2394-7_1.

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Fox, Barbara A. « On the embodied nature of grammar ». Dans Complex Sentences in Grammar and Discourse, 79–99. Amsterdam : John Benjamins Publishing Company, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/z.110.06fox.

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Sethy, Satya Sundar. « Definition, Nature, and Scope of Logic ». Dans Introduction to Logic and Logical Discourse, 3–19. Singapore : Springer Singapore, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-16-2689-0_1.

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Fetzer, Anita. « The multilayered and multifaceted nature of political discourse ». Dans The Pragmatics of Political Discourse, 1–18. Amsterdam : John Benjamins Publishing Company, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/pbns.228.01fet.

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Garb, Yaakov. « Toward a Political Ecology of Environmental Discourse ». Dans After the Death of Nature, 235–48. New York, NY : Routledge, 2019. : Routledge, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315099378-15.

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Actes de conférences sur le sujet "Discourse on Nature"

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Tárnyiková, Jarmila. « The multifaceted and whimsical nature of discourse ». Dans 9th Brno Conference on Linguistics Studies in English. Brno : Masaryk University Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.5817/cz.muni.p280-0212-2022-1.

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My contribution, rooted in functional and systemic grammar, is based on the assumption that though discourse as a social behaviour and verbal interaction has been studied by great minds for decades, the dynamism of human evolution and the consequent changes in communicative strategies can hardly leave discourse analysts immune to a whole spectrum of new challenges. These are evoked by changes in the scope of items considered to be relevant for present-day research, by blurring the traditional borderlines between categories (written manifestation of spoken discourse in chatting), but before all by the existence of language corpora offering the immensity of data across genres, language varieties and language interfaces. A brief introduction (Part 1) will be followed by three main parts, focusing on reasons for multifacetedness in discourse (Part 2), whimsical nature of discourse (Part 3), and hands-on experience with overt language manifestations of vagueness, as exemplified by English placeholders (Mrs Thingy, John Whatsisname, whatchamacallit, so-and-so) emergent from the BNC and COCA corpora (Part 4). The aim is twofold: to map the facets which contribute to patterning and variation in discourse shaping, and by using authentic language data amplify the role of peripheral language devices in interaction.
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Chernyak, Aleksey, et Svetlana Rudanovskaya. « Sympathy for Nature in Contemporary Ethical Discourse ». Dans Proceedings of the International Conference on Contemporary Education, Social Sciences and Ecological Studies (CESSES 2018). Paris, France : Atlantis Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/cesses-18.2018.169.

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Shamshurin, A. « THE EXISTENCE OF THE CONSUMING PERSON IN THE CONTEXT OF SOCIO-NATURAL HISTORY ». Dans Man and Nature : Priorities of Modern Research in the Area of Interaction of Nature and Society. LCC MAKS Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.29003/m2582.s-n_history_2021_44/34-38.

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A socio-natural history assumes the space of human definition. "Man" is defined through two points: "Homo sapiens" described in terms of science and "everyday man" represented in everyday experience. "Homo oeconomicus" becomes the intersection of scientific discourse and everyday knowledge. He fully coincides with the definable "man". "Man consuming" appropriates the social meanings of man so that every interaction and relationship concerns economic meanings. Society in the process of self-description produces social constructs including the construct of "man". Thus, economic discourse collapses with the production of the social. Economy is hermeticized and becomes the standard of social meanings. However, the production of social constructs is preceded by the production of their consumption as a possibility of their existence as social. This production of production (through consumption) closes in on itself. It becomes clear that "consumer society" is constructible. It is possible to reach the limits of economic discourse by "reading" consumption as non-social, i.e., meaningless, production. The non-social turns out to be a null construct as well as a potential possibility of new meanings. Thus "Homo oeconomicus" turns out to be precisely the construct that produces consumption, and thus the production of new social constructs. As an example of this, the discussion of "social networks" is cited in the article
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Boyarkina, I. « SPECIALISED TOURIST DISCOURSE ». Dans SAKHAROV READINGS 2021 : ENVIRONMENTAL PROBLEMS OF THE XXI CENTURY. International Sakharov Environmental Institute, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.46646/sakh-2021-1-178-181.

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The concept of specialised tourism discourse presents several difficulties for researchers. First of all, at present there is no unanimity among scholars about the definition of specialised discourse due to the variety of approaches employed in this field. Another difficulty arises from a binary nature of the language of tourism: on the one hand, it is employed by numerous specialists working in the industry of tourism. On the other hand, due to the high social impact of tourism and for promotional purposes tourism discourse must cater for as many people (tourists and potential clients) as possible, hence, its language must be comprehensible even for laymen with different levels of instruction. As many lingiusts observe, “Rarely are the professional aspects of tourism discourse investigated” (Maci 2020). Moreover, development of Internet brought further challenges to the studies of specialised tourism discourse. This paper focuses on the analysis of tourism discourse in English in socials for promotional purposes and on the specialised tourism discourse of ecological sustainability of the industry of tourism.
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Старикова, Дарья. « SYNERGETIC NATURE OF THE CONCEPT OF HAPPINESS IN THE DYSTOPIAN DISCOURSE ». Dans CROSS-CULTURAL↔INTRA-CULTURAL COMMUNICATION : THEORY AND PRACTICE OF TRAINING AND TRANSLATING. Baskir State University, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.33184/miktipoip-2021-12-02.37.

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Žnidarič, Davorin. « Trajnostni razvoj in njegova nadgradnja glede na probleme sodobne družbe v prostoru ». Dans Values, Competencies and Changes in Organizations. University of Maribor Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.18690/978-961-286-442-2.78.

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Sustainable development, or discourse, is currently still the dominant environmental discourse in international and local environments, which was formed on the initiative of the so-called Brundtland Commission in the mid-1980s due to many social problems, especially environmental problems and their consequences. It basically represented the first global response from a critical, wider public, due to the growing needs of an ever-growing population, spatial pressures and lack of environmental awareness, reflected in increasing consequences for living and non-living nature and especially for humans. The idea of sustainable discourse represented the beginning of a positive direction in solving environmental problems, but in practice the environmental paradigm is still insufficiently established and globally effectively accepted, the operation of which often develops only on a theoretical level. Due to the lack and unification of concepts, but above all practical, efficient and feasible concepts in space, it is necessary to upgrade sustainable discourse, which will take into account modern trends and current spatial and natural conditions and limitations.
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Расулова, М. « Dramatik diskurs pragmatik xususiyatlari tasnifi ». Dans TEACHING FOREIGN LANGUAGES IN THE CONTEXT OF SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT : BEST PRACTICES, PROBLEMS AND OPPORTUNITIES. ISCRC, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.37547/geo-53.

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The article deals with the nature of dramatic discourse in linguistics, its pragmatic features, the comparative, systemic-structural, descriptive and analytical research of linguo-cultural units that exist as concepts or concepts in the language of a person under the responsibility of linguistics based on an anthropocentric approach, as well as discourse, its essence, and classification.
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Mavuru, Lydia. « THE NATURE OF CLASSROOM DISCOURSE IN PRE-SERVICE LIFE SCIENCES TEACHERS’ LESSONS IN JOHANNESBURG ». Dans International Conference on Education and New Developments. inScience Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.36315/2019v1end090.

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Girutskij, A. A. « VERBALIZATION OF ENVIRONMENTAL DISCOURSE IN “ENVIRONMENTAL NOVEL” S.P. SALYGIN’S : SEMANTIC DOMINANTS ». Dans SAKHAROV READINGS 2021 : ENVIRONMENTAL PROBLEMS OF THE XXI CENTURY. International Sakharov Environmental Institute, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.46646/sakh-2021-1-189-192.

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The report examines the verbal and artistic content of the ecological discourse in the work of Zalygin “Ecological Novel”. The main components of the novel’s ecological discourse are characterized: ideological, economic, political, cultural-historical, ethical, scientific and technical which serve as a background that determines the specifics of semantic dominants. The following semantic dominants are distinguished in the architectonics of the novel as “golden fish”, “Five hundred and first construction site”, “kWh - kilowatt-hour”, “science and nature”, “Chernobyl”.
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Corobcean, Andrei. « Ethnicity and cultural identity from an archeological point of view ». Dans Latinitate, Romanitate, Românitate. Conferinţa ştiinţifică internaţională, Ediția a 7-a. Moldova State University, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.59295/lrr2023.04.

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The ethnic interpretations in archaeology have always been the subject of controversial discussions, considering the nature of archaeological sources and the risk of tendentious approaches. However, the actuality of the issue of ethnic reconstructions from the past returns every time the political and historiographical discourse imposes it. Thus, the critical analysis of the possibilities of the interpreting identities in archeology is important for combating tendentious discourses, preventing the risks of unilateral manipulations of the past. Obviously, the poorer the written sources, the more speculative the tendency to supplement them with archaeological ones. In this view, according to Iron Age or early medieval identities must be made with great caution when we establish a correlation between the archaeological remains and the few historical sources.
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Rapports d'organisations sur le sujet "Discourse on Nature"

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Stefan, Madalina. Conviviality, Ecocriticism and the Anthropocene : An Approach to Postcolonial Resistance and Ecofeminism in the Latin American Jungle Novel. Maria Sibylla Merian Centre Conviviality-Inequality in Latin America, avril 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.46877/stefan.2022.43.

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In the context of the Anthropocene, ecocriticism is gaining an increasingly important role, foregrounding the inextricability of nature and culture, on the one hand, and the postcolonial cultural representation from the Global South on the other. Against this backdrop, the present working paper will focus on the Latin American context, suggesting that conviviality signifies a crucial contribution to the discourse about the Anthropocene and serves as an ideal theoretical framework for the research project on “Postcolonial Resistance and Ecofeminism in the Latin American Jungle novel”, which is outlined at the end of the paper.
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Javed, Umair, Aiza Hussain et Hassan Aziz. Demanding Power : Contentious Politics and Electricity in Pakistan. Institute of Development Studies (IDS), juin 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.19088/ids.2021.047.

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This paper explores Pakistan’s electricity supply crisis that lasted from 2007 to 2015, and the ensuing contention that shaped public discourse and political events in the country. During this period, which witnessed electricity outages of up to 14 hours per day, 456 incidents of contention took place, with just under 20 per cent escalating into some form of violence. Electricity became the number one political issue in the country and was integral in shaping the outcomes of the 2013 General Election. Following the election, public authorities undertook extensive investment to expand capacity and ensure consistency in supply while evading questions about affordability and sustainability. On the surface, this appears to be a case of extensive protest working towards shaping state responsiveness. And it is true that the state now sees supply as a non-negotiable aspect in the social contract with citizens. However, a range of factors contributed to the chronology and the selective, generation-focused nature of this response. On the other hand, citizen inclusion and participation in decision-making, and issues of affordability and sustainability, which impact vulnerable and disempowered groups the most, remain absent from the political and policy conversation around energy. This suggests that while protests were useful in generating a short-term response, their long-term legacy in empowerment related outcomes is less visible.
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Hirschman, Lynette. Integrating Syntax, Semantics, and Discourse DARPA Natural Language Understanding Program. Fort Belvoir, VA : Defense Technical Information Center, février 1987. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada178411.

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Hirschman, Lynette. Integrating Syntax, Semantics, and Discourse DARPA Natural Language Understanding Program. Fort Belvoir, VA : Defense Technical Information Center, octobre 1985. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada163439.

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Hirschman, Lynette. Integrating Syntax, Semantics , and Discourse DARPA Natural Language Understanding Program. Fort Belvoir, VA : Defense Technical Information Center, février 1986. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada165285.

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Hirschman, Lynette. Integrating Syntax, Semantics, and Discourse DARPA Natural Language Understanding Program. Fort Belvoir, VA : Defense Technical Information Center, mai 1986. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada168341.

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Hirschman, Lynette. Integrating Syntax, Semantics, and Discourse DARPA Natural Language Understanding Program. Fort Belvoir, VA : Defense Technical Information Center, novembre 1986. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada175282.

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Hirschman, Lynette. Integrating Syntax, Semantics, and Discourse DARPA Natural Language Understanding Program. Fort Belvoir, VA : Defense Technical Information Center, août 1986. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada175283.

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Crispin, Darla. Artistic Research as a Process of Unfolding. Norges Musikkhøgskole, août 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.22501/nmh-ar.503395.

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As artistic research work in various disciplines and national contexts continues to develop, the diversity of approaches to the field becomes ever more apparent. This is to be welcomed, because it keeps alive ideas of plurality and complexity at a particular time in history when the gross oversimplifications and obfuscations of political discourses are compromising the nature of language itself, leading to what several commentators have already called ‘a post-truth’ world. In this brutal environment where ‘information’ is uncoupled from reality and validated only by how loudly and often it is voiced, the artist researcher has a responsibility that goes beyond the confines of our discipline to articulate the truth-content of his or her artistic practice. To do this, they must embrace daring and risk-taking, finding ways of communicating that flow against the current norms. In artistic research, the empathic communication of information and experience – and not merely the ‘verbally empathic’ – is a sign of research transferability, a marker for research content. But this, in some circles, is still a heretical point of view. Research, in its more traditional manifestations mistrusts empathy and individually-incarnated human experience; the researcher, although a sentient being in the world, is expected to behave dispassionately in their professional discourse, and with a distrust for insights that come primarily from instinct. For the construction of empathic systems in which to study and research, our structures still need to change. So, we need to work toward a new world (one that is still not our idea), a world that is symptomatic of what we might like artistic research to be. Risk is one of the elements that helps us to make the conceptual twist that turns subjective, reflexive experience into transpersonal, empathic communication and/or scientifically-viable modes of exchange. It gives us something to work with in engaging with debates because it means that something is at stake. To propose a space where such risks may be taken, I shall revisit Gillian Rose’s metaphor of ‘the fold’ that I analysed in the first Symposium presented by the Arne Nordheim Centre for Artistic Research (NordART) at the Norwegian Academy of Music in November 2015. I shall deepen the exploration of the process of ‘unfolding’, elaborating on my belief in its appropriateness for artistic research work; I shall further suggest that Rose’s metaphor provides a way to bridge some of the gaps of understanding that have already developed between those undertaking artistic research and those working in the more established music disciplines.
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Hirschman, Lynette. Integrating Syntax, Semantics, and Discourse DARPA (Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency) Natural Language Understanding Program. Fort Belvoir, VA : Defense Technical Information Center, août 1988. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada200485.

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