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The Lebanese post-civil war novel: memory, trauma, and capital
In: Palgrave studies in cultural heritage and conflict
"After the Lebanese Civil War, many of Lebanon's best known novelists committed themselves to building a "memory for the future." More than twenty years later, Elias Khoury's and Rashid al-Daif's postwar novels rank among the most important texts in contemporary Arabic literature and a new generation of authors has begun writing about the civil war. The role of collective and individual trauma seems to be central to this development. However, as this book will show, the Lebanese Post-civil war novel is a response not so much to trauma, but to the forces at work in the literary field. From the book market to literary prizes and the similarity of the writers' biographies and socio-economic backgrounds, a number of factors worked in favor of novels offering a literary war narrative for Lebanon's secular upper-middle class"--
Bourdieu, Latour and Rasha Abbas: The Uses of Actor-Network Theory for Studying the Field(s) of Cultural Production in the Middle East and North Africa
In: Cultural sociology, Volume 13, Issue 4, p. 428-443
ISSN: 1749-9763
Since the events of the 'Arab Spring' in 2011, the field(s) of cultural production of the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) have attracted considerable scholarly attention. However, the conceptual and methodological tools of cultural sociology, mostly developed for and through research in western societies, often have limited purchase when it comes to the empirical reality of cultural production in the MENA. This article proposes to introduce concepts from actor-network theory (ANT) in order to adapt Bourdieu's conceptual framework of analysis to the case of globally dominated, transnational and relatively unstable spaces of cultural production. Two main arguments are being pursued: (1) Conceiving the field as network(s) offers a way of opening up the rigid and nation-centred space to include transnational as well as transient relations between actors that may only briefly play a role in cultural production. (2) In a situation where the artwork is the most immediately visible expression of the field's structure, the role of objects in constituting the field must be reassessed. ANT offers ways of making full use of the heuristic potential of material objects and thus provides a privileged starting point for the analysis of fields in flux.
World Affairs Online
Culture and crisis in the Arab world: art, practice and production in spaces of conflict
"Since 2011, the art of the Arab uprisings has been the subject of much scholarly and popular attention. Yet the role of artists, writers and filmmakers themselves as social actors working under extraordinary conditions has been relatively neglected. Drawing on critical readings of Bourdieu's Field Theory, this book explores the production of culture in Arab social spaces in 'crisis'. In ten case studies, contributors examine a wide range of countries and conflicts, from Algeria to the Arab countries of the Gulf. They discuss among other things the impact of Western public diplomacy organisations on the arts scene in post-revolutionary Cairo and the consequences of dwindling state support for literary production in Yemen. Providing a valuable source of empirical data for researchers, the book breaks new ground in adapting Bourdieu's theory to the particularities of cultural production in the Middle East and North Africa."--Bloomsbury Publishing
The porous borders of extremism: Autonomous Nationalists at the crossroad with the extreme left
In: Behavioral sciences of terrorism & political aggression, Volume 7, Issue 1, p. 69-83
ISSN: 1943-4480
This article explores the ways in which the Autonomous Nationalists (ANs) have borrowed from extreme left discourse, style and repertoires of action, and in particular inquires into the ways in which such choices have been justified in online discourse. Based on a sample of AN websites throughout Germany, a mix of deductive and inductive content analysis revealed that central subcultural concepts were present, but not as arguments per se, or only to a very small extent in the data. The bulk of the arguments were rather phrased in strategic terms, and to a lesser extent as a matter of taste or enjoyment. This confirms at the discursive level earlier findings at the individual level with regard to the importance of agency and taste for individual life choices along the radicalization path toward right-wing extremism. Adapted from the source document.
The porous borders of extremism: Autonomous Nationalists at the crossroad with the extreme left
In: Behavioral sciences of terrorism & political aggression, Volume 7, Issue 1, p. 69-83
ISSN: 1943-4480
Das römische Heer: Wirtschaft und Kulturträger : Colloquium Lauriacum 2016 : Beiträge zur Tagung im Museum Lauriacum - Enns, 22.-24. September 2016
In: Forschungen in Lauriacum Band 19
Arabistik: eine literatur- und kulturwissenschaftliche Einführung
In: Lehrbuch J.B. Metzler
World Affairs Online
Einfach göttlich!: Mythologisches von der Antike bis zur heutigen Werbung ; [Katalog zu den Ausstellungen: 'Einfach göttlich! Mythologisches von den alten Römern zu heutigen Werbung' (Oberösterreichisches Landesmuseum, Schlossmuseum Linz, 2013) und 'Merkur, Mars & Co. - Vom Mythos zur Marke' (Lande...
In: Katalog N.F., 49
Gedenkschrift für Wolfgang Wohlmayr
In: Archaeo plus 13
Gräber in Kontaktregionen: Aussagepotenzial und Methoden bei der Auswertung römerzeitlicher Nekropolen : Workshop vom 8. bis 10. November 2021 am Österreichischen Archäologischen Institut in Wien
In: Archaeo plus 14
Proton Radiation Hardness of Perovskite Tandem Photovoltaics
Monolithic [Cs0.05(MA0. 17FA0. 83)0.95]Pb(I0.83Br0.17)3/Cu(In,Ga)Se2 (perovskite/CIGS) tandem solar cells promise high performance and can be processed on flexible substrates, enabling cost-efficient and ultra-lightweight space photovoltaics with power-to-weight and power-to-cost ratios surpassing those of state-of-the-art III-V semiconductor-based multijunctions. However, to become a viable space technology, the full tandem stack must withstand the harsh radiation environments in space. Here, we design tailored operando and ex situ measurements to show that perovskite/CIGS cells retain over 85% of their initial efficiency even after 68 MeV proton irradiation at a dose of 2 × 1012 p+/cm2. We use photoluminescence microscopy to show that the local quasi-Fermi-level splitting of the perovskite top cell is unaffected. We identify that the efficiency losses arise primarily from increased recombination in the CIGS bottom cell and the nickel-oxide-based recombination contact. These results are corroborated by measurements of monolithic perovskite/silicon-heterojunction cells, which severely degrade to 1% of their initial efficiency due to radiation-induced recombination centers in silicon. ; F.L. acknowledges financial support from the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation via the Feodor Lynen program and thanks Prof. Sir R. Friend for supporting his Fellowship at the Cavendish Laboratory. This work was supported by the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme (HYPERION, grant agreement number 756962). M.J, A.A.A., E.K., and S.A. acknowledge financial support from the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) via program "Materialforschung für die Energiewende" (grant no. 03SF0540), by the German Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy (BMWi) through the 'PersiST' project (Grant No. 0324037C). T.B. C.A.K. and R.S. acknowledge funding by BMWi through the speedCIGS (grant no. 0324095E) and EFFCIS project (grant no. 0324076D). D.K. and M.C. acknowledge financial support from the Dutch Ministry of Economic Affairs, via The Top-consortia Knowledge and Innovation (TKI) Program ''Photovoltaic modules based on a p-i-n stack, manufactured on a roll-to-roll line featuring high efficiency, stability and strong market perspective'' (PVPRESS) (TEUE118010) and "Bridging the voltage gap" (BRIGHT) (1721101). K. F. acknowledges the George and Lilian Schiff Fund, the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC), the Winton Sustainability Fellowship, and the Cambridge Trust for funding. S.D.S. acknowledges the Royal Society and Tata Group (UF150033). The authors acknowledge the EPSRC for funding (EP/R023980/1). This project has received funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie Skłodowska-Curie grant agreement No. 841265. A.R.B. acknowledges funding from a Winton Studentship, Oppenheimer Studentship, and funding from the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) Doctoral Training Centre in Photovoltaics (CDT-PV). K.G. acknowledges the Polish Ministry of Science and Higher Education within the Mobilnosc Plus program (Grant No. 1603/MOB/V/2017/0).
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