Transversale
In: Le syndicalisme dans la France occupée, S. 195-203
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In: Le syndicalisme dans la France occupée, S. 195-203
In: Urbana: revista eletrônica do Centro Interdisciplinar de Estudos sobre a Cidade, Band 7, Heft 2, S. 86
ISSN: 1982-0569
Temáticas feministas e de gênero ganharam proeminência em publicações nos Estados Unidos no início dos anos 90. A tradução para o português, em 2006, da coletânea organizada por Kate Nesbitt, em 1995, viabilizou amplo acesso nacional aos debates teóricos dos centros especializados do Norte. Este artigo apresenta uma revisão bibliográfica de alguns destes textos e sugere potencialidades e limites para a historiografia da arquitetura e da cidade. A análise dos textos leva a uma concepção transversal da narrativa histórica a partir do olhar de diferentes sujeitos e dos atravessamentos do tempo cotidiano com o tempo histórico, do espaço sensível com o espaço construído.
Increasingly, the images we regard as authoritative – those with a seem - ingly direct relation to the "˜truth' of our brains, profiling our identities, or mapping our universe – are not generated optically. They are composed out of other media, notably sonic and electromagnetic materialities, and other processes, primarily algebraic and statistical transforms. In actuality they are transmaterial assemblages. Yet such heterogeneous image enti - ties continue to command the epistemological privilege of indexicality that light-based images previously claimed. If the scientific, authoritative image is already constituted "˜transgenically, ' what implication does this have for interference as a viable aesthetic strategy? To what extent can artists and cultural producers visually interfere with the politics and ethics of such im - aging practices? This article suggests that we should abandon the strategy of interference as intervention in favour of a better understanding of in - terference as pattern, indeed fabric, subtending many contemporary non - visual imaging practices. I argue for a transversal diagrammatic approach to the nonvisual image; to diagramming as both a holding together and a dynamic deformation of images into new assemblages. In turn, such dia - grammatic practices reflexively remind us that what we see as fixed and authoritative images are instead processual, virtual and speculative modes of "˜viewing' and engaging life.
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In: Soundings: a journal of politics and culture, Heft 12, S. 90-93
ISSN: 1362-6620
In: Critical times: interventions in global critical theory, Band 6, Heft 2, S. 189-194
ISSN: 2641-0478
Abstract
This short intervention examines the relationship between Black trans life and coral bleaching through discourses of tipping points.
In: Integration — Desintegration, S. 433-450
In: Idées ećonomiques et sociales
ISSN: 2116-5289
In: The Borders of Punishment, S. 93-110
In: Soundings: a journal of politics and culture, Heft 12, S. 94-114
ISSN: 1362-6620
In: 15 S. Cal. Rev. L. & Women's Stud 65 (2005)
SSRN
In der Arbeitssoziologie wird Arbeit überwiegend mit formell regulierter, betrieblicher Lohnarbeit gleichgesetzt. Dieser Umstand ist auf den historischen Kontext des Faches zurückzuführen, hat aber auch theoretische und politische Gründe. So erfolgreich die Arbeitssoziologie damit gewesen ist, so sehr steht dieser Fokus in Spannung zur faktischen Pluralität von Arbeit. Diese rückt seit den 1970er Jahren und der Forschung zu unbezahlter (Sorge-)Arbeit und informeller Arbeit immer mehr ins Blickfeld der internationalen Arbeitsforschung. Vor diesem Hintergrund plädiert der Beitrag für eine transversale Arbeitssoziologie, die die Pluralität von Arbeitsformen systematisch in den Blick nimmt. Dabei werden verschiedene Arbeitsformen als analytisch gleichrangige und gesellschaftlich hierarchisierte Tätigkeiten in einem Spektrum erfasst und ihre Interdependenzen und konstitutiven Wechselwirkungen zentral berücksichtigt. Anregungen für einen solchen Perspektivwechsel liefert der Ansatz einer 'Total Social Organization of Labour'. ; In the sociology of work, work is predominantly equated with paid, formally regulated work. This is due to the historical context of the discipline but has also theoretical and political reasons. As successful as the discipline has been with this focus, it contradicts the factual plurality of work. Since the 1970s and research on unpaid (care) work and informal work, this has become the focus of international research. Against this background, the article argues for a 'transversal sociology of work' which systematically considers the plurality of work. In doing so, different forms of work are captured in a spectrum as analytically equal but socially hierarchized, and their interdependencies are centrally considered. Suggestions for such a change of perspective are provided by the approach of a 'Total Social Organization of Labour'.
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