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  1. Development and Validation of the Purity Orientation–Pollution Avoidance Scale: A Study With Japanese Sample.Hideya Kitamura & Akiko Matsuo - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    The moral foundations theory (MFT) proposes that there are five moral foundations that work as the standard to make moral judgments. Among them, the purity foundation is a complex concept. It is considered to be a distinctive foundation compared with the other ones partly because it involves religious beliefs. The assumption underlying the purity foundation is Christian beliefs, so the MFT was developed and made prevalent mostly in the Western cultures. However, because of that assumption, cultural differences in perceiving the (...)
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  • Strange vegetation: Emotional undercurrents of Tove Jansson’s Moominvalley in November.Sara Heinämaa - 2018 - SATS 19 (1):41-67.
    This article investigates the emotional undercurrents of Tove Jansson’s Moominvalley in November. I argue that one of the main characters of Jansson’s book is the autumn forest that surrounds the abandoned Moomin house. The decomposing forest is not just an emblem of the inner lives of the guests that gather in the house but is an active character itself: an ambiguous life form that creeps in the house and must be expelled from its living core. I further demonstrate that the (...)
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  • (1 other version)“You can’t manage with your heart”: risk and responsibility in farm to school food safety.Jennifer Jo Thompson, A. June Brawner & Usha Kaila - 2017 - Agriculture and Human Values 34 (3):683-699.
    Farm to School programs aim to connect school children with local foods, to promote a synergistic relationship between local farmers, child nutrition and education goals, and community development. Drawing from 18 months of ethnographic research with a regional FTS project and interviews with child nutrition program operators implementing FTS across Georgia, we identify perceptions of food safety as an emerging barrier in efforts to bring local foods into schools. Conducting a thematic analysis of data related to food safety, we find (...)
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  • Nietzsche: Through the Lens of Purity.Robbie Duschinsky - 2011 - Journal of Nietzsche Studies 41 (1):50-64.
    In remarks scattered across his corpus of writings, Nietzsche offers a fascinating analysis of the theme of purity. In this article I systematize these fragments into a genealogy and draw out conclusions relevant to philosophy and cultural criticism. Nietzsche argues that the Christian use of purity, as both an ideal and a means of achieving self-martyrdom of the will, has been retained in modern Western culture. He is generally quite skeptical of purity, considering it to be tightly associated with dominating (...)
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  • Primitive Classification and Postmodernity: Towards a Sociological Notion of Fiction.Karin Knorr Cetina - 1994 - Theory, Culture and Society 11 (3):1-22.
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  • 'Only odd people wore suede shoes':1 careers and sexual identities of men attending a sexual health clinic.Anthony Pryce - 2004 - Nursing Inquiry 11 (4):258-270.
    This paper is concerned with the ways in which men construct and explain their sexual identity. When attending a genitourinary medicine (GUM) clinic the constraints of the system and the imperatives of the clinical encounter tend to be reductive, reinforcing the dominant constructions of male sexuality and masculinity. Interviews with men recruited as part of a study of the social construction of male sexuality yielded richly textured narratives of sexual experiences and explanations of sexual identity. The paper reports on the (...)
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  • The Question of Moral Action: A Formalist Position.Iddo Tavory - 2011 - Sociological Theory 29 (4):272 - 293.
    This article develops a research position that allows cultural sociologists to compare morality across sociohistorical cases. In order to do so, the article suggests focusing analytic attention on actions that fulfill the following criteria: (a) actions that define the actor as a certain kind of socially recognized person, both within and across fields; (b) actions that actors experience—or that they expect others to perceive—as defining the actor both intersituationally and to a greater extent than other available definitions of self; and (...)
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  • Embodied and Embedded Morality: Divinity, Identity, and Disgust.Heather Looy - 2004 - Zygon 39 (1):219-235.
    Our understanding of human morality would benefit from an integrated interdisciplinary approach, built on the assumption that human beings are multidimensional unities with real, irreducible, and mutually interdependent spiritual, relational, emotional, rational, and physiological aspects. We could integrate relevant information from neurobiological, psychosocial, and theological perspectives, avoiding unnecessary reductionism and naturalism. This approach is modeled by addressing the particular limited role of disgust in morality. Psychosocial research reveals disgust as a universal emotion that enables evaluation and regulation of certain moral (...)
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  • Austin's Mistake about 'Real'.D. J. C. Angluin - 1974 - Philosophy 49 (187):47 - 62.
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  • I. Apes and angels: Reductionism, selection, and emergence in the study of man.Eileen Barker - 1976 - Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 19 (1-4):367-387.
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  • The shock of the new: A psycho-dynamic extension of social representational theory.Hélène Joffe - 1996 - Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 26 (2):197–219.
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  • The action-constitutive theory of monuments: A strong pragmatist version.A. Martin Byers - 1992 - Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 22 (4):403–446.
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  • Notes on Structuralism: Introduction.Sunil Manghani - 2022 - Theory, Culture and Society 39 (7-8):117-131.
    This commentary introduces a section of the journal titled ‘Notes on Structuralism’. It centres around two interviews. The first, from 1987, is with the structural anthropologist Mary Douglas (who speaks on various aspects of her work, including on Purity and Danger). The second is an interview with Roland Barthes, who, speaking in 1965, was at the height of his structuralist phase. The interview focuses upon the structural analysis of narrative and prefigures the well-known volume of Communications on the subject. The (...)
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  • Discourses on im/migrants, ethnic minorities, and infectious disease: Fifty years of tuberculosis reporting in the United Kingdom.Hella von Unger & Penelope Scott - 2022 - History of the Human Sciences 35 (1):189-215.
    Ethnicity and im/migrant classification systems and their constituent categories have a long history in the construction of public health knowledge on tuberculosis in the United Kingdom. This article critically examines the categories employed and the epidemiological discourses on TB, im/migrants, and ethnic minorities in health reporting between 1965 and 2015. We employ a Sociology of Knowledge Approach to Discourse Analysis to trace the continuities and changes in the categories used and in the discursive construction of im/migrants, ethnic minorities, and TB. (...)
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  • The turn of the body: history and the politics of the corporeal.Roger Cooter - 2010 - Arbor 186 (743):393-405.
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  • Ekel und Emotionsforschung. Mediävistische Überlegungen zur "Aisthetik" des Häß..Rüdiger Schnell - 2005 - Deutsche Vierteljahrsschrift für Literaturwissenschaft Und Geistesgeschichte 79 (3):359-432.
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  • Making a meal of the big dish: the construction of the Jodrell Bank Mark 1 radio telescope as a stable edifice, 1946–57.Jon Agar - 1994 - British Journal for the History of Science 27 (1):3-21.
    From a distance the Mark 1 radio telescope at Jodrell Bank is an edifying sight. It is a steel structure of over 1000 tons, holding aloft a fully steerable dish of wire mesh which focuses incoming radio waves from astronomical objects. It is set in gently rolling Cheshire countryside. Its striking appearance can easily be recruited as a powerful symbol of progress and of science as the pursuit of pioneering spirits.
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  • The cultural environment: measuring culture with big data.Christopher A. Bail - 2014 - Theory and Society 43 (3-4):465-482.
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  • I See Dead People: Insights From the Humanities Into the Nature of Plastinated Cadavers. [REVIEW]Mike R. King, Maja I. Whitaker & D. Gareth Jones - 2014 - Journal of Medical Humanities 35 (4):361-376.
    Accounts from the humanities which focus on describing the nature of whole body plastinates are examined. We argue that this literature shows that plastinates do not clearly occupy standard cultural binary categories of interior or exterior, real or fake, dead or alive, bodies or persons, self or other and argue that Noël Carroll’s structural framework for horrific monsters unites the various accounts of the contradictory or ambiguous nature of plastinates while also showing how plastinates differ from horrific fictional monsters. In (...)
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  • (1 other version)The Physical Form of the School.Kate Evans - 1979 - British Journal of Educational Studies 27 (1):29 - 41.
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  • Translational neonatology research: transformative encounters across species and disciplines.Mie S. Dam, Per T. Sangild & Mette N. Svendsen - 2018 - History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences 40 (1):21.
    This paper explores the laborious and intimate work of turning bodies of research animals into models of human patients. Based on ethnographic research in the interdisciplinary Danish research centre NEOMUNE, we investigate collaboration across species and disciplines, in research aiming at improving survival for preterm infants. NEOMUNE experimental studies on piglets evolved as a platform on which both basic and clinical scientists exercised professional authority. Guided by the field of multi-species research, we explore the social and material agency of research (...)
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  • Blood Symbolism in African Religion: M. Y. NABOFA.M. Y. Nabofa - 1985 - Religious Studies 21 (3):389-405.
    Symbolism has found spontaneous expression in several religious and secular practices among many different peoples of Africa. These expressions can be seen in religious emblems, ideograms, rituals, songs, prayers, myths, incantations, vows, customary behaviour and personifications. The under-standing of these religious symbols lends itself to rapid comprehensive and compact use; not only that, it also helps understanding and concentration. In fact, Mary Douglas expresses the view that such symbols, especially rituals, aid us in selecting experiences for concentrated attention, creative at (...)
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  • Trial Argumentation: The Creation of Meaning. [REVIEW]Denis J. Brion - 2009 - International Journal for the Semiotics of Law - Revue Internationale de Sémiotique Juridique 22 (1):23-44.
    My purpose is to analyze lawyers creating meaning in three well-known cases in Anglo-American legal history: Commonwealth v. Woodward (1997) the famous Boston ‘nanny’ case, the O.J. Simpson Murder Trial (1995), and the John Peter Zenger Libel Case in Colonial New York (1734). In each case, creative lawyers were able to shift the question before the jury from the formal legal question—did Woodward and Simpson commit murder? Did Zenger publish libelous material?—to issues of vengeance and catharsis, and of the ability (...)
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  • Rethinking the Body and Its Boundaries.Leigh E. Rich, Michael A. Ashby & Pierre-Olivier Méthot - 2012 - Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 9 (1):1-6.
    Rethinking the Body and Its Boundaries Content Type Journal Article Category Editorial Pages 1-6 DOI 10.1007/s11673-011-9353-8 Authors Leigh E. Rich, Department of Health Sciences (Public Health), Armstrong Atlantic State University, 11935 Abercorn Street, Savannah, GA 31419, USA Michael A. Ashby, Palliative Care and Persistent Pain Services, Royal Hobart, Hospital, Southern Tasmania Area Health Service, and School of Medicine, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Tasmania, 1st Floor, Peacock Building, Repatriation Centre, 90 Davey Street, Hobart, TAS 7000 Australia Pierre-Olivier Méthot, ESRC (...)
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  • On Decadence.Jane Duran - 1990 - Philosophy 65 (254):455 - 464.
    When one visits Thailand, one is struck by the enormous number of temples in the urban Bangkok area, many of which are conspicuously absent from the more cherished art historical works on the art and architecture of south-east Asia. The Wat Po complex and Wat Reitmit, one discovers, whatever their virtues for the Western tourist, are not among the temples and archaeological sites mentioned in the text of such an authority as Benjamin Rowland. Nor are these temples—when cited at all—discussed (...)
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  • Translating COVID-19: From Contagion to Containment.Marta Arnaldi, Eivind Engebretsen & Charles Forsdick - 2022 - Journal of Medical Humanities 43 (3):387-404.
    This article tests the hypothesis that all pandemics are inherently translational. We argue that translation and translation theory can be fruitfully used to understand and manage epidemics, as they help us explore concepts of infectivity and immunity in terms of cultural and biological resistance. After examining the linkage between translation and coronavirus disease from three different yet interlinked perspectives—cultural, medical, and biocultural—we make a case for a translational medical humanities framework for tackling the multifactorial crisis brought about by the SARS-CoV-2 (...)
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  • From «converso» to «novamente convertido». Political identity and difference in the Portuguese kingdom and empire.Ângela Barreto Xavier - 2006 - Cultura:245-274.
    Para estudar os processos de conversão e cristianização que se verificaram em Goa entre os sé­culos XVI e XVIII, e os seus impactos sociais, importa entender como é que na tópica dominan­te no reino se explicava a alteridade, como é que esta se manifestava no quadro legal e institu­cional, e, simultaneamente, se transplantava para os territórios imperiais. Com este estudo pretende-se mostrar que as atitudes da coroa portuguesa em relação às populações residentes nos territórios do império se inspiraram naquelas que (...)
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  • Maintaining ethnic boundaries in “non-ethnic” contexts: constructivist theory and the sexual reproduction of diversity.Z. Ozgen - 2015 - Theory and Society 44 (1):33-64.
    How can ethnic boundaries survive in contexts of legal racial equality and institutionalized ethnic mixing? Constructivist theories of ethnicity have long emphasized the fluidity, rather than the durability, of ethnic boundaries. But the fact that ethnic boundaries often endure—and even thrive—in putatively non-ethnic political contexts suggests the need for sustained attention to the problem of boundary persistence. Based on an ethnographic study of ethnic boundaries in the Turkish case, this article argues that the regulation of the domain of sexuality and (...)
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  • Standard fare or fairer standards: Feminist reflections on agri-food governance. [REVIEW]Martha McMahon - 2011 - Agriculture and Human Values 28 (3):401-412.
    In 2007 new meat inspection regulations standardizing meat production throughout the Province of British Columbia (BC), Canada came into effect moving food for local consumption closer to continentally harmonized production standards. Critics argue that the economic viability of small-scale livestock farmers is threatened. Small-scale women farmers are central to the creation of alternative local agri-food networks in BC. Using gender as an analytically enabling tool this paper argues that public food-safety regulation can create the conditions for the dominance of private (...)
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  • Time, Magic, and Gynecology Contemporary Israeli Practice.Miriam Jacoby - 1995 - Science in Context 8 (1):231-248.
    The ArgumentThis paper describes the way in which a simple device, the pregnancy wheel, has been used by the medical profession to impose a new way of measuring and experiencing pregnancy.The change involves counting in weeks instead of counting in months and it is gradually replacing a commonsensical method that had deep physiological and cultural roots. In contrast, the medical methodology of counting forty weeks is more complicated and lacks direct connections to the events of pregnancyIn the encounter between the (...)
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  • (1 other version)The reintroduction and reinterpretation of the wild.Eileen O’Rourke - 2000 - Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 13 (1-2):145-165.
    This paper is concerned with changing social representations of the “wild,” in particular wild animals. We argue that within a contemporary Western context the old agricultural perception of wild animals as adversarial and as a threat to domestication, is being replaced by an essentially urban fascination with certain emblematic wild animals, who are seen to embody symbols of naturalness and freedom. On closer examination that carefully mediatized “naturalness” may be but another form of domestication. After an historical overview of the (...)
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  • Governmentality, the iconography of sexual disease and 'duties' of the STI clinic.Anthony Pryce - 2001 - Nursing Inquiry 8 (3):151-161.
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  • Introduction: Why Islam, Health and the Body?Debra Budiani & Diane M. Tober - 2007 - Body and Society 13 (3):1-13.
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