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Keynesian Prospects for the US Economy
Lance Taylor 서울대학교 경제연구소 2010 Seoul journal of economics Vol.23 No.1
Historically, financial crises have been commonplace. Why did the latest episode almost derail the world economy ? The macroeconomics developed by John Maynard Keynes and his close followers provides the only plausible set of answers, including rising income inequality which spilled over into debt accumulation at the same time as household consumption rose, low real interest rates, massive expansion of financial assets and liabilities as investors borrowed heavily (increased leverage) to buy assets with rising prices, and an ample supply of imports and capital inflows from the rest of the world. In an accommodating political economic environment these factors linked the real and financial sides of the economy to create the crisis.
Reading Wallace Stevens` Readers
Lance Hong 한국중앙영어영문학회 2004 영어영문학연구 Vol.46 No.2
The reader is implicitly inscribed in the text the writer creates. This paper explores the readership assumed in Steven’s poetry by critically examining his theories of poetic writing found in his essays and letters and a selection of his poems that metaphorically addresses the issue of the reader/audience. Stevens’ pure, and often abstract, poetry is marked by impenetrability, a natural result of the kind of writing he had intended to write. Stevens considered poetic art an act of the mind, a cognitive process enacting a mind thinking. It’s no accident that his poetry seems indifferent to his readers. His many self-reflexive poems about a mind describing itself are necessarily personal, not social, and Stevens wrote first and foremost for himself. When he did address a particular audience, it was as a prophetic or patriarchal figure addressing the privileged elite. And while he claimed art was something to be experienced rather than understood, his seemingly closed texts don’t leave much room for the reader to participate in the meaning-making process involved in the act of reading. If Stevens is one of greatest of modern poets, he was also the most asocial and apolitical of American poets when considered against the historical climate of the early twentieth century in which he was writing.
John Lance Griffith 한국중세근세영문학회 2012 중세르네상스 영문학 Vol.20 No.1
This essay examines the function and symbolism of magic in the narrative of Britomart, the female knight in Edmund Spenser’s Faerie Queene. Though she is not herself magical, the initial episode in Book III where we first encounter Britomart does link her to magic in interesting ways. We realize how Spenser invests the idea and image of magic with meanings that develop important themes in Britomart’s (and indeed Spenser’s overarching) story. I argue that the way in which this section of the poem repeatedly de-emphasizes the significance and the power of magic cleverly allows Spenser at once to advance an argument for Elizabeth’s greatness (as a virtuous queen) and for his own (as a poet of a significant power rivaling that of any wondrous magic recorded in romance).
Chaucer on Wildness: The Host, the Monk, and the Tragedy of Cenobia
John Lance Griffith 한국중세근세영문학회 2016 중세르네상스 영문학 Vol.24 No.1
Through a close reading of the Host’s remarks in the prologue to the Monk’s Tale and their relation to the Monk’s subsequent discussion of the tragic queen Cenobia, this essay examines Chaucer’s concept of the wild and of wildness. It argues that the Monk’s inclusion of Cenobia, the only woman in his collection of tragedies, is in part a response to Harry’ comments about his own uncontrollable wife; and that, for Chaucer and his readers, the exchange between the Host and the Monk is a meditation on reccheless-ness, a wildness of character which can manifest both as virtue and as vice in an individual and the community.
SIMULATIONS OF THE INTERACTING MAGELLANIC SYSTEM
GARDINER LANCE T.,NOGUCHI MASAFUMI The Korean Astronomical Society 1996 Journal of The Korean Astronomical Society Vol.29 No.suppl1
The Galaxy and the Large and Small Magellanic Clouds (LMC and SMC respectively) form a triple system of mutually interacting galaxies. We have carried out a set of N-body simulations on the gravitational interaction of the SMC with the Galaxy and the LMC in order to model prominent features such as the Magellanic Stream, the inter-Cloud Bridge, and the large depth of the SMC which are thought to be products of the tidal interactions among the members of this system.
Integration and Inversion: Western Medieval Knights in Japanese Manga and Anime
John Lance Griffith 한국중세근세영문학회 2009 중세르네상스 영문학 Vol.17 No.1
While there has been mounting curiosity among Western scholars about Japanese animation as a significant pop culture form, less attention has been devoted to the interest Japanese artists have in the Western middle ages. However, Japanese anime and manga artists borrow and transfigure not just the cross but many other elements of Christianity (stained glass and other trappings of the Church) and of Western medieval culture (the castle, the garden, the knight). In addition to occasional and relatively brief uses of such images, some anime and manga make extended use of medieval iconography, narratives, and narrative techniques. Japanese writers have their own rich (medieval) history and culture to draw on for source material, so there is no pressing need to borrow from western medieval and biblical narratives. Yet as episodic and image-intensive genres, anime and manga have a stylistic affinity with early Western literature. This essay explores the way in which these forms of Japanese pop culture find creative ways to adapt the alien material of the Western Middle Ages for their own cultural and artistic ends.
Exposure Assessment of Volatile Organic Compounds in Air, Drinking Water and House Dust
Wallance,Lance A. 漢陽大學校 環境 및 産業醫學硏究所 1992 環境과 産業醫學 Vol.2 No.1
The total human exposure research concept requires a balanced emphasis on 1) development of adequate measurement methods, both for personal exposure and body burden; 2) field studies, including both large-scale studies such as TEAM to establish frequency distributions of human exposure and smaller-scale focused studies to establish concentration ranges in important microenvironments; and 3) development of human exposure-activity pattern models, including validation of these models by comparing with the field study results.