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Images and Figurations: Creative Cognition and Representation in Nietzsche
Ruth A BURCH 한국니체학회 2018 니체연구 Vol.33 No.-
The aim of this article is to explore Nietzsche’s understanding of thinking as the partaking in transformative experimentation. In this writing, I argue that Nietzsche thinks in images. For him cognition ought to be based on new figurations that incarnate located narratives that improve the future. Nietzsche creatively synthesises in his experimental thought various domains of knowledge. He not only plays with metaphors but philosophical cheerfulness is also indispensable to his experimentations as Ruth Burch holds in her book entitled ‘Is Donna Haraway’s ‘Situated Knowledge’ Nietzschean ‘Gay Science?’ In The Birth of Tragedy, Nietzsche links art and science. In Daybreak and in Ecce Homo, he depicts the necessity of thinking in images and metaphors. His figurations that are a result of his right to responsibility embody future-enhancing stories.
Ruth Phillips,정용문 한국사회복지학회 2013 Asian Social Work and Policy Review Vol.7 No.1
Drawing from a wider study of the ideas of poverty and inequality in South Korea, this paperreports on the lived experiences of disadvantaged South Koreans and their relationship to theNational Basic Livelihood Security System (NBLSS), a flagship social assistance program aimed ataddressing poverty and inequality. Utilizing a cultural approach to understanding and analysingpolicy responses to poverty, the impact of familism in the application of the NBLSS safety net isexamined. Research data is presented through the testimonies, obtained through qualitativeresearch interviews, of disadvantaged research participants and those who work with them, as wellas policy-makers’ perspectives, revealing key flaws in the current NBLSS policy objectives. It isclearly evident that, by clinging to outdated Confucian conceptualizations of familial piety as a justificationfor highly selectivist access to what is no more than a subsistence level of financial supportfor poor people, the proposition of a poverty safety net is compromised and is widely missing itsaim of reducing poverty and inequality in contemporary South Korea.
( Ruth Barraclough ) 국제비교한국학회 2011 비교한국학 Comparative Korean Studies Vol.19 No.3
This article examines the factory girl classic The Solitary Room (published in 1995) as part of an archive of Korean industrial literature. The Solitary Room fixes on adolescent sexuality and suicide to tell the story of individual factory girls who lived through rapid industrialisation of the late 1970s. This article argues that The Solitary Room grapples with the elusive subject of ``factory girl`` at the same time that it addresses the guilt and grief of post-industrial South Korean society over the recent trauma of industrialisation. The story displays a fear of both revolution and class immobility, and part of its success as a best-seller can be related to the conventionality of its narrative. Yet The Solitary Room is exceptional for signaling the complicity of readers (society) in the violence done to factory girls. The article concludes by arguing that The Solitary Room should be read as part of a distinct oeuvre of factory girl literature.
Performing Age, Class, and Gender in Korean P’ansori
Ruth Mueller 아시아음악학회 2015 Asian Musicology Vol.25 No.-
P‟ansori, narrative song of lower class origin, became popular amongst all levels of society through the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. As the genre grew in popularity with the upper class, performers altered stories and performance style to suit the audience. The folk style was more emotionally expressive, linguistically direct, was performed outdoors, and had a raspier sound; the aristocratic style was more emotionally reserved, used refined language, was performed indoors, and had a clearer tone. Current performances are typically held in theatrical settings and students train in institutions. Still, through fieldwork, variations in performance practice became apparent to me. Some singers gesture to mime words while other singers gesture to emphasize ornamentation; some singers use a large amount of stage space and interact directly with the audience while other singers remain center stage and interact with the accompanying drummer. The choice performance style seems to often reflect a gender divide with men performing folk style and women the aristocratic style. As women age they seem to be allowed more freedom of movement and expression and shift towards the folk style. Through ethnographic and movement analysis, I demonstrate how movement and gesture are culturally encoded with varying class and gender identities.
Ruth E. Propper,Alexis Grant,Ryan King,Stephen D. Christman 서울대학교 인지과학연구소 2019 Journal of Cognitive Science Vol.20 No.3
Individual differences in handedness in episodic memory have been demonstrated across a wide variety of stimuli and protocols, with inconsistent-handers (ICH) having superior memory relative to consistent-right-handers (CRH). The current study looks at the question of whether ICH also report better subjective memory. Prior work shows that objective and subjective memory performance are generally unrelated, but the current study found that ICH indeed report better subjective memory, as measured by the Cognitive Failures Questionnaire. Given evidence for associations between personality factors and subjective memory, the current study also looked at the Behavioral Inhibition Scale (BIS) and found (i) no handedness differences on the BIS, but (ii) a negative association between neuroticism and cognitive failures in CRH.
Evaluating Trade Corridor Performance: A Myanmar Case Study
Ruth BANOMYONG,Thomas E. Fernandez 인하대학교 정석물류통상연구원 2021 JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL LOGISTICS AND TRADE Vol.19 No.1
The purpose of this paper is to assess the logistics performance of national trade corridors in Myanmar based on a theoretical portrayal of multimodal transport in logistics chains combined with the real-time operation of such chains. A cost-time-distance model was used as the core theoretical framework for the discussion. Empirical data related to cost, time and distance was obtained to evaluate national trade corridors in Myanmar. The study explored the performance of trade corridor in the pulses and beans sector from the largest sown and harvest areas to the main seaports in Myanmar. The pulses and beans sector was selected because the country is the 2nd highest exporter in the world and would benefit from improved access to its national seaports. Under the cost-time-distance model used, it was observed that physical infrastructure, institutional environment as well as limited capability of local providers hindered the overall performance of the trade corridors under study.