scholarly journals A Case for the One-offs: Improvisation and Innovation Within a Copper Age Potting Community

2016 ◽  
Vol 26 (3) ◽  
pp. 513-526 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sheila Kohring

Unique objects are often poorly integrated into discussions about the social organization of production or technological processes. Often they are frustratingly interpreted as ritual or prestige objects, or they are simply consigned to footnotes in archaeological reports. This does not do them justice and their contextualization may provide greater insight into the social factors involved in production activities. This paper attempts to demonstrate what unique, or one-off, objects can tell us about technological systems and how improvisational technical choices can lead to innovation within society. It focuses on a particular example of pottery production and usage at the Copper Age site of San Blas (Spain) and how two particular vessels on the surface appear to be unique one-off products. This paper shows that one-off objects may in fact be opening the door to innovation through acts of improvisation within existing socially sanctioned production aesthetics and object ideals.

Author(s):  
Smart E. Otu

Conventional western social science scholars hold the view that the current crisis in Zimbabwe is but the consequence of misgovernance by President Robert Mugabe and his ZANU-PF led government. This paper debunks this viewpoint and considers it a short-circuit analysis of the complex nature of Zimbabwe’s crisis. Instead, the political economy approach is adopted which is considered more far-reaching, holistic, historic, dialectic, and more empirically-scientific-based. The critical analysis of the crisis reveals that the key to the current socio-economic and political impasse in Zimbabwe lies in the nature of the social organization of production and the class character of both colonial and postcolonial Zimbabwe’s social system which are strongly tied to the land issue. To this end, the paper confirms that Zimbabwe’s economy, polity and social relations are organized in a manner that many Zimbabweans are at the fringe of the social structure. The main argument of this paper is that social organization of production in Zimbabwe is such that does not guarantee ordinary Zimbabweans access to land to produce their basic material needs, and to participate in making decision about how this major means of production is organized for production, distribution and consumption. This paper concludes by noting that the way out of the current crisis in Zimbabwe lies in a radical overhauling of the feeble social organization of production while not undermining the importance of a congenial political milieu in Zimbabwe


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Lawrence Loiseau

[ACCESS RESTRICTED TO THE UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI AT REQUEST OF AUTHOR.] This study addresses Lacan's comments on Marx. While much has been done towards reading Marx with psychoanalysis generally, little had has been done to unpack the meaning and extent of Lacan's own statements on Marx. For example, while Lacanian Marxists like Slavoj Zizek have wielded Lacan to great effect in a critique of post-structuralism, they have neglected the full meaning and complexity of Lacan's own stance. What is argued thereby is that Zizek not only omits the discrete knowledge within Lacan's commentary, but misses what I describe as a Lacan's theory of the social. On the one hand, it is commonly known in Lacanian thought that discourse is responsible for making the subject. On the other hand, what is less known is that Lacan defined discourse as that which makes a social link which, in contrast with Marxist thought, introduces a certain affect and materialism premised on discourse itself, commonly known, but also for providing the underlying strata of topology (namely, paradox) requisite for making any social link between subjects. Although less commonly known, we can nevertheless gain new insight into Marx. On the one hand, Lacan concedes Marx's underlying structuralism. On the other hand, Marx fails to see the true source of discourse's origins, the real itself, and consequently fails to see the true efficacy of discourse. He fails to see how discourse, although negative, stands as entirely positive and material in its distinctive effects. Discourse negotiates subjects and their inimitable objects of desire in this singularity itself. This is where true production lies; it is that which precedes any social or economic theory, which are otherwise premised on reality. Lacan rejects reality.


2020 ◽  
Vol 101 (6) ◽  
pp. 29-34 ◽  
Author(s):  
Edit Khachatryan ◽  
Emma Parkerson

Teachers have historically been at the margins of educational improvement, and they are just beginning to drive improvements in the profession. Networked improvement communities (NICs) are one approach for collective reprofessionalization of teaching, where practice is defined and managed by practitioners. Edit Khachatryan and Emma Parkerson offer insight into the social organization of a NIC and use two real and mature networks — the Network to Transform Teaching and the National Writing Project — to describe how NICs structure roles and relationships and foster vital norms and identities among professionals.


1959 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 103-107
Author(s):  
K. E. Bugge

Summary of the Review of Knud Banning9s Books.Grundtvig and Rasmus Sørensen. By Knud Eyvin Bugge.This article is a review of two books by Knud Banning - “A Village Teacher” and “Christian Deacons” (both published in Copenhagen, 1958), the latter of which is a thesis for a Doctor’s Degree. The books are of interest for readers of “Grundtvig Studies”, on the one hand because they give an insight into important events and currents of thought during Grundtvig’s lifetime, and besides this they also give a detailed description of Grundtvig’s relations with Rasmus Sørensen, who was a leading figure in the so-called “religious awakening” in South-west Sjaelland in the i 83o’s.Rasmus Sørensen was bom in 1799 and was trained as a teacher at Vesterborg Seminary in Lolland. All his life was influenced by his stay in these surroundings, where the best-known names were those of Bishonp P. O. Boisen and Count G. D. Reventlow, the famous champion of the emancipation of the peasants at the end of the 18th century. Under the influence of thi circle and its distinctive characteristics, Rasmus Sørensen became convinced that it was the chief task of the village school to contribute to the emancipation of the peasantclass, in both the social and the religious sphere. In reality his struggle became in essence a conflict with the clergy. Banning’s merit is to have shown how these religious and social viewpoints are combined in an indissoluble unity in Rasmus Sørensen’s struggle.Rasmus Sørensen first became acquainted with Grundtvig through his books. Reading Grundtvig’s “Biblical Sermons” ( 1816) brought about a crisis of conversion for Rasmus Sørensen, and he became a whole-hearted adherent of the orthodox Lutheran views which Grundtvig then held. He entered into a correspondence with Grundtvig, and visited him a couple of times at Praestø. Their relationship did not continue without some friction, because, among other things, Grundtvig’s thought in the 1820’s and 1830’s developed away from his earlier standpoint. No break took place, however, until 1836. Its occasion was the already well-known dispute between Rasmus Sørensen and Grundtvig concerning their views on the question as to how far it is the school’s task to instil the Christian faith into the children. Rasmus Sørensen answered the question in the affirmative and Grundtvig in the negative, and thereupon Rasmus Sørensen bade farewell to Grundtvig in a letter quivering with indignation. Still, he could not wholly tear himself loose from the influence of Grundtvig’s ideas, but continued for many years afterwards to discuss them in his writings.Rasmus Sørensen’s relationship to the religious awakening in South-west Sjaelland became for various reasons increasingly strained. He therefore gave up his teaching post in 1844, and turned to political activities. In 1852 he emigrated to America, and he died in 1865 while staying for a while in Denmark.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Samantha M. Stead ◽  
Julie A. Teichroeb

AbstractA few mammalian species exhibit complex, nested social organizations, termed multi-level societies. Among nonhuman primates, multi-level societies have been confirmed in several African papionin and Asian colobine species. Using data on individually-recognized Rwenzori Angolan colobus at Lake Nabugabo, Uganda, we document the first multi-level society in an African colobine. The study band comprised up to 135 individuals living in 12 socially and spatially distinct core units that ranged in size from 4 to 23 individuals. These core units shared a home range, and fissioned and fused throughout the day. Using the association indices between core units, we employed hierarchical cluster analyses and permutation tests to show that some core units clustered into clans. Thus, we confirm three tiers of social organization for Rwenzori Angolan colobus: core unit, clan, and band. The social organization of this subspecies is unlike any reported previously in a nonhuman primate, with about half the core units containing a single adult male and the others containing multiple reproductive adult males. Preliminary data show males to transfer within the band and female to transfer outside of the band, which suggests that, like Hamadryas baboons, this subspecies could provide insight into the selective pressures underlying hominin social organization.


Slavic Review ◽  
1963 ◽  
Vol 22 (3) ◽  
pp. 499-522 ◽  
Author(s):  
V. Stanley Vardys

The story of armed resistance to Soviet rule in postwar Lithuania is of interest both to historians and to political scientists. On the one hand, it unveils an important period of modern Lithuanian history and offers a glimpse into the dilemma of East European nationalism, caught between Nazis and Communists in World War II. On the other, it allows an insight into the nature of a movement that seeks to produce political changes by the use of violence. In an age when political practitioners use guerrilla warfare and paramilitary tactics as basic means of struggle for power, justification of a study of partisan movements seems hardly necessary. By showing academic interest, the social scientist merely recognizes their growing practical importance.The Lithuanian partisan resistance to the Soviet regime now can be analyzed with the help of varied source material, including firsthand testimony of both nationalist and Communist origin.


1976 ◽  
Vol 39 (1) ◽  
pp. 62-82 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bruce Ingham

The following is an attempt to relate the distribution of linguistic variants in the spoken Arabic of southern Iraq and Khūzistān to certain geographical areas on the one hand and to certain demographically isolatable groups on the other. These factors correlate in certain cases with political regions of earlier times. The geographical areas are relatable to communication patterns of preautomobile times and to some extent group around the main waterways of the area, the Tigris, Euphrates, Shaṭṭ al-'Arab, and Kārūn. The demographic groupings involved in particular what may be referred to as degree of sedentari-zation and also degree of contact with the nomad populations in the desert to the west of the Euphrates. It is true that in some cases the social and regional groupings were coextensive; however, the distinction between the two is maintained in the treatment because the linguistic features correlating with demographic groups could be shown to have similar demographic relevance in other areas of Mesopotamia, while the features regarded as primarily of regional relevance were relevant only to the area under investigation.


1988 ◽  
Vol 32 (1) ◽  
pp. 64-71
Author(s):  
Andrew Lyall

The case of Gwao bin Kilimo v. Kisunda bin Ifuti decided by the colonial courts of the then Tanganyika has always held a certain fascination for those interested in the process of law under colonial rule. This is for a variety of reasons. The case seems to put into sharp focus the conflict between the imposed common law system and the indigenous customary law. This in turn stimulates questions as to the social values that lay, and probably still lie, behind the two systems and the extent to which those values reflect actual differences between the societies in which they developed. Since the conflict arose in a colonial context, the case also raises the question of the rôle of law in such a society and therefore, to some extent, the rôle of law in relation to ideology and political economy in this and in other contexts also. What is less well known is that the case was the subject of comment by colonial administrative officers at the time, comments which point up many of the issues involved and provide some insight into the different perceptions of African society on the part of administrative officers on the one hand and the judiciary on the other.


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