MAMADOU DIAWARA, BERNARD LATEGAN, JORN RUSEN, editors. Historical Memory in Africa: Dealing with the Past, Reaching for the Future in an Intercultural Context. (Making Sense of History: Studies in Historical Cultures, number 12.) New York: Berghahn. 2010. Pp. vi, 248. $95.00

2010 ◽  
Vol 115 (4) ◽  
pp. 1262-1263
2016 ◽  
Vol 59 (2) ◽  
pp. 42-55 ◽  
Author(s):  
ADAM RABINOWITZ ◽  
RYAN SHAW ◽  
SARAH BUCHANAN ◽  
PATRICK GOLDEN ◽  
ERIC KANSA

Abstract The PeriodO project seeks to fill a gap in the landscape of digital antiquity through the creation of a Linked Data gazetteer of period definitions that transparently record the spatial and temporal boundaries assigned to a given period by an authoritative source. Our presentation of the PeriodO gazetteer is prefaced by a history of the role of periodization in the study of the past, and an analysis of the difficulties created by the use of periods for both digital data visualization and integration. This is followed by an overview of the PeriodO data model, a description of the platform's architecture, and a discussion of the future direction of the project.


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ardian Bakhtiar Rivai

Discourse on Taiwan cannot be separated by the legacy of Japanese rule in the past era. This article aims to explore how Taiwan miracle between 1977 and 1983. Adopt the Gold thinking (1986) which discussed the complete Taiwan conditions in those years. I have the interest to understand Taiwan from as in the past as a lesson for today and the future. This book provides an understanding that Taiwan as a colony of Japan inherits the legacies are complete and provide a paradigm about the strong influence of Japan against Taiwan today.


2021 ◽  
Vol 27 (3) ◽  
pp. 357-377
Author(s):  
Christina A. León

Abstract This article traces the figure of polvo (dust) across the writing career of Puerto Rican and New York writer Manuel Ramos Otero. Polvo heralds the macabre sensuality of his early short stories, long before his diagnosis with HIV, and persists and morphs through his later essays and poetry up until his eventual death in 1990 from AIDS complications. Writing defiantly as a queer, a feminist, a Puerto Rican, and a sidoso, he produced work that invites death and desire to commingle through a figuration of dust, as a scattered substance that covers skin, coats translation, and dirties conventional genres. Polvo illuminates the dimensions and risks of relation as a particulate matter that exposes our porosity—clinging and hovering in the space between bodies, between the past and the future, between life and death. As the dust settles in the wake of Hurricane María, so too can polvo be read as prescient for how coloniality lingers as enduring conditions of debility and precarity. Ramos Otero's affinity for finitude, figured through polvo, counterintuitively conjures a relational desire that privileges the porous, the marginal, and the always precarious possibility of survival. Polvo moves across the different genres and phases of Ramos Otero's work as a matter that refuses to disentangle the material realities of queerness and coloniality.


2011 ◽  
Vol 17 (4) ◽  
pp. 448-458 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lars Fuglsang ◽  
Jan Mattsson

AbstractThe idea of this paper is to develop a sensemaking tool that can help managers to generate a more asserted approach to innovation. A tool can be defined as something which is needed to perform an action – like innovation. We see innovation as ‘an improvisational dynamics of “moving to” the future’ (Pye, 2005) and use the concept of future perfect thinking (Weick, 1979, 1995), which has been lately debated in studies of project management (Pitsis, Clegg, Marosszeky, & Rura-Polley, 2003; Winch & Kreiner, 2009), to develop a tool that can reduce the perceived uncertainty of innovation. The key in future perfect thinking is to treat the future as something that has already happened in the past and thereby reducing the perceived open-endedness of the future. We suggest, more particularly, that verbal reflections on future challenges by relevant employees can help state the future as something that has a deeper, more stable and more practical meaning. The sensemaking tool is illustrated in a recent case of software development.


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