Magic in the Chains

Author(s):  
Diana E. Henderson

In analysing an important Hindi film’s precise yet radical reconception of Othello’s famously overdetermined handkerchief in the form of a jewelled chain or ‘kamarband’, this essay focuses on media representation and gender across time and space. It demonstrates how material objects factor into the perception and definition of gendered bodies in Shakespeare’s playtexts and modern performance, using ‘comparative close analysis’ to understanding the symbolic, narrative, and political consequentiality of metamorphic things. In Vishal Bhardwaj’s 2006 Omkara’s, chains of corrupted authority, both political and domestic, have superseded the superstitious magic in the web of Othello; following the kamarband’s journey reveals complexities in each artwork’s conception of femaleness, a sustained opposition between the sexes’ moral culpability, and an alternative form of female community. Omkara reframes difference and foregrounds gendered embodiment in a culturally specific, insightful way that prompts reflection upon our critical methods and futures in cross-cultural media and gender studies.

2016 ◽  
Vol 18 (4) ◽  
pp. 457-473 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roberto Maniglio

To examine the relationship between bullying and other forms of peer victimization in adolescence and alcohol use or misuse, all the pertinent studies were reviewed. Fourteen databases were searched. Blind assessments of study eligibility and quality were performed by two independent researchers. Seventy-four studies including 2,066,131 participants across 56 countries all over the world and meeting minimum quality criteria that were enough to ensure objectivity and to not invalidate results were analyzed. Across studies, evidence for a significant association between peer victimization and alcohol use or misuse was conflicting. Results were affected by sample size, definition of victim status, specific forms of peer victimization, and specific types of alcohol consumption. There was some evidence for a number of mediating or moderating variables, such as depression, coping, drinking motives, attachment to school, social support, and gender. Findings are discussed according to stress-coping and self-medication hypotheses. Alternative etiological mechanisms are also considered.


1998 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 5-24 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ronit Lentin

This paper argues that ‘Irishness’ has not been sufficiently problematised in relation to gender and ethnicity in discussions of Irish national identity, nor has the term ‘Irish women’ been ethnically problematised. Sociological and feminist analyses of the access by women to citizenship of the Republic of Ireland have been similarly unproblematised. This paper interrogates some discourses of Irish national identity, including the 1937 Constitution, in which difference is constructed in religious, not ethnic terms, and in which women are constructed as ‘naturally’ domestic. Ireland's bourgeois nationalism privileged property owning and denigrated nomadism, thus excluding Irish Travellers from definitions of ‘Irishness’. The paper then seeks to problematise T.H. Marshall's definition of citizenship as ‘membership in a community’ from a gender and ethnicity viewpoint and argues that sociological and feminist studies of the gendered nature of citizenship in Ireland do not address access to citizenship by Traveller and other racialized women which this paper examines in brief. It does so in the context of the intersection between racism and nationalism, and argues that the racism implied in the narrow definition of ‘Irishness’ is a central factor in the limited access by minority Irish women to aspects of citizenship. It also argues that racism not only interfaces with other forms of exclusion such as class and gender, but also broadens our understanding of the very nature of Irish national identity.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Béatrice Bouhanick ◽  
Philippe Sosner ◽  
Karine Brochard ◽  
Claire Mounier-Véhier ◽  
Geneviève Plu-Bureau ◽  
...  

Hypertension is much less common in children than in adults. The group of experts decided to perform a review of the literature to draw up a position statement that could be used in everyday practice. The group rated recommendations using the GRADE approach. All children over the age of 3 years should have their blood pressure measured annually. Due to the lack of data on cardiovascular morbidity and mortality associated with blood pressure values, the definition of hypertension in children is a statistical value based on the normal distribution of blood pressure in the paediatric population, and children and adolescents are considered as having hypertension when their blood pressure is greater than or equal to the 95th percentile. Nevertheless, it is recommended to use normative blood pressure tables developed according to age, height and gender, to define hypertension. Measuring blood pressure in children can be technically challenging and several measurement methods are listed here. Regardless of the age of the child, it is recommended to carefully check for a secondary cause of hypertension as in 2/3 of cases it has a renal or cardiac origin. The care pathway and principles of the therapeutic strategy are described here.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daiki Hiramori ◽  
Saori Kamano

Most studies on the measurement of sexual orientation and gender identity (SOGI) in representative surveys are conducted in Western countries. Whether the findings from these studies are applicable to countries with legal, religious, and cultural contexts regarding sexual and gender minorities distinct from Western societies is yet to be explored. To fill this gap, this paper summarizes the findings from focus groups and a pilot survey conducted to develop SOGI questions in the Japanese context. For sexual orientation identity, a six-category question that includes definition of each category, and for transgender status, a three-step method, are suggested for general use. The paper also reports on percentage distributions of SOGI by assigned sex at birth and by age group based on the Osaka City Residents' Survey, one of the first population-based surveys in Japan with SOGI questions. Overall, our findings illustrate the significance of examining the measurement of SOGI beyond Western societies.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  

Change is at the heart of the definition of fashion, as many theorists, designers and cultural analysts have shown. This article takes up this perspective to question the role of fashion design in the 21st century in the relation to cultural, media and technological changes. Adopting a field research approach, the paper analyses the interaction between fashion, designers and digital technologies that are emerging in Italy in order to re-grasp Made in Italy in a futuring perspective. The case studies were selected for their relevance to the digital in terms of design, production, and display. The paper analyses that the pandemic crisis is having on the Made in Italy, stimulating new ways of designing, understanding, producing, and consuming fashion.


Hypatia ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 34 (4) ◽  
pp. 713-735
Author(s):  
Jana Cattien

This article critically reflects on some of the themes and assumptions at stake in the “transracialism” controversy, and connects them to important works in critical race theory: namely Rey Chow's notion of “coercive mimeticism” and Sara Ahmed's critique of white liberal multiculturalism. It argues that the analytic account of “race” that Tuvel draws upon in her article—Sally Haslanger's—is politically problematic, both on its own terms and in light of broader reflections on racialized and gendered power relations. In particular, I critique Haslanger's assumption that all racial identities exist on the same conceptual plane: that a single variable definition of “race” can be applied to any particular racialized group—including white and nonwhite racial identities. This erases racialized power relations, especially where, in liberal “multicultural” nations, whiteness constitutes the implied standard against which an appearance of “racial difference” is conjured. Finally, I extend my argument to the issue of treating “race” and gender analogously. Rejecting this move, I propose an alternative way of conceptualizing these as analytically distinct, yet constitutively interdependent, phenomena. In order to situate the debate historically, I consider an example of “racial transgression” from twentieth‐century China.


2020 ◽  
Vol 20 (3) ◽  
pp. 387-411
Author(s):  
Lena Holzer

ABSTRACT This article explores the definition of ‘sportswoman’ as put forward in the Caster Semenya case (2019) and the Dutee Chand case (2015) before the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS). It analyses the structural and discursive factors that made it possible for the CAS to endorse a definition that reduces sex and gender to a matter concerning testosterone. By relying on the concept of intersectionality and analytical sensibilities from Critical Legal Studies, the article shows that framing the cases as a matter of scientific dispute, instead of as concerning human rights, significantly influenced the CAS decisions. Moreover, structural elements of international sports law, such as the lack of knowledge of human rights among CAS arbitrators and a history of institutionalising gendered and racialised body norms through sporting regulations, further aided the affirmation of the ‘testosterone rules’.


2020 ◽  
Vol 35 (Supplement_3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jill Vanmassenhove ◽  
Johan Steen ◽  
Johan Decruyenaere ◽  
Dominique Benoit ◽  
Eric Adriaan J Hoste ◽  
...  

Abstract Background and Aims The reported incidence of Acute Kidney Injury (AKI) at the intensive care unit (ICU) is variable. Although the Kidney Disease Improving Global Outcome (K-DIGO) improved harmonisation of this definition, there is remaining variability in the actual implementation of this AKI definition, with variable interpretation of the urinary output (UO) criterion, and of the baseline serum creatinine (Screa) criterion. This hampers progress of our understanding of the clinical concept AKI and leads to confusion and unclarity when interpreting models to predict AKI or associated outcomes. With the advent of big data and artificial intelligence based decision algorithms, this problem will only become more of interest, as the user will not know what exactly the construct AKI in the application used means and represents. Therefore, we intended to explore the impact of different interpretations of the Screa and the UO criterium as presented in the K-DIGO definition on the incidence of AKI stage 2. Method We included all patients of an electronic health data system applied in a tertiary ICU between 2013 and 2017. Sequential Organ Failure Assessment (SOFA) score was calculated, and gender, age, weight and mortality at ICU and in hospital were extracted. All serum creatinine (sCrea) values during ICU stay and hospitalisation were extracted, as were UO data, with their time stamps. In addition, all available Screa data up to 1 year before ICU admission were retrieved from a dataset external to the ICU. AKI was defined according to KDIGO stage 2, using different possible interpretations of the Screa and/or the UO criterion. For the evolution of Screa as compared to a baseline value, we sued either a value directly available to ICU staff (def 1), a presumed eGFR of 75ml/min (def 2), the first available value after admission to ICU (def 3), the lowest value during the current hospitalisation before ICU admission (def 4), the lowest value before the hospitalisation episode as found in an external dataset (def 5). For the UO criterion, we also applied two criteria in line with K-DIGO stage 2: a UO below 6ml/kg during a 12 hour block (def 6) or a UO below 0.5ml/kg/hour during each of 12 consecutive one hour intervals (def 7). Def 8 identified patients who did not comply with any of the definitions (1-7), so who had no AKI according to any definition. Definition 9 and 10 identified patients who complied with at least one out of the Screa criteria 1-5 (def 9) or out of the UO criteria (def 10). Definition 11 identified patients who complied both with at least one Screa and one UO criterium. Results Our dataset included 16433 ICU admissions (34.7% female, age 60.7±16.4 years). Overall, 8.1% of patients died at ICU, and another 5.2% during their hospitalisation. The SOFA score at admission was 6.9±4.1. The incidence of AKI according to the stage 2 definition of K-DIGO varied according to the interpretation of the diagnostic criteria from 4.3% when baseline creatinine was defined as the first ICU value, to 35.3% when the UO criterium was interpreted as a UO below 6ml/kg over a 12 hour block (fig). Only half of patients (53.7%) did not comply with any of the definitions (def 8), 10.9% and 19.7% complied with one of the Screa (def 9) OR one of the UO criteria (def 10) respectively, and 15.7% complied with both (def 11). There was substantial reclassification across the different definitions. Conclusion Unclarity on the actual interpretation of the Screa and UO criteria used in the K-DIGO definition of AKI leads to substantial differences in incidence of AKI, and also with substantial reclassification according to different definitions. This is especially concerning in an era of big data and automated decision support, as clinicians might not know which construct of AKI is actually being represented.


2020 ◽  
pp. 107755952092746
Author(s):  
Sarah Bendall ◽  
Oliver Eastwood ◽  
Georgina Cox ◽  
Anna Farrelly-Rosch ◽  
Helen Nicoll ◽  
...  

There is growing consensus that outpatient health services for young people (aged 12–25 years) need to deliver trauma-informed care to ameliorate the effects of trauma, offer safe treatments, and avoid retraumatization. Trauma-informed care has become a familiar term for many professionals; however, its operating definition lacks clarity. MEDLINE, Embase, and PsycINFO were systematically searched to clarify what trauma-informed care is, and what it should achieve in these settings. We reviewed 3,381 unique records, of which 13 met criteria for inclusion. Content analysis identified 10 components of trauma-informed care as it has been operationalized in practice: seven of these occurred at the system-level (interagency collaboration; service provider training; safety; leadership, governance and agency processes; youth and family/carer choice in care; cultural and gender sensitivity; youth and family/carer participation), and three involved trauma-specific clinical practices (screening and assessment; psychoeducation; therapeutic interventions). There is a need for greater consensus regarding an operating definition of trauma-informed care and further research into outcomes for young people and their families/carers.


2019 ◽  
Vol 12 (3) ◽  
pp. 416-433 ◽  
Author(s):  
Richard Mocarski ◽  
Robyn King ◽  
Sim Butler ◽  
Natalie R Holt ◽  
T Zachary Huit ◽  
...  

Abstract In recent years, the transgender and gender diverse (TGD) population has gained a stronger voice in the media. Although these voices are being heard, there are limits on the types of TGD representation displayed in media. The current study interviewed 27 TGD individuals. These interviews exposed how participants view the rise of TGD media representation. The main themes that emerged were TGD awareness and TGD identity discovery and role modeling. Clearly, there is a disconnect between transnormativity in the media and transnormativity in reality.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document