scholarly journals Queering Outer Space

2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael P. Oman-Reagan

How can queer and other minority or marginalized people stake a claim in human futures in space? This paper reflects on the challenges, opportunities, scenarios, and interventions involved as we try to queer the increasingly corporate and military human exploration of and engagement with outer space. I suggest that we must go further than academically interrogating the military and corporate narratives of space “exploration” and “colonization.” We must also water, fertilize, and tend the seeds of alternative visions of possible futures in space, not only seeking solutions to earthly problems of the moment, but actively queering outer space and challenging the future to be even more queer.Keywords: Queer Theory, Space, Anthropology, Colonialism, Mars, SETIPlease Cite as:Oman-Reagan, Michael P. 2015. “Queering Outer Space.” SocArXiv, Open Science Framework. Manuscript, submitted January 22, 2017. osf.io/preprints/socarxiv/mpyk6/

2021 ◽  
Vol 40 (2) ◽  
pp. 137-141 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jordan Mansell ◽  
Allison Harell ◽  
Elisabeth Gidengil ◽  
Patrick A. Stewart

AbstractWe introduce the Politics and the Life Sciences special issue on Psychophysiology, Cognition, and Political Differences. This issue represents the second special issue funded by the Association for Politics and the Life Sciences that adheres to the Open Science Framework for registered reports (RR). Here pre-analysis plans (PAPs) are peer-reviewed and given in-principle acceptance (IPA) prior to data being collected and/or analyzed, and are published contingent upon the preregistration of the study being followed as proposed. Bound by a common theme of the importance of incorporating psychophysiological perspectives into the study of politics, broadly defined, the articles in this special issue feature a unique set of research questions and methodologies. In the following, we summarize the findings, discuss the innovations produced by this research, and highlight the importance of open science for the future of political science research.


2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael P. Oman-Reagan

In this anthropological account of the “interstellar” – the vast expanses of outer space between the stars – I take interstellar travel as an object of ethnographic study. First, I examine three interstellar space projects: NASA’s Voyager 1 spacecraft; 100 Year Starship’s manifesto on their quest to travel to another star; and SETI’s search for life in the universe. Finally, I turn to corresponding examples of interstellar travel in speculative fiction.In 2013, NASA announced a transmission from the Voyager 1 spacecraft as the “sound of interstellar space” and marked it as crossing a boundary into the “space between stars.” Organizations like 100 Year Starship and the Interstellar Message Composition program at SETI describe interstellar travel in terms of spacecraft, listening for signals, and active transmission. Fiction and science also co-render humans into interstellar scale via speculative technologies like artificial intelligence, instantaneous travel across the universe by “folding space,” and the “generation ship,” in which generations of crewmembers live and die during a multi-year voyage to another star.This ethnography of interstellar ontologies across multiple sites and scales builds on feminist science studies (Haraway), recent work on abstractions as scientific things (Helmreich), and the concept of hyperobjects – non-human entities that are massively distributed in time and space (Morton). As interstellar space moves between abstraction, text, place, and object, I find that it unfolds to reveal a constellation of potentially inhabited worlds inscribed by both scientists and speculative fiction; what was remote, insensate, and desolate becomes intimate, poetic, inhabited.Keywords: Science; Speculative Fiction; Object-Oriented Ontology; Deconstruction; SpacePlease cite as:Oman-Reagan, Michael P. 2015. “Unfolding the Space Between Stars: Anthropology of the Interstellar.” SocArXiv, Open Science Framework. Manuscript, submitted February 4, 2017. osf.io/preprints/socarxiv/r4ghb/A version of this paper was presented as:Oman-Reagan, Michael P. 2015. Unfolding the Space Between Stars: Anthropology of the Interstellar. Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Anthropological Association, Denver, November 21.


2021 ◽  
Vol 27 (4) ◽  
pp. 499-523
Author(s):  
David Andrew Griffiths

Abstract Heteronormativity structures biomedical justifications for continuing surgical interventions on infants’ genitals that are cosmetic and medically unnecessary. It would seem, then, that queer theory is uniquely suited to challenge this continuing practice. This article takes up the question of what queer theory can do for intersex, with particular focus on queer temporality. I consider the example of “hypospadias repair,” a surgical intervention justified by invoking restrictive norms of what the penis should look like and be able to do at some point in the future. In contrast, intersex activists invoke post-medical futures, structured by norms of consent and bodily integrity. While queer approaches to temporality might challenge the notion of intervening surgically on an infant for the sake of the future adult the child will become, might this queer critique also disrupt the ability of activist individuals and organizations to invoke other narratives of the future, including ones where adults have not had irreversible surgeries as infants? I will ask whether queer theories of temporality and futurity can challenge medical practices that compromise consent and bodily integrity. Can queer theory question surgery as a queer moment and help us to conceptualize all bodily differences within a more expansive frame, without reinstating heteronormative narratives of futurity?


2020 ◽  
pp. 126-158
Author(s):  
Beata Możejko

On 10 February 1454, the Polish King, Kazimierz Jagiellończyk (born 1427) married Elżbieta Rakuska (born around 1436/1437), daughter of the German, Czech, and Hungarian king, Albrecht II Habsburg and Elizabeth of Luxemburg. Kazimierz Jagiellończyk and Elżbieta had 13 children, 7 daughters (two of them – also called Elżbieta – died in early childhood and 6 sons. So, in total, 11 children survived into adulthood. The royal couple gave birth to children with a certain regularity, more or less every several months, especially in the first years of their marriage. It is well­­­­­­‑known that Elżbieta accompanied Kazimierz Jagiellończyk on his journeys for many years. Research has revealed the itineraries of the King and his wife. This article analyzes these itineraries with regard to the details of the journey and the place of conception of individual royal children. The analysis reveals that, especially in the first years of the marriage, King Kazimierz Jagiellończyk spent a lot of time journeying between different places. This was not just a consequence of the custom (common then) of royal progresses, but also of the military situation. Queen Elżbieta did not give up the company of her husband on his journeys, although she did not venture into areas directly affected by warfare. So it is not surprising that the first royal offspring – the future Czech and Hungarian King Władysław – saw the light of day in Wawel Castle, but he was conceived outside Kraków. Possibilities include Łuków, Kazimierz Dolny, Radom, Opoczno, or, finally, Piotrków. Nor is it difficult to see that from the moment of the birth of their first­­­­­­‑born son to Elżbieta’s next pregnancy, the royal pair were practically never parted, leaving Kraków together, travelling and spending time in Lithuania. Their daughter Jadwiga was conceived during a winter stay in Lithuania, most likely in Wilno. The next children were also conceived during the couple’s long visits to Lithuania: Kazimierz in winter, and Jan Olbracht in spring. Most likely, their son Aleksander was conceived in Łęczyca. In turn Zofia was conceived in Breść Kujawski. It is difficult to fix the place where Elżbieta (1) was conceived; it happened while travelling, at the time of one of the couple’s brief stops in Kłodawa, Łęczyca, Piotrków, or Parczew. Zygmunt was conceived in Łęczyca, and Fryderyk in Kraków. He was the first but not the only one of the royal children to be conceived in Wawel Castle; his sisters Elżbieta (2) and Barbara were conceived there too. Anna, older than Barbara, was conceived somewhere en route between Lublin and Nowe Miasto Korczyn. Like their eldest brother, the majority of the royal children were born in Wawel Castle. Exceptions were: Zygmunt, born in Kozienice (in this case, we know that this was a result of a search for a place safe from plague), Anna, born in Nieszawa (almost to the birth, the Queen accompanied her husband on his current journey), and Barbara, born in Sandomierz. The King was present at the following births: of Władysław, Jan Olbracht, Zofia, Elżbieta (1), Zygmunt, Fryderyk, Elżbieta (2), and Barbara. We know the dates of the christenings of several of the children: Władysław – 4 April 1456 (more than a month after his birth; his parents set off on a journey when he was almost two months old); Kazimierz – 5 November 1458 (more than a month after his birth; the christening waited till the King returned; the royal couple set off on a journey three months after his birth); Jan Olbracht – christened three days after his birth (30 December); Zofia – christened a week after being born (her parents set off on a journey five months after her birth). The King was certainly present at the christenings of Elżbieta (1) in June 1465 (a week after her birth), Zygmunt, Fryderyk (christened eleven days after being born), Elżbieta (2), and Barbara (eleven days elapsed between her birth and her christening). If we look at the bates of birth of the children of Kazimierz Jagiellończyk and Elżbieta, we also see that in the first few years the gaps between a birth and a subsequent pregnancy were quite short. Between 1456 (the first birth) and 1461, pregnancies occurred at the following intervals: the second pregnancy was nine months from the first birth; the third pregnancy was five to five and a half months after the second; the fourth was around seven months after the third birth; and the fifth pregnancy came eleven to twelve months after the fourth birth. After the birth of a fifth child (Aleksander), there was a gap of more than two years before the Queen’s next pregnancy, a subsequent conception being in September 1463. From the birth of her sixth child to her seventh pregnancy there was an interval of four to five months; from the seventh birth to the eighth pregnancy there was an interval of around ten to eleven months; from the eighth birth to the ninth pregnancy, it was eight months. After this eighth birth (27 April 1468), it was three years before the Queen was pregnant again, this interval being most likely caused by illness (perhaps miscarriage). It was only around mid­­­­­­‑September 1471 that the Queen was pregnant again. After giving birth to her tenth child (20 April 1472), there was a gap of more than three years. The Queen only became pregnant again in June 1475. The child was born in March 1476, and a further conception took place more or less eighteen months later. We cannot discuss the date and place of conception of the royal daughter Elżbieta (3); we do not have annual data relating to the date of her birth.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Angelos Tsiaras

<p>The field of exoplanets is one of the most rapidly growing, with more than 4000 new planets discovered over the past 25 years. In the last decade, we have entered in a new era, the era of exoplanet characterisation, where studies are also focused on understanding more about individual exoplanets, through follow-up observations. Follow-up observations can be used to better constrain the architecture and the dynamics of the planetary system, to detect and characterise the atmospheres of the planets in the system, and to efficiently plant future dedicated observations. Many ground and space-based observatories contribute to this effort from different perspectives already, and new ones are being designed at the moment. In addition, more exoplanets are being discovered on a daily basis. Overall, the variety and the amount of follow-up observations are increasing year by year. In this context, the effort of characterising exoplanets calls for an efficient way of extracting the most information out of all the available observations and sharing this with the community, though a centralized platform open to as many members of the community as possible. While many observatories provide publicly available data, in such a rapidly growing and diverse field a really open platform cannot be limited to sharing open access data alone.</p> <p>In this talk I will discuss about the contribution of the Hubble Space Telescope to the characterisation of a population of exoplanet atmospheres over the last 10 years, emphasising the importance of publicly available data but also the limitations in extracting and sharing the information in them. More specifically, I will focus on the need for dedicated data archives and publicly available data analysis tools.  Also, I will discuss how the lessons learned can be used as a prototype for an open platform for the characterisation of exoplanets in the future.</p>


Chelovek RU ◽  
2020 ◽  
pp. 18-53
Author(s):  
Sergei Avanesov ◽  

Abstract. The article analyzes the autobiography of the famous Russian philosopher, theologian and scientist Pavel Florensky, as well as those of his texts that retain traces of memories. According to Florensky, the personal biography is based on family history and continues in children. He addresses his own biography to his children. Memories based on diary entries are designed as a memory diary, that is, as material for future memories. The past becomes actual in autobiography, turns into a kind of present. The past, from the point of view of its realization in the present, gains meaning and significance. The au-thor is active in relation to his own past, transforming it from a collection of disparate facts into a se-quence of events. A person can only see the true meaning of such events from a great distance. Therefore, the philosopher remembers not so much the circumstances of his life as the inner impressions of the en-counter with reality. The most powerful personality-forming experiences are associated with childhood. Even the moment of birth can decisively affect the character of a person and the range of his interests. The foundations of a person's worldview are laid precisely in childhood. Florensky not only writes mem-oirs about himself, but also tries to analyze the problems of time and memory. A person is immersed in time, but he is able to move into the past through memory and into the future through faith. An autobi-ography can never be written to the end because its author lives on. However, reaching the depths of life, he is able to build his path in such a way that at the end of this path he will unite with the fullness of time, with eternity.


2020 ◽  
Vol 26 (2) ◽  
pp. 305-308
Author(s):  
Fabiana Martinescu-Bădălan

AbstractThis work is designed to challenge the maintenance of the highest standards of physical training required to perform armed tasks. It is desired to accumulate a development experience that will culminate with the set upof very well-trained leaders. The training of the military is based on physical training. It ensures the possibility and availability of the military to cope with combat missions, obligations in the military environment, ensures the maintenance and development of resistance to intense physical and mental effort, and develops self-confidence and teamwork. The physical training considers the fulfillment of some general objectives and of some specific objectives, absolutely necessary in the conditions of carrying out the combat actions.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Adib Rifqi Setiawan

Berikut ini beberapa publikasi saya pada 2019 ini. Penting atau tidak, saya menganggap bahwa publikasi hanyalah efek samping riset. Di luar publikasi ini, saya juga masih aktif sebagai penulis media daring, seperti Qureta.com, Selasar.com, dan SantriMilenial.net serta mengunggah beberapa artikel preprint melalui layanan Open Science Framework (OSF), EdArxiv.org, dan Research Papers in Economics (RePEc).


2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (11) ◽  
pp. 6313
Author(s):  
Ramona Ciolac ◽  
Tiberiu Iancu ◽  
Ioan Brad ◽  
Tabita Adamov ◽  
Nicoleta Mateoc-Sîrb

The agritourism activity can be a characteristic reality of the present, considering rural area’s sustainability, being at the same time a business reality for rural entrepreneurs and a “must have” for rural communities that have tourism potential. It is a form of tourism, through which the tourist can receive a qualitative product at a reasonable price, but also a field that can ensure sustainable development over time, being at the same time environmentally friendly. The purpose of this scientific paper is to identify the aspects that make agritourism “a possible business reality of the moment”, for Romanian rural area’s sustainability. We take into account the following areas: Bran-Moieciu area—considered “the oldest” in terms of agritourism experience, and Apuseni Mountains area, with a great inclination and potential for this activity. The study conducted for these two areas is focused on several aspects: the degree of involvement in agritourism activities, considering the number of years and managerial experience, the analysis of the types of activities/experiences offered by agritourism structures, the identification of the main reasons/motivations for the orientation towards agritourism and the manner in which this field is perceived. Aspects related to the marketing-finance part of the agritourism business are also taken into account: customers, distribution channels, financial sources, shortcomings observed by agritourism business owners and possible action directions so as to improve the activity/agritourism product. Agritourism may be “a possible business reality of the moment” for the studied areas and not only, but in the future, the entrepreneur/farmer must be constantly updated because of the changing situations that appear on the market, be able to make sustainable decisions for his/her own business, which in the future will ensure its viability and obviously its long-term profitability and development, and in the same time rural area’s sustainability.


2001 ◽  
Vol 19 (2) ◽  
pp. 1-21
Author(s):  
Michael Werz

Recent debates about the future of the European Union have focusedin large part on institutional reforms, the deficit of democratic legitimacy,and the problem of economic and agrarian policies. As importantas these issues may be, the most crucial question at the momentis not whether Europe will prevail as a union of nations or as a thoroughlyintegrated federal structure. What is of much greater concernis the fact that political structures and their corresponding politicaldiscourses have lagged far behind the social changes occurring inEuropean societies. The pivotal transformation of 1989 has not beengrasped intellectually or politically, even though its results areincreasingly visible in both the east and west.


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