CULTURAL INFORMATION FROM CATALAN-SPEAKING LANDS 2000 (II)

2001 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 157-170
Author(s):  
CARLES SANTACANA I TORRES ◽  
MERCÈ LORENTE CASAFONT ◽  
ENRIC BALAGUER ◽  
FRANCESC FOGUET I BOREU ◽  
LAURA GARCÍA SÁNCHEZ
Keyword(s):  
2019 ◽  
Vol 49 (1) ◽  
pp. 135-150
Author(s):  
Diane Negra

In this article I consider how registers of weather media carry/convey cultural information, specifically how texts about extreme weather articulate with investment in a supposed post-recession restored normality marked by the Irish government's commitment to deregulated transnational capitalism. I maintain that, in a process of cross-cultural remediation, sensationalist codes of US weather media that discursively manage awareness of systemic climate problems are just starting to infiltrate the Irish broadcasting environment. In early December 2015 RTÉ’s Teresa Mannion covered a strong gale, Storm Desmond, amidst inclement conditions in Salthill, Co Galway. Modelling the kind of ‘body at risk’ coverage consummately performed by US Weather Channel personnel, Mannion could barely speak over the lashing rain and strong winds in a dramatic broadcast that quickly became a viral video. This article analyses the fascination with Mannion's piece and its memetic, and attends to the nature of the pleasure taken in her on-camera discomfiture and the breach of gendered territory committed by Mannion at a time when national popular culture in Ireland is under increased obligation to identify and explain climate change-related extreme weather.


2020 ◽  
pp. 256-262
Author(s):  
N.V. Bubnova

The article suggests an approach to revelation anthroponymic markers of the integrated national cultural space, the creation and the preservation of which acquired especial significance in the 21st century due to the rapid globalization. Obviously, that proper names, which carry multifaceted historic and cultural information concerning people's life, constitute the major part of Russian cultural basis. Thus, the question arises, how to find these proper names in such a vocabulary diversity. Correspondingly, the exploration of proper names and theirs value on regional level using objective experimental data, can be considered as a “filtr” for the detection of such proper names. The experience of conducting such explorations of Smolensk's onomastic material is described in this article.


2021 ◽  
pp. 100158
Author(s):  
Anawat Suppasri ◽  
Miwako Kitamura ◽  
Haruka Tsukuda ◽  
Sebastien P. Boret ◽  
Gianluca Pescaroli ◽  
...  

2006 ◽  
Vol 29 (4) ◽  
pp. 351-352 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bruce Bridgeman

Mathematical models are potentially as useful for culture as for evolution, but cultural models must have different designs from genetic models. Social sciences must borrow from biology the idea of modeling, rather than the structure of models, because copying the product is fundamentally different from copying the design. Transfer of most cultural information from brains to artificial media increases the differences between cultural and biological information.


2011 ◽  
Vol 347-353 ◽  
pp. 426-430
Author(s):  
Da Lai Wang

This paper aims to account for sustainable development of different cultures in the context of globalization from the perspective of cultural functions of translation, which wield enormous power in constructing representations of the foreign culture and have far reaching effects in the target culture. According to cultural communication of translation, the major task of translation is to turn the cultural information in one language into another. Therefore, in the process of translating, the translator should try his utmost to allow his target language reader to acquire cultural information of the source text in order to promote mutual understanding between Western people and Eastern people and make different cultures co-exist peacefully and achieve sustainable development.


2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 209-226 ◽  
Author(s):  
Adrienne L. Kaeppler

Four early photographers are examined here in relation to their encounters with Tongans and Tonga. These photographers are Andrew Garrett, Gustav Adolph Riemer, Clarence Gordon Campbell and Walter Stanhope Sherwill. Garrett, an American natural historian who specialized in shells and fish, took two ambrotypes of Tongans in Fiji in 1868, which are two of the earliest Tongan photographs known. Riemer, born in Saarlouis, Germany, was a marine photographer on S.M.S. Hertha on an official diplomatic visit and took at least 28 photographs in Tonga in 1876. Campbell, a tourist from New York, took 25 culturally important photographs in 1902. Sherwill, a British subject born in India, moved to Tonga about the time of the First World War. He probably took many photographs with more modern equipment, but only two have been identified with certainty. This article presents information about the photographers and those depicted, where the original photographs can be found and the research that made it possible to glean cultural information from them. These early photographers are placed in the context of other more well-known early photographers whose works can be found in archives and libraries in New Zealand, Australia, Hawai‘i and Germany. In addition, summary information about two Tongan-born photographers is presented, as well as where their photographs/negatives can be found.


1993 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 133-157
Author(s):  
JOAN-F. CABESTANY I FORT ◽  
CARLES SANTACANA I TORRES ◽  
MERCÈ LORENTE CASAFONT ◽  
ENRIC BALAGUER ◽  
JAUME CARBONELL I GUBERNA ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
O. Nikiforova

The paper uses the material of Nizhny Novgorod dialects to note that the verbal code of family rituals, being a special form of storing and reflecting national and cultural information, becomes the basis for learning the specifics of the national mentality and gives a multifaceted idea of people's life in the value space of the Russian ethnic group.


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