Geven en krijgen rond het tijdschrift De Beweging (1905-1919)

2014 ◽  
Vol 19 (3) ◽  
pp. 301-325 ◽  
Author(s):  
Helleke van den Braber

Abstract Patterns of Giving and Receiving: the Case of the Cultural Magazine De Beweging (1905-1919)The Dutch poet Albert Verwey was editor of the cultural magazine De Beweging between 1905-1919. This article uses gift theory to investigate the alliances he forged with his publishers, with his readers, and with the writers he worked with, and takes stock of the ways he tried to keep the insolvent magazine financially afloat. Verwey struggled to find a balance between his own agenda and the interests of his associates, and had to tread carefully as he appealed to their clemency and goodwill. Following Aafke Komter, who differentiates between four types of gift relationship, this article demonstrates that Verwey positioned himself predominantly within the modes of what Komter calls community sharing and authority ranking.

2007 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-13 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mark Manolopoulos
Keyword(s):  

2015 ◽  
Vol 24 (2) ◽  
pp. 467-475 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roberta Zaffalon Ferreira ◽  
Michele Mandagará de Oliveira ◽  
Luciane Prado Kantorski ◽  
Valéria Cristina Christello Coimbra ◽  
Vanda Maria da Rosa Jardim

This is an excerpt from a dissertation which sought to investigate the meaning of gift theory among groups of users of crack and of other drugs within the scenarios of use. The study has an ethnographic approach; participants were 13 persons who made use of crack and other drugs in the scenarios of use in the Municipality of Pelotas in the state of Rio Grande do Sul, and the observations were made in 2013. The results evidenced that the users are victims of prejudice, but maintain the gift in their relationships and seek to help each other and show solidarity as a group. It was possible to share and demystify a highly specific and invisible way of life of the crack users; however, the changes will only begin to appear when more efficacious means of approach are found, with health policies for promoting closeness and links with this population, providing, above all, embracement of their needs, which at many times appeared to be neglected.


Author(s):  
Tzachi Zamir

This chapter begins the book’s analysis of gratitude. The fundamental religious attitude as the poem conveys it is life lived as experiencing a gift. Gratitude is the response this experience calls for. However, for gratitude to acquire value, it must be tested in various ways. To fall is to avoid gratitude. Three such avoidances—Satan’s, Adam’s, and Eve’s—are presented. A connection with contemporary gift-theory is also made in this chapter. Derrida and Jean-Luc Marion have claimed that the notion of the gift is paradoxical. Inspired by Mauss, both assert that gifts do not transcend the sphere of exchange. Milton’s Satan enables us to pinpoint their mistake.


2006 ◽  
Vol 67 (4) ◽  
pp. 723-749
Author(s):  
Wing-Chi Ki
Keyword(s):  

2013 ◽  
Vol 765-767 ◽  
pp. 1214-1217
Author(s):  
Jing Xin

Nowadays, microblog has emerged as the most promising social networking service in the Web2.0 age with diverse features for information dissemination, interpersonal communication and many other aspects. Chinese microblog shows great potential owing to the rich marketing source and powerful media influence brought by the huge user population. As the microblog community is largely influenced by some authoritative users, identifying these users and understanding the information dissemination pattern are theoretically and practically significant for us to promote user services, develop further applications and seek commerce opportunities. In this paper, we proposed a modified method for user authority ranking. A user-message graph modified according to Chinese microblog was applied to our study, and an algorithm based on ObjectRank was used to calculate ueser authority scores. We analyzed Sina microblog, as it was the most widely adopted Chinese microblog and more resources for research was accessible.


2021 ◽  
pp. 002085232110291
Author(s):  
Negar Monazam Tabrizi

This study investigates the relational dimensions that shape clinicians' intentionality and motivation for knowledge-sharing. Qualitative data was collected from 40 clinicians in two hospitals, and relational models theory was used to investigate the impact of different relational models (communal-sharing, authority-ranking, equality-matching and market-pricing) on clinicians' intentionality and motivation to engage in knowledge and learning. While communal-sharing and expert-based authority–ranking relationships predominantly encourage intra-professional knowledge-sharing, equality-matching encourages inter-professional knowledge-sharing. This implies that while the idea is to work together to improve public service quality, each actor has their own interests and is motivated to share knowledge for different collective and/or personal reasons/agendas. In the public sector, formal authority-ranking and market-pricing are the main driving forces of coordination of actions and knowledge flow, through the medium of money and trade. Despite this, power games and a lack of support from those in positions of authority and ignorance of potential conflicts of interest, as well as extrinsic motivators, hamper knowledge-sharing, all of which threaten patient safety. Points for practitioners In pursuit of public service improvement, a focus on fostering an organizational culture that promotes collective behaviour, especially among those in authority, is crucial, given that their lack of support retards knowledge-sharing. For effective knowledge-sharing, both intrinsic and extrinsic motivators are equally important depending on the relational model.


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