Showing 1 - 20 results of 32 for search '"Lost Objects"', query time: 0.61s Refine Results
  1. 1

    Polin: „Ultimate Lost Object by Joanna Tokarska-Bakir

    Published 2016-12-01
    “… Polin: "Ultimate Lost Object” The article is a critique of the POLIN Museum’s contemporary exhibition, which – according to the author – suppresses the most difficult aspect of Polish-Jewish past, the ones associated with the violence of the pogroms that were the decisive factor in the greatest waves of Jewish emigration from Poland. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  2. 2
  3. 3

    Del duelo al deseo by Sylvia De Castro Korgi

    Published 2011-09-01
    Subjects: “…deseo, duelo, identificación, filiación, objeto perdido, padre simbólico, désir, deuil, identification, filiation, objet perdu, desire, mourning, identification, filiation, lost object, symbolic father…”
    Get full text
    Article
  4. 4
  5. 5

    Clustered Crowd GPS for Privacy Valuing Active Localization by Fatih Yucel, Eyuphan Bulut

    Published 2018-01-01
    “…In this paper, we study the localization of lost objects through the crowd GPS service in an active manner. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  6. 6

    Analiza psychokrytyczna poezji Stanisława Barańczaka by Katarzyna Mulet

    Published 2011-01-01
    “…Barańczak’s writing is gaining then the title of reparation, it becomes a way to recover lost objects from the past by the writer: freedom, stabilization, health, but also the past time, places, events and people.…”
    Get full text
    Article
  7. 7

    A Sequential Search Distribution: Proofreading, Russian Roulette, and the Incomplete q-Eulerian Polynomials by Travis Herbranson, Don Rawlings

    Published 2001-01-01
    “…The distribution for the number of searches needed to find k of n lost objects is expressed in terms of a refinement of the q-Eulerian polynomials, for which formulae are developed involving homogeneous symmetric polynomials. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  8. 8

    The replaced image. Reconstruction, copy and representation of the lost cultural heritage‬‬‬ by Elena Pirazzoli

    Published 2017-01-01
    “…Some innovative aspects of this phenomenon are emerged in the last years: the technical possibilities, as virtual reconstructions or 3D prints, allow to realize perfect, or even iper-realist, copies of the lost objects. Furthermore, the identitarian quality of the cultural heritage goes beyond the national border: lately some transnational projects have been created to realize virtual or 3D reconstructions of Palmyra (e.g. the Arch of Triumph recreated in London). …”
    Get full text
    Article
  9. 9

    SUJETO Y MUNDO MATERIAL EN LA NARRATIVA CHILENA DEL NOVENTA Y EL DOS MIL: ESTOICOS, ESCÉPTICOS Y EPICúREOS by Ignacio Alvarez

    Published 2012-11-01
    “…Stoic texts melancholically long for a contact with their lost objects, skeptical ones doubt that this is possible, and epicurean texts -which do not distinguish between perception and imagination-, exasperate .symbolic production as a contact with material production. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  10. 10

    INTERACTIVE IMMERSIVE VIRTUALMUSEUM: DIGITAL DOCUMENTATION FOR VIRTUAL INTERACTION by P. Clini, L. Ruggeri, R. Angeloni, M. Sasso

    Published 2018-05-01
    “…<br> The challenge, taking advantage of the latest opportunities made available by photogrammetry and ICT, is to enrich visitors’ experience in Real Museum making possible the interaction with perishable, damaged or lost objects and the public access to inaccessible or no longer existing places promoting in this way the preservation of fragile sites.…”
    Get full text
    Article
  11. 11

    La melancolía y el estado. Reflexiones desde el psicoanálisis aplicado by Lina Fernanda Buchely Ibarra

    Published 2013-08-01
    “…By applying basic Freudian concepts of melancholy, the article concludes by suggesting that, paradoxically, the dependence of colonization is our lost object of desire.…”
    Get full text
    Article
  12. 12

    “Self-Wrought Homemaking”: Revisiting the Concept of the “Home” in the Poetry of Naomi Shihab Nye and Lisa Suhair Majaj by Eman K. Mukattash

    Published 2019-12-01
    “…The fixed perception of the home as a lost object in some of their poems, as well as the more realistic perception of the home as a substitute for the lost object in other poems are eventually replaced with a self-motivated realization of the need to free their perception from the essentialist categories of old and new, lost and retrieved through language. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  13. 13

    Minimizing the expected search time of finding the hidden object by maximizing the discount effort reward search by Mohamed Abd Allah El-Hadidy, Ajab A. Alfreedi

    Published 2020-01-01
    “…A new search technique is developed to locate the hidden target (object) in one of the N-disjoint regions that are not identical. The lost object follows a bivariate distribution. Minimizing the search effort with discount reward has been applied instead of reducing the expected search time. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  14. 14

    Recovering the Irrecoverable: Blackness, Melancholy, and Duplicities That Bind by Joseph Winters

    Published 2021-04-01
    “…Yet I contend that melancholy, which Best associates with black studies’ desire to recover a lost object, can be read in a different direction, one that includes both attachment and wound, investment and dissolution. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  15. 15

    Melancholia of deconstruction by Jacob Rogozinski, Vicentina Marangon (tradução)

    Published 2011-12-01
    “…This paper addresses Derrida´s texts on “the work of mourning”, in which the philosopher, borrowing from psychoanalytic theory, postulates a distinction between mourning as a “normal” process of introjection of the lost object, and its pathological forms, in which mourning does not succeed. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  16. 16

    Czas melancholii - czasem przemian (transgresji) czy czasem destrukcji? by Marek Tański

    Published 2007-11-01
    “…To see the issue in a broad perspective, the author takes into account the relation between a man and his undertakings, such as: eftorts to be a through man, free from the despair, abandonments of lost object and in necessity to retrieval of oneself.…”
    Get full text
    Article
  17. 17

    Die Wende als Witz, Komische Darstellungen eines historischen Umbruchs by W. Gabler

    Published 1997-04-01
    “…The author shows that the wit in two recent novels - Helden wie wir (1995) by Thomas Brussig and Der Zimmerspringbrunnen (1995) by Jens Sparschuh - is based on unconsciously repressed or isolated feelings of mourning over the lost object, the GDR. These feelings are seen as the major reason for the different or contradictory public reception of both novels.…”
    Get full text
    Article
  18. 18

    Art between Fetishism and Melancholy in Adorno’s Aesthetic Theory Authors by Rok Benčin

    Published 2023-07-01
    “…Nevertheless—the article claims—thas this is only possible if art’s fetishism is dialectically opposed to its melancholy, through which art establishes a relation to the heterogeneous element of the lost object produced by its autonomous form.…”
    Get full text
    Article
  19. 19

    The cultural practice of responso in Mostardas/RS by Sabrina Machado Araujo, Ronaldo Bernardino Colvero

    Published 2021-12-01
    “…It requires the figure of the "responsador(a)", a person who, through faith, intercedes for another person to find a lost object or animal. This practice is part of Mostardas culture, constituting a tradition that is passed on through generations and that, therefore, can be understood as an Intangible Cultural Heritage. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  20. 20

    Samuel Beckett’s Theatre: from “things” to “The Thing” by Geneviève Chevallier

    Published 2009-03-01
    “…But the tongue which we both see and hear in Not I, as the lips and the words take form in the Mouth, turns the object into a thing, The Thing, Das Ding, as Freud defines it, that which cannot be represented, what the subject longs for and will never find, a lost object, which is the core of the sublimation process that accounts for the work of art.…”
    Get full text
    Article