4 resultados para Modern piracy
em Universidad de Alicante
Resumo:
Seventy-five years ago, Walter Benjamin showed us that the line between "production" and "reproduction" had begun to blur. Reproduction was no longer optional, consequential and degrading (the shredding of the original’s aura), but was instead being transformed into a principle of production itself: something was produced bearing in mind how it was to be reproduced. No longer did the original exist (in photography, film, music recordings), but instead diffusion, exhibition. The work existed precisely at the time and place of its enjoyment. Today, the cultural pirates of the new digital era take this principle to the extreme, with a certain characteristic also foreseen by Benjamin: a yearning to participate, to post-produce something captured in order to later return it to the Internet, modified in some way and made available to others. This postproduction is what is now often mixed up with reception, just as production and reproduction used to be in Benjamin’s day. Postproduction on the receiver’s side, which somehow augments and extends the received work, in other words creates an etymologically rigorous author-ization (auctor as the root of both author and augmentation). The cultural pirate only deserves redemption thanks to this creative augmentation.
Resumo:
Se recogen 730 referencias bibliográficas que tratan de las Baleares durante el periodo andalusí, de la conquista cristiana y sus diferentes documentos (Repartiment, etc.), del período de dominio cristiano en el cual los musulmanes, primero –como mudéjares– eran un grupo social mayoritario, y luego –como meros esclavos, pasaron a ser minoría en la Edad Moderna, en la que además de este fenómeno de los esclavos musulmanes nos hemos fijado en el de la piratería islámica proveniente del norte de África. En las épocas sucesivas hemos creído conveniente recoger los trabajos que hagan referencia a las Baleares y sus relaciones de diversa índole con el mundo islámico. Además de otros muchos estudios de índole cultural, social, económica, arqueológica, política, etc., que se encuadren u ocupen de estos períodos cronológicos. Igualmente se han recogido los trabajos más generales en los que se halle referencia a las islas, bien de geógrafos árabes (descripciones geográficas), o literatos, científicos y demás personajes musulmanes, de tratados islámicos medievales, o de fuentes cristianas que las mencionen y nos muestren la huella o legado de lo árabe.
Resumo:
Apart from reflecting modern human dental variation, differences in dental size among populations provide a means for studying continuous evolutionary processes and their mechanisms. Dental wear, on the other hand, has been widely used to infer dietary adaptations and variability among or within diverse ancient human populations. Few such studies have focused on modern foragers and farmers, however, and diverse methods have been used. This research aimed to apply a single, standardized, and systematic quantitative procedure to measure dental size and dentin exposure in order to analyze differences among several hunter-gatherer and agricultural populations from various environments and geographic origins. In particular, we focused on sexual dimorphism and intergroup differences in the upper and lower first molars. Results indicated no sexual dimorphism in molar size and wear within the studied populations. Despite the great ethnographic variation in subsistence strategies among these populations, our findings suggest that differences in sexual division of labor do not affect dietary wear patterns.