On_Culture Vol. 01 (2016)
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Item Reflections on ethnography as a research method(2016) Wehde, KatjaItem The wisdom of crowds(2016) Kohle, HubertusItem Reflections on hunger in Burkina Faso(2016) Kalfelis, Melina C.Item Item The trouble with emergence(2016) Schniedermann, WibkeItem Sarah Kane's world of depression : the emergence and experience of mental illness in 4.48 psychosis(2016) Ovaska, AnnaFictional narratives of mental illnesses often focus on individual experiences of pain, anxiety and suffering. As such, narratives depict the experiences of illness in a holistic way, revealing the embodied, situated and intersubjective in other words, emer-gent nature of psychiatric disorders. They are thus able to create a different kind of understanding of mental disorders than medicalizing strands of psychiatry that tend to reduce mental illnesses to biological dysfunctions of the brain and the nervous system and thus ignore how disorders straddle the brain, the body and the environment.In this article, I discuss how the experiential world of depression is constructed and conceived of in Sarah Kane s play 4.48 Psychosis. Kane s depiction of severe, psychotic depression is in line with phenomenological accounts of the illness, in which depression is understood as an emergent phenomenon that gives rise to altera-tions in the embodied being-in-the-world of the subject. The text refers to common cognitive-affective experiences and folk-psychological understandings of the mind and employs different intertextual, narrative and poetic strategies to convey the phe-nomenal world of depression to its readers. In addition, Kane emphasizes that to treat depression a deeper understanding of this state of emergency is needed than what medicalizing psychiatry is able to provide.Item A poetic reading of permaculture in three helical aesthetic plans(2016) Schröder, AndressaItem Curating as research(2016) Gschrey, RaulItem New narrative forms in the digital age : the emergence of enhanced e-books(2016) Weigel, AnnaItem Emergent emergencies in complex ecosystems : reflections on the limits of narrative cognition and a revisiting of Michael Crichton's Jurassic Park (1990)(2016) Scherr, AlexanderThis article argues that emergent emergencies in complex natural systems or eco-systems can be understood as the ethical consequences of cognitive failure or epis-temological error (Gregory Bateson). More specifically, I hold that complex systems display emergent behaviors, and that narrative cognition our human default way of making sense of the world is not particularly well suited for understanding emer-gence. Building on previous narratological work on the incompatibility of narrative and emergence (H. Porter Abbott, Richard Walsh), I argue further that narrative think-ing and complex systems are each characterized by distinct types of agency, or ways of conceptualizing agency. In its second half, the essay turns to Michael Crichton s classic Jurassic Park (1990), reading the novel as a fictional thought experiment which not only simulates an emergency situation, but also explores the reasons for the collapsing of the control system in the fictional theme park from the vantage of chaos theory. It will be shown that the emergent emergency staged in the novel is the result of cognitive failure on the part of the park managers, who are misled by a narrative of centralized control (Abbott) in their attempts to control the park and a reductionist conceptualization of life. Such reductionist approaches to life are contrasted with ecological frameworks in this article.1Item Shake those methods! The art of doing research(2016) Krit, Alesya; Wehde, Katja; Gschrey, Raul; Trischler, RonjaItem Design and modeling as processes of creating culture(2016) Trischler, RonjaItem Emergency in protest : young people's politics in the Gezi protests(2016) Gümüs, PinarProtests often indicate social states of emergency. Protesters no longer agree with the existing situation and the way their lives are regulated; therefore, they demand immediate change. The Gezi Protests, in which people from various social, political, and class backgrounds went to the streets to voice their dissent, certainly reflected a state of emergency in Turkey. Young people, often referred to as members of the country s post-1980 apolitical generation within public discourse, unexpectedly gathered on the streets and acted as the frontrunners of this mass movement. What is more, their way of protesting through creative performances and humor effectively increased their visibility. Drawing upon the concept of emergency, and guided by a cultural performative approach, this article focuses on young people s experiences of protest. It is a study of the reasons and meanings behind young people s participation in the protests, as well as of values such as trust, solidarity, and collectivity upon which their action was grounded. My findings are based on qualitative field research, i.e., in-depth interviews conducted with young participants of the Gezi protests in İstanbul. The investigation is driven by the questions of how young people describe the notion of the political in relation to trust, solidarity, and collectivity, and how these diverse ways of describing the political through practices foreshadow a new understanding of the political, which gained momentum from the state of emergency of the Gezi ProtestsItem Digital dark age : an overview for the humanities and social sciences(2016) Migowski, Ana LúciaThe possibility of a Digital Dark Age worries computer scientists, archivists, and librarians, but it also concerns humanists and social scientists. The absence of access to digital data and cultural products due to the obsolescence of technologies used for today s communication, entertainment, work, production and circulation of scientific knowledge is an imminent risk. This report is based on texts and interviews with experts. Here we provide an overview of this emergent and urgent problem and present suggestions for prevention.Item Schools under fire? : school shootings and the construction of a cultural discourse of emergency(2016) Braselmann, SilkeContrary to popular belief, rampage violence at suburban and rural schools occurred before the infamous Columbine High School shooting in April 1999. While school shootings before Columbine gained international media attention were treated as a local rather than a national or even international problem, they are now seen as an emergent phenomenon that has to be addressed with appropriate urgency.In this paper, I want to examine whether school shootings are in fact increasing and address the medial construction of the discourse of emergency that has evolved around these acts of excessive violence. I argue that the public perception of school shootings is inseparably intertwined with the media dynamics in the aftermath of these incidents. In these discursive dynamics, I argue, it can be seen that these acts of vio-lence lay open society s underlying fears. School shootings, as this paper shows, are closely linked to contemporary media logic and can be understood as examples of the contemporary dynamics of cultural discourses of emergency.