Your browser doesn't support javascript.
Montrer: 20 | 50 | 100
Résultats 1 - 5 de 5
Filtre
Ajouter des filtres

Type de document
Gamme d'année
1.
iScience ; : 107079, 2023 Jun 09.
Article Dans Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-20239031

Résumé

Ongoing debates on anti-COVID19 policies have been focused on coexistence-with vs. zero-out (virus) strategies, which can be simplified as "always open (AO)" vs. "always closed (AC)." We postulate that a middle ground, dubbed LOHC (low-risk-open and high-risk-closed), is likely favorable, precluding obviously irrational HOLC (high-risk-open and low-risk-closed). From a meta-strategy perspective, these four policies cover the full spectrum of anti-pandemic policies. By emulating the reality of anti-pandemic policies today, the study aims to identify possible cognitive gaps and traps by harnessing the power of evolutionary game-theoretic analysis and simulations, which suggest that (i) AO and AC seems to be "high-probability" events (0.412-0.533); (ii) counter-intuitively, the middle ground-LOHC-seems to be small-probability event (0.053), possibly mirroring its wide adoptions but broad failures. Besides devising specific policies, an equally important challenge seems to deal with often hardly avoidable policy transitions along the process from emergence, epidemic, through pandemic, to endemic state.

2.
Cultural Geographies ; 30(2):279-298, 2023.
Article Dans Anglais | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-2269747

Résumé

This article enquires how ‘spatial hinges' between author Philip Pullman's series The Book of Dust and different sites are unexpected and elusive, but may opened by mindfulness. Natalie Goldberg's mindful writing practice techniques are used as an interpretative instrument to measure this hinging together of parallel worlds. The research data amalgamates interviews with Oxford fantasy tour guides conducted before COVID 19 restrictions with writing sprints about Lockdown walks in both a local park and on a guided tour of ‘Philip Pullman's Oxford'. The data reveals how a secret commonwealth of elves and fairies infuse the parks with otherworldly, unexpected and exaggerated bucolic awakenings and intersubjectivity, exposing ancient mythical places, including a holloway. On a tour of Oxford, the imaginative storytelling techniques of the guide include impromptu flights of fancy and tilted perspectives that contribute to an atmosphere of unlikeliness, suggestive of Pullman's texts. In addition, an experience of getting lost or ‘de-touring', leads to unexpected encounters with the affective mystical presence of Pullman's novels. The findings conclude that mindfulness may create a state of attunement to the reverberations of the opening of spatial hinges, allowing stories to reveal themselves spontaneously.

3.
Oceania ; 92(3):250-266, 2022.
Article Dans Anglais | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-2127942

Résumé

Social movements often attract tourists in their wake. The Association for Social Anthropology in Oceania convened a successful annual meeting in Portland, Oregon, less than a year after passionate protests that attracted national attention in the United States. Concerned city boosters, in response, invited tourists to enjoy Portland's vibrant diversity. That same year, Tulsa (Oklahoma) commemorated a 1921 race massacre with a new museum and events that also invited tourist visits. This brings me to consider the consequences of increasing (pre‐Covid‐19) tourists on Tanna (Vanuatu). Island entrepreneurs have packaged Tanna's famed John Frum and Prince Philip movements to entice tourists. Touristic attention and resources, however, can spark dispute within local communities, commoditize bits of culture, and reframe island identity and self‐conception.

4.
cultural geographies ; 2022.
Article Dans Anglais | Web of Science | ID: covidwho-2098252

Résumé

This article enquires how 'spatial hinges' between author Philip Pullman's series The Book of Dust and different sites are unexpected and elusive, but may opened by mindfulness. Natalie Goldberg's mindful writing practice techniques are used as an interpretative instrument to measure this hinging together of parallel worlds. The research data amalgamates interviews with Oxford fantasy tour guides conducted before COVID 19 restrictions with writing sprints about Lockdown walks in both a local park and on a guided tour of 'Philip Pullman's Oxford'. The data reveals how a secret commonwealth of elves and fairies infuse the parks with otherworldly, unexpected and exaggerated bucolic awakenings and intersubjectivity, exposing ancient mythical places, including a holloway. On a tour of Oxford, the imaginative storytelling techniques of the guide include impromptu flights of fancy and tilted perspectives that contribute to an atmosphere of unlikeliness, suggestive of Pullman's texts. In addition, an experience of getting lost or 'de-touring', leads to unexpected encounters with the affective mystical presence of Pullman's novels. The findings conclude that mindfulness may create a state of attunement to the reverberations of the opening of spatial hinges, allowing stories to reveal themselves spontaneously.

5.
Choral Journal ; 62(8):51-55, 2022.
Article Dans Anglais | Academic Search Complete | ID: covidwho-1823998

Résumé

The article discusses that creative director Philip Brunelle and his videographer son Tim have created a video catalog of choral composers and their compositions performed with Brunelle's choirs, VocalEssence and the Plymouth Congregational Church Choir in Minneapolis, Minnesota, and named it "Musical Moments." They started the project when the Covid-19 pandemic began in March 2020 after the cancelation of live concerts.

SÉLECTION CITATIONS
Détails de la recherche