theory 
(
800) Narrative is a fundamental means through which people live their lives
(
781) Communication codes are learnt and culturally defined
(
747) Law as a discourse framed by the world that it inhabits and creates
(
721) Images do not embody information about their use
(
690) The Reflective Practitioner: Choreography As Research In An Intercultural Context
(
687) Frayling: into, through and for art and design
(
641) Inside Out - Issues of interpretation in virtual heritage
(
640) Barthes: Death of the Author
(
617) Reflexive Modernisation: knowledgeable subjects able to reflect on their social conditions
(
587) Spectacle as Show - not an inferior part of tradegy
(
580) changing our footing in talk
(
579) Ernest Boyers: Priorities of the Professoriate
(
576) bystandering as a footing position
(
573) Thick Conceptions of Practice: cognitive skills that give rise to contextualised beliefs
(
560) topography of action: to rise above or drop below a field of experience
(
539) ICT-Based Learning Environments: transmission or active exploration?
(
536) discussion about culture anticipates and disseminates culture
(
532) Types of Research in the Creative Arts and Design
(
527) Bernstein: Horizontal Discourse and Vertical Discourses
(
521) Design scholarship as an alternative form of research grounded in practice
(
510) Self-Reflexivity: the natural sciences versus the human sciences
(
495) A Depiction Of The Process Of Picture Making: Emergence Of A Meta-Subject
(
481) Clive Wearing: procedural and declarative memories
(
477) Constructivism and Online Education
(
459) coalescing in the act of interpretation
(
449) Wittgenstein's picture theory of meaning
(
448) Differ
ance: formation of form
(
447) Interaction Design: university & applied research centres
(
426) Gestell: enframing and converting everything encountered
(
413) Empiricism: failing to secure contingency
(
406) post-traditional order contesting the hierarchy of legitimacy
(
397) Reflexive Modernisation: Beyond Modernism & Postmodernism
(
360) the mirror is both a utopia and a heterotopia
(
344) Francis Bacon: misconceptions in the discovery of causes
(
322) Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis
(
205) Donald Schön: The Reflective Practitioner Model
(
195) archaeology-poem: multiple registers
(
203) Julia Kristeva: The Abject
(
193) Defamiliarization and Making Strange
(
191) suture: revelation of constructed nature
(
178) insurrection of subjugated knowledges
(
168) Donna Haraway: situated knowledges
(
161) Historical Revisionism
(
146) every utterance generates a response
(
149) freemason: secular architect shaping the world
(
150) freemason: utopic representations of an orderly society
(
151) freemason: Solomon's Temple - classical order
(
154) heteroglossia: multilanguagedness
(
131) contingent product of contingently existing forces
(
92) authenticity: authority of the object
(
80) tends to perfection: nature
(
63) information is a commodity and is properly controlled by market forces?
(
61) Diachronic and synchronic
(
3) Walter Benjamin: das passagen-werk / the arcades project
(
38) Michel Foucault: Heterotopia
(
40) Kevin Hetherington: Heterotopia & Social Ordering
(44) Henri Bergson: Tendencies and Composites
http://folksonomy.org.uk/?s=44
Utterance:
What are the "things themselves"? In the 1956 essay, Deleuze spends a lot of time on this aspect of Bergsonian metaphysics. Things are not self-contained substances, independent of time and becoming, but "phases" of becoming itself. In other words, a thing is not the effect of a cause but the expression of a "tendency." A tendency is a phase of becoming. Is there a correspondence between a thing and a tendency? Not a one-to-one correspondence because things are composites (des mixtes) of at least two tendencies. A tendency can express itself only insofar as it is acted upon by another tendency and, therefore, tendencies never come isolated from one another but always in pairs.
(
45) readerly texts and writerly texts
(
48) Deleuzian Memory of Sans Soleil