theory 
(
800) Narrative is a fundamental means through which people live their lives
(
781) Communication codes are learnt and culturally defined
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747) Law as a discourse framed by the world that it inhabits and creates
(
721) Images do not embody information about their use
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690) The Reflective Practitioner: Choreography As Research In An Intercultural Context
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687) Frayling: into, through and for art and design
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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
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587) Spectacle as Show - not an inferior part of tradegy
(
580) changing our footing in talk
(
579) Ernest Boyers: Priorities of the Professoriate
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576) bystandering as a footing position
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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
http://folksonomy.org.uk/?s=560
Utterance:
What this topography of action brings to the theory-practice debate is a way of thinking which allows art theory and art practice to stand alongside each other as mutually supportive 'interventions' in the development of an artwork. On this account, both theory and practice can be understood as gestures which make a difference, make something stand out, rise above or drop below an otherwise undifferentiated field of experience. While we are probably accustomed to thinking of art practice as a form of action, it needs to be borne in mind that activity, i.e. activity in general, is being viewed here from a particular, existentialist perspective. With [Jean-Paul] Sartre, we are theorizing the action as an event, a moment, a rupture, something which makes a difference where there was previously no difference at all, and which thereby allows the subject to orient itself in terms of the objects it encounters. Approaching the art-making process in these terms requires us to think about the way in which the work develops as a series of ruptures or saliences...
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©Clive Cazeaux pp. 44-56
Motivation:
Book: Cazeaux, Clive. 2002 Categories in Action: Sartre and the Theory-Practice Debate, , : Journal of Visual Art Practice 2.
(
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
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527) Bernstein: Horizontal Discourse and Vertical Discourses
(
521) Design scholarship as an alternative form of research grounded in practice
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510) Self-Reflexivity: the natural sciences versus the human sciences
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495) A Depiction Of The Process Of Picture Making: Emergence Of A Meta-Subject
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481) Clive Wearing: procedural and declarative memories
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477) Constructivism and Online Education
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459) coalescing in the act of interpretation
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449) Wittgenstein's picture theory of meaning
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448) Differ
ance: formation of form
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447) Interaction Design: university & applied research centres
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426) Gestell: enframing and converting everything encountered
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413) Empiricism: failing to secure contingency
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406) post-traditional order contesting the hierarchy of legitimacy
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397) Reflexive Modernisation: Beyond Modernism & Postmodernism
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360) the mirror is both a utopia and a heterotopia
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344) Francis Bacon: misconceptions in the discovery of causes
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322) Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis
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205) Donald Schön: The Reflective Practitioner Model
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195) archaeology-poem: multiple registers
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203) Julia Kristeva: The Abject
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193) Defamiliarization and Making Strange
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191) suture: revelation of constructed nature
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178) insurrection of subjugated knowledges
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168) Donna Haraway: situated knowledges
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161) Historical Revisionism
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146) every utterance generates a response
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149) freemason: secular architect shaping the world
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150) freemason: utopic representations of an orderly society
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151) freemason: Solomon's Temple - classical order
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154) heteroglossia: multilanguagedness
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131) contingent product of contingently existing forces
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92) authenticity: authority of the object
(
80) tends to perfection: nature
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63) information is a commodity and is properly controlled by market forces?
(
61) Diachronic and synchronic
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3) Walter Benjamin: das passagen-werk / the arcades project
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38) Michel Foucault: Heterotopia
(
40) Kevin Hetherington: Heterotopia & Social Ordering
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44) Henri Bergson: Tendencies and Composites
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45) readerly texts and writerly texts
(
48) Deleuzian Memory of Sans Soleil