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Biblioteka Uniwersytecka

Etica originaria e assoluto affettivo : La coscienza e il superamento della modernità nella teologia filosofica di Antonio Rosmini

Obrazy
Autor
Fernando Bellelli
Place of publication
Milano
Publication date
2014
Table of Contents

Prefazione . . XI
Introduzione . . XV
Abbreviazioni delle opere di Rosmini . . XXIII

PARTE PRIMA: Rosmini: l'antropologia dell'essere morale tra sapere filosofìco e sapere teologico

I. Status quaestionis: la quarta fase. Teologia, metafisica, ontologia, fenomenologia ed ermeneutica . . 3
1. L'antropologia di Rosmini: il punto di vista della quarta fase . . 4
1.1. Elementi teologico-filosofici per decifrare in modo ermeneuticamente compiutO l'antropologia rosminiana . . 15
1.2. L'idea dell'essere: tra ontologia e gnoseologia . . 17
2. Il «Trattato della coscienza morale» . . 19
2.1. L'affezione e il giudizio della coscienza . . 24
2.2. La nostra prospettiva ermeneutica e l'originalità della coscienza in Rosmini: giudizio speculativo di un giudizio pratico . . 29
3. La «Teosofia» . . 40
3.1. Approccio alla «Teosofia»: l'essere reale . . 43
3.2. L'affezione, l'atto del giudizio e l'inoggettivazione . . 47
Tavola sinottica 1 . . 51
Tavola sinottica 2 . . 52
Tavola sinottica 3 . . 54

II Ricostruzione e rielaborazione del percorso rosminiano . . 55
1. Filosofia e pedagogia: rapporto originario co-implicante la genesi di un'epistemologia implicita del nesso tra scienze umane e filosoh'co-teologiche . . 61
1.1. L'organicità del sintesismo nel sapere enciclopedico . . 65
2. Coscienza ed essere morale: accostamenti inediti . . 82
2.1. La soggettività tra assolutezza dell'origine e compimento della destinazione: legge, fecondità dell'insessione, generazione e libertà . . 97
3. Elementi teologicofilosofici di una metafisica dell'affezione . . 110
3.1. Il sentimento fondamentale e l'inoggettivazione: il 'sintesismo nel sintesismo' (Schelling e Rosmini) . . 113

III. Il punto d'incontro tra la rivelazione e la libertà nell'opera di Rosmini . . 133
1. Il giudizio . . 134
2. Agape: esteriorità e sensibilità del soggetto relazione . . 144

PARTE SECONDA: Rosmini e la postmodernità

IV. Con Rosmini oltre i sentieri interrotti e ripresi della modernità . . 155
1. Postmodernità: fine o ri-de-finizione del soggetto? . . 157
1.1. Per un'ermeneutica dell'etica come ontologia in Lévinas: invocazione implicita dell'essere morale? . . 175
1.2. L'istanza etico-estetico-simbolica dopo la fine del soggetto moderno e l'unità del sapere in Rosmini . . 184
2. Rosrnini e la postmodernità: prospettiva ermeneutica . . 188
2.1. L'esteriorità della coscienza, l'etica dell'incontrovertibile e l'essere morale . . 210

V. Struttura salvifica della rivelazione. Il non colpevole vuoto antropologico e la dinamica della redenzione . . 221
1. Inoggettivazione e affidamento: la sensibilità della rivelazione . . 225
1.1. Un possibile approfondimento del magistero e sua risulttante risonanza . . 225
1.2. Intercettazione, decifrazione e possibile orientamento della postmodernità . . 231
2. Colpa, peccato e libertà . . 235
2.1. L'affezione e il pensare dell'ingiunzione/ obbedinza tra ontologia e grazia . . 240
Tavola sinottica 4 . . 251
Tavola sinottica 5 . . 252

VI. Coscienza e struttura originaria. Libertà della rivelazione e verità degli affetti . . 255
1. Sentimento fondamentale ed etica teologica della verità . . 259
1.1. Coscienza morale ed etica dell'alterila . . 265
1.2. Coscienza morale ed ermeneutica dialogica . . 274
1.3. Coscienza morale e modello trascendentale del compimento del senso . . 277
2. Metafisica dell'affezione in Rosmini e svolta affettiva per la metafisica . . 280
2.1. Essere morale e teoria della coscienza credente: un confronto da svolgere . . 284
2.2. Elementi per illustrare la pertinenza della questione e per la sua istruzione . . 292
3. La «Teosofìa» come oltrepassamento del duplice modello storico della correlazione . . 294
3.1. Teosofia, inoggettivazione e correlazione (dialettica e come conciliazione) . . 295
3.2. Teosofia, fenomenologia e metafisica . . 301
3.3. Rosmini oltre i limiti dell'idealismo trascendentale e della riduzione eidetica . . 306

Conclusioni . . 317
Postfazione . . 323
Bibliografia . . 327
Indice dei nomi . . 369

Series
(Filosofia. Ricerche)

Finnish consumption : an emerging consumer society between East and West

Obrazy
Autor
ed. by Visa Heinonen & Matti Peltonen
Place of publication
Helsinki
Publication date
2013
Table of Contents

Acknowledgements . . 7
Introduction: The Formation of the Finnish Type of Consumer Society between the East and the West, the!950s and 1960s . . 10

PART I. THE MAKING OF THE FRUGAL CONSUMER
The Finnish Consumer Mentality and Ethos: At the Intersection between East and West . . 42
A Country of Decent Consumers: The Role of Alcohol in Everyday Finnish Life in the 1950s . . 88
Imagining Economy. Finlandia Newsreels Building up shared Imagery in the 1950s and early 1960s . . 104
Anglo-American Pop Music, Finnish Tango, and the Controversial Images of Modernity in Finland in the 1960s . . 124

PART II. CONSUMPTION AS SPECTACLE: AGE OF THE TELEVISION, AFFLUENCE AND MEDIATISATION OF CONSUMER SOCIETY
Television Creating Finnish Consumer Mentality in the 1960s . . 154
The Legalizing of Roulette and Changes in Finnish Consumer Culture in the 1960s and 1970s . . 180
Accidental Traders - Finnish Tourists in the Soviet Union in THE 1950s-1970s . . 206
From Background to Foreground: Music Products for Production and Consumption Spaces. . 230

Afterword
Summerhouses and Saunas, Parks and Libraries - Places of Private and Public Consumption in Finland . . 254
List of conrributors . . 260

Series
(Studia Historica ; 83)

Trafficking for forced labour and labour exploitation in Finland, Poland and Estonia

Obrazy
Autor
Anniina Jokinen, Natalia Ollus and Kauko Aromaa (eds.)
Place of publication
Helsinki

Publisher

Publication date
2011
Table of Contents

FOREWORD . . 9

TRAFFICKING FOR FORCED LABOUR AND LABOUR EXPLOITATION - SETTING THE SCENE . . 11
Introduction, project background and objectives . . 11
Literature and data collection issues . . 13
A brief overview of key international instruments concerning trafficking in human beings and forced labour . . 17
The three country reports . . 24
References . . 26

WORK ON ANY TERMS: TRAFFICKING FOR FORCED LABOUR AND EXPLOITATION OF MIGRANT WORKERS IN FINLAND . . 31
CHAPTER 1: INTRODUCTION AND NATIONAL LEGISLATION . . 31
1.1 Terminology . . 32
1.2 National legislation . . 33
CHAPTER 2: THE FINNISH CONTEXT . . 39
2.1 Institutional framework and data collection . . 39
2.2 Previous research in Finland . . 40
2.3 Reported crimes and court judgements . . 42
2.4 The assistance system for victims of human trafficking . . 43
2.5 The number of migrant workers in Finland . . 44
CHAPTER 3: DATA AND METHODS . . 48
3.1 The research questions . . 48
3.2 Expert interviews . . 49
3.3 Victim interviews . . 51
3.4 Court data . . 53
3.5 Pre-trial investigation materials . . 58
3.6 Media material . . 59
3.7 National expert meetings . . 60
CHAPTER 4: BEFORE ARRIVING IN FINLAND . . 61
4.1 Countries of origin and sectors . . 61
4.2 Victims and exploited workers . . 63
4.3 Perpetrators . . 64
4.4 Recruitment . . 66
4.5 Work permits . . 73
4.6 Travel arrangements . . 75
CHAPTER 5: FORMS OF EXPLOITATION IN FINLAND . . 77
5.1 Physical control . . 77
5.2 Other means of control . . 81
5.3 Economic control and other deficiencies regarding the terms of employment . . 90
CHAPTER 6: IDENTIFYING AND HELPING VICTIMS . . 106
6.1 How cases of exploitation are found out . . 106
6.2 Victim identification . . 107
6.3 Assisting victims of human trafficking within the official system of assistance . . 111
6.4 Victims' experiences and views regarding assistance and help . . 113
CHAPTER 7: CRIMINAL INVESTIGATION AND COURT PROCEEDINGS . . 116
7.1 Which unit is responsible for the investigation? . . 116
7.2 The length of the investigation . . 118
7.3 Interrogation . . 119
7.4 Problems regarding the evidence . . 121
7.5 Difficult crime labels and elements of crimes . . 122
7.6 Prosecution and non-prosecution . . 124
7.7 Lenient sanctions . . 125
7.8 The satisfaction of the victims and its impact on the criminal justice process . . 126
CHAPTER 8: WHAT IS TRAFFICKING FOR FORCED LABOUR? . . 130
8.1 The definition of human trafficking . . 130
8.2 Examples from other countries . . 132
8.3 Conclusions related to the definition . . 135
CHAPTER 9: SUMMARY AND RECOMMENDATIONS . . 138
SOURCES AND REFERENCES . . 142

TRAFFICKING FOR FORCED LABOUR IN POLAND . . 165
CHAPTER 1: INTRODUCTION AND TERMINOLOGY . . 165
CHAPTER 2: THE POLISH CONTEXT . . 171
2.1 Social context . . 172
2.2 Legal context . . 173
CHAPTER 3: DATA AND METHODS . . 184
3.1 Research questions . . 184
3.2 Data and methods used . . 185
3.3 Ethical questions related to the research . . 191
CHAPTER 4: ANALYSIS OF RESEARCH RESULTS . . 193
4.1 General information about the forced labour phenomenon in Poland . . 193
4.2 Modus operandi of the perpetrators . . 196
4.3 Who are the victims? . . 198
4.4 Who are the perpetrators? . . 200
4.5 Working conditions and salary . . 202
4.6 Means of control used against the victims . . 203
4.7 Economic sectors affected . . 206
4.8 The legal status of the victims in the country of destination . . 208
4.9 Other related phenomena - agency or leased workers . . 209
4.10 Impacts of the recession . . 211
CHAPTER 5: LAW IN PRACTICE AND LAW IN ACTION, I.E. HOW THE JUSTICE SYSTEM AND LAW ENFORCEMENT DEFINE FORCED LABOUR . . 213
5.1 The difficulty of defining human trafficking . . 214
5.2 How the courts and prosecutors defined human trafficking for forced labour . . 216
CHAPTER 6: SHORT DESCRIPTION OF THE SYSTEM OF ELIMINATION OF TRAFFICKING IN HUMAN BEINGS FOR FORCED LABOUR . . 220
6.1 Prevention . . 220
6.2 Identification of victims . . 220
6.3 Prosecution of the offence of trafficking in human beings for forced labour . . 224
6.4 Punishing of the offence of trafficking in human beings for forced labour . . 227
6.5 Assistance to victims . . 228
CHAPTER 7: HOW TO DO A STUDY ON TRAFFICKING FOR FORCED LABOUR . . 232
7.1 General remark . . 232
7.2 Interviews with experts (mostly law enforcement and state officials) . . 232
7.3 Official data from all possible institutions . . 233
7.4 Press analysis . . 233
7.5 Criminal cases - law in action studies . . 234
7.7 Interviews with perpetrators . . 235
7.8 Public opinion polls . . 236
CHAPTER 8: CONCLUSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS . . 237
LITERATURE . . 241
Specific sources of information referred to in Chapter 3 . . 244
List of interviewed experts . . 245

TRAFFICKING FOR FORCFD T.AROUR AND LABOUR EXPLOITATION IN ESTONIA . . 246
CHAPTER 1: INTRODUCTION . . 246
CHAPTER 2: BACKGROUND AND LEGISLATIVE FRAMEWORK . . 248
2.1 National definitions . . 248
2.2 Reflections on the current national situation . . 249
CHAPTER 3: DATA AND METHODS . . 254
3.1 Research questions . . 254
3.2 Data and methods used . . 254
3.3 Ethical questions related to the study . . 259
CHAPTER 4: LEGISLATIVE ANALYSIS . . 261
4.1 Procedural issues of labour exploitation cases . . 261
4.2 Lack of the legislation . . 264
4.3 Legislation amendments and developments . . 266
CHAPTER 5: PROBLEMATISATION OF HUMAN TRAFFICKING FOR FORCED LABOUR AND LABOUR EXPLOITATION . . 269
5.1 Media analysis . . 269
5.2 Labour migration to Estonia . . 275
5.3 Labour migration from Estonia . . 279
CHAPTER 6: THE NATURE OF EXPLOITATION . . 282
6.1 Recruitment . . 283
6.2 Elements of exploitation . . 285
6.3 Vulnerabilities of victims . . 291
CHAPTER 7: INSTITUTIONS AND AUTHORITIES DEALING WITH HUMAN TRAFFICKING . . 295
7.1 Citizenship and migration division of police . . 295
7.2 Centre of extradition . . 295
7.3 Estonian embassies abroad . . 296
7.4 Labour market organisations . . 297
7.5 Police . . 297
7.6 Prosecutor's office . . 299
7.7 The Labour inspectorate . . 300
7.8 Trade unions . . 301
CHAPTER 8: SUMMARY AND RECOMMENDATIONS . . 303
8.1 Summary . . 303
8.2 Recommendations . . 306
REFERENCES . . 308

TRAFFICKING FOR FORCED LABOUR: PROJECT SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS . . 312
Summary of project activities . . 312
Pilot methodology . . 314
Summary of the research findings . . 317
Conclusions and recommendations . . 319
Literature . . 322

Annex 1: Pilot methodology table . . 324
Annex 2: Infopaper for Expert Interviews (Template) . . 334
Annex 3: Thematic Interview Template for Expert Interviews . . 335
Annex 4: Infopaper for Victim Interviews (Template) . . 337
Annex 5: Thematic Interview Template for Victim Interviews . . 338
Annex 6: Questionnaire of analysis of criminal cases in Poland . . 341
Annex 7: Questionnaire for the interviews with the victims of forced labour and for court cases analysis in Poland . . 343

Series
(Publication Series ; No. 68)

The 21st century media (r)evolution : emergent communication practices

Obrazy
Autor
Jim Macnamara
Place of publication
New York

Publisher

Publication date
2010
Table of Contents

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS . . ix
INTRODUCTION . . 1

1 THE NEW MEDIASPEAK - MEDIA LANGUAGE AND TERMINOLOGY TODAY . . 17
35 common media descriptions . . 17
What is Web 2.0 and what is all the fuss about? . . 32
A timeline of key Web developments: Web 1.0 - Web 3.0 . . 46

2 UNDERSTANDING THE MEDIASCAPE - PHILOSOPHIES AND THEORIES OF EMERGENT MEDIA . . 59
Major traditions of media critique . . 60
Media barons versus net neutrality . . 68
The digital divide . . 77
Community and social capital . . 84
Technological determinism . . 93
The less travelled middle ground and the beauty of grey . . 97

3 SORTING MYTHS AND CYBERBOLE FROM TRENDS AND TIPPING POINTS . . 105
The end of endism . . 105
The myth of cyberspace and cyberculture . . 107
The disappearing computer and communications network . . 114
Media are immaterial . . 115
Audience fragmentation and demassification . . 120

4 THE FUTURE OF COMMUNITY AND CULTURE . . 137
Reclaiming folk culture . . 138
Identity construction - new 'technologies of the self' . . 140
Anomie or social glue? . . 146
Engaging youth - generations X, Y and C . . 148
When autonomy and individualism are important - online 'greys' . . 151

5 THE FUTURE OF MEDIATED POLITICS . . 155
The mediated public sphere . . 157
The emergent public sphere . . 160
E-democracy and e-government - the role of emergent media . . 175

6 THE FUTURE OF JOURNALISM . . 209
Four converging changes . . 211
The loss of journalists . . 212
The loss of time . . 215
The loss of 'gatekeepers' . . 221
The loss of 'truth', 'objectivity' and source credibility . . 229
The loss of audiences . . 239
Opportunities for a 'new new journalism' . . 242

7 THE FUTURE OF ADVERTISING . . 253
Structural as well as economic challenges . . 254
The audiences that got away . . 256
Evolving approaches in advertising . . 257
Future approaches - Relevancy Advertising and other ways to 'ad value' . . 268

8 FUTURE MEDIA BUSINESS MODELS . . 277
Emergent business models . . 281
Beyond advertising . . 292
The Attention Economy . . 296
Market intelligence and data v privacy . . 297
E-commerce to v-commerce . . 303

9 THE FUTURE OF PUBLIC RELATIONS . . 307
Unspinning spin . . 308
Conversations, dialogue, relationships - rediscovering authenticity . . 316
Emergent media monitoring and analysis . . 318
Emergent media relations . . 322

10 THE FUTURE FOR ORGANIZATIONS AND BUSINESS . . 327
Transparency - four billion mobile/cell phones are watching . . 329
Security and governance . . 330
Beyond brand to reputation and relationships . . 331
Opportunities - the Long Tail and beyond . . 332

CONCLUSIONS . . 335
REFERENCES . . 351
INDEX . . 397

The cartoons that shook the world

Obrazy
Autor
Jytte Klausen
Place of publication
New Haven
Publication date
2009
Table of Contents

Acknowledgments . . vii
Introduction . . I
1 The Editors and the Cartoonists . . 13
2 The Path to a Showdown . . 35
3 The Diplomatic Protest against the Cartoons . . 63
4 Muslims'"Day of Rage" . . 83
5 Seeking the Third Way . . 114
6 Muslim Iconoclasm and Christian Blasphemy . . 131
7 Danish Intolerance and Foreign Relations . . 147
8 The Freedom Agenda Rebound . . 167
Chronology . . 185
Notes . . 201
Index . . 221

On directing and dramaturgy : burning the house

Obrazy
Autor
Eugenio Barba ; translated by Judy Barba
Place of publication
London

Publisher

Publication date
2010
Table of Contents

Acknowledgments . . ix
Prologue . . xi
Introduction: the field of poppies . . xvii

1 The empty ritual . . 1
Word bridges . . 1
Where do I come from? . . 4
A plurality of dramaturgies . . 8

FIRST INTERMEZZO: The children of silence . . 15

2 Organic dramaturgy as a level of organisation . . 23
The actor's dramaturgy . . 23
The ritual of Disorder . . 35
Sonorous dramaturgy . . 40
Dramaturgy of the space . . 45
Prepare for life and arms . . 50
The moment of truth . . 53

SECOND INTERMEZZO: What the actors say and the director's reflections . . 59

3 Narrative dramaturgy as a level of organisation . . 83
Creative thought . . 83
From glance to vision . . 88
Who made me what I am? . . 94
Knots . . 98
Simultaneity: narrating according to the laws of space . . 101
Exu: swimming in a lasting presence . . 106
The origin of the Odin Road . . 108
Not text, but narrative context . . 113
Centre of the book . . 122
Working for the text and working with the text . . 123
Kaosmos . . 130
Chained to an oar . . 146

THIRD INTERMEZZO: Twenty years later . . 149

4 Evocative dramaturgy as a level of organisation . . 169
The Trans-Siberian . . 169
The torrid zone of memory . . 173
Winds that burn . . 177
The spectator's dramaturgy . . 183  
The elusive order . . 187
Shadows like roots . . 190

FOURTH INTERMEZZO: What a notebook says . . 191

5 Theatre-in-liberty . . 201
Burning the house . . 202
A dramaturgy of dramaturgies . . 204
Letter from the director to his friend and adviser Nando Taviani . . 207
Incursions and irruptions . . 210

Epilogue . . 212
Envoi . . 213
Notes . . 217

Writing and the digital generation : essays on new media rhetoric

Obrazy
Autor
ed. by Heather Urbanski
Place of publication
Jefferson
Publication date
2010
Table of Contents

Preface . . 1
Introduction: Blurring Rhetorical Borders . . 3

I. React: Maintaining a Fan Community
Essays
1. The Inter(Active) Soap Opera Viewer: Fantastic Practices and Mediated Communities . . 19
2. Going Deep: What Online Sports Culture Teaches Us About the Rhetorical Future of Social Networks . . 33
3. Spoiling Heroes, Enhancing Our Viewing Pleasure: NEC's Heroes and the Re-Shaping of the Televisual Landscape . . 45
4. History, the Trace, and Fandom Wank . . 58
5. Writing Wonder Women: How Playful Resistance Leads to Sustained Authorial Participation at Sequential Tart . . 70
Profiles
6. What the Frell Happened? Rhetorical Strategies of the Farscape Community . . 83
7. The Realtime Forum Fan . . 86
8. "As Seen on The Colbert Report": Or, Why I Love Reality TV . . 90

II. Re-Mix: Participating in Established Narratives
Essays
9. Making Our Voices Heard: Young Adult Females Writing Participatory Fan Fiction . . 95
10. Dungeons and Dragons for Jocks: Trash Talking and Viewing Habits of Fantasy Football League Participants . . 106
11. Alternate Universes on Video: Ficvid and the Future of Narrative . . 117
Profiles
12. Dean, Mal and Snape Walk into a Bar: Lessons in Crossing Over . . 132
13. Stars of a Different Variety: Stealth Teaching Through Fanfic . . 135

III. Re-Create: Creating Narratives within Established Frames
Essays
14. Writing and Rhetoric for a Ludic Democracy: YouTube, Fandom, and Participatory Pleasure . . 141
15. World of Rhetcraft: Rhetorical Production and Raiding in World of Warcraft . . 152
16. Rekindling Rhetoric: Oratory and Marketplace Culture in Guild Wars . . 162
17. Virtual Guerrillas and a World of Extras: Shooting Machinima in Second Life . . 174
18. Remix, Play, and Remediation: Undertheorized Composing Practices . . 186
Profiles
19. Conf(us)(ess)ions of a Videogame Role-Player . . 198
20. Born Again in a Fictional Universe: A Participant Portrait of EVE Online . . 201
21. A Place to Call Home: The Experience of One Guild Chat in World of Warcraft . . 204
22. Magic Canvas: Digital Building Blocks . . 207

IV. Teaching the Digital Generation
Essays
23. Encouraging Feedback: Responding to Fan Fiction at Different Colored Pens . . 213
24. MetaSpace: Meatspace and Blogging Intersect . . 226
25. Meeting the Digital Generation in the Classroom: A Reflection on the Obstacles . . 239
Profiles
26. Making Dorothy Parker My MySpace Friend: A Classroom Application for Social Networks . . 252
27. Novel Cartographies, New Correspondences . . 255

About the Contributors . . 259
Index . . 265