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1
Invective Gaze - Das digitale Bild und die Kultur der Beschämung
In: 99 ; Edition Medienwissenschaft ; 206 (2022)
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2
Sexualität - Geschlecht - Affekt: Sexuelle Scripts als Palimpsest in literarischen Erzähltexten und zeitgenössischen theoretischen Debatten
Binswanger, Christa. - : transcript Verlag, 2021. : DEU, 2021. : Bielefeld, 2021
In: Gender Studies ; 326 (2021)
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3
Public responses to George Floyd's "I can't breathe"
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4
Visualising Anthropocene Extinctions: Mapping affect in the works of Naeemah Naeemaei
In: Animal Studies Journal (2021)
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5
Becoming-Pite: An Application of Deleuzian Theory to Chrystal Pite’s Choreography
In: Undergraduate Honors Thesis Collection (2020)
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6
Understanding the human in stakeholder theory : a phenomenological approach to affect-based learning
In: ISSN: 1350-5076 ; Management Learning ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-03188192 ; Management Learning, SAGE Publications, 2020 (2020)
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7
Peculiar Attunements: How Affect Theory Turned Musical [Table of Contents]
In: Philosophy & Theory (2020)
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8
Affekt Macht Netz: Auf dem Weg zu einer Sozialtheorie der Digitalen Gesellschaft
In: 22 ; Digitale Gesellschaft ; 358 (2020)
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9
Jewish Refugee Women, Transnational Coalition Politics, and Affect in Ebe Cagli Seidenberg’s Come ospiti: Eva ed altri
In: California Italian Studies, vol 9, iss 1 (2019)
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10
The Suffering Joker and the Cruel Joke: Nabokov's and Bellow's Dark Laughter
In: CLCWeb: Comparative Literature and Culture (2019)
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11
Recognizing the Assemblage: Palestinian Bedouin of the Naqab in Dialectic with Israeli Law
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12
Autonomic arousal in a foreign language in the context of decision making
In: Proceedings of the Linguistic Society of America; Vol 4 (2019): Proceedings of the Linguistic Society of America; 24:1–5 ; 2473-8689 (2019)
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13
Salty feel ...
Tremblay, Ingrid. - : The University of Texas at Austin, 2018
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14
Reframing the figure of the sexual child/teen in Argentine cinema: Affect, sexuality and agency
Olivera, Guillermo Elpidio. - : John Benjamins Publishing Company, 2018
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15
Salty feel
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16
Embodying hope: intercultural encounters in the (b)orderdands of volunteer tourism
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17
Forces of Chaos and Anarchy: Rock Music, the New Left and Social Movements, 1964 to 1972
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18
Feine Unterschiede in den Bedeutungen ... : Affektive Wahrnehmung und soziale Varianz ...
Ambrasat, Jens. - : Freie Universität Berlin, 2017
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19
Gender and dominance in action: World view and emotional affect in language processing and use
Marrville, Caelan. - : University of Alberta. Department of Linguistics., 2017
Abstract: Degree: Doctor of Philosophy ; Abstract: This dissertation examines the association between the emotional dominance of verbs and the perception, or inference, of character gender. In the context of this dissertation, emotional dominance is described as the perceived level of power, or control, exerted by a verb. I hypothesize that when actions are perceived as having higher levels of control, and thus a character has a high level of control over the verbal event (in an active, transitive sentential construction), there is a stronger association with male characters. Accordingly, when a verb is perceived to have a lower level of emotional dominance, there is a stronger association with female characters. Throughout the dissertation, the validity of this claim and the possible sources of such a cognitive association are explored through a multi-methodological and multi-modal approach. This investigation begins with a corpus-based analysis into patterns of co-occurrence between verbs and gender- marked verbal arguments. I continue through a series of five experimental psycholinguistic experiments that focus on the association between emotional dominance and character gender through two modalities: implicit causality bias and gender stereotypical roles and occupations. A sentence completion task utilizing implicit causality bias provides evidence that participants are more likely to assign cause to male characters for actions perceived as being high dominance, and to fe- male characters for actions perceived as low dominance. Throughout four reading tasks, I find converging evidence that the association between gender and dominance significantly affects measures of reading time. Significant interactions are reported based on the dominance of verbs and the gender of stereotypical roles and occupations, gender-marked pronouns and implicit causality bias focussed characters. Throughout all four reading studies, this association appears through faster processing times between low dominance and female characters and high dominance and male characters. The evidence suggests that the activation of this association may occur early in processing and that it can be used incrementally throughout discourse processing to update the mental representation. These findings provide initial evidence that, at least for native speakers of North American English, the emotional dominance of verbs may play a role in how language users perceive gender. A better understanding of the association between emotional dominance and character gender may provide a greater understanding of the processes involved in interpreting factors that affect verbal argument structure, inference production, and the mental representation of language.
Keyword: Computational linguistics; Dominance; Emotion; Emotional affect; Eye-tracked reading; Gender; Gender stereotypes; Implicit causality bias; Inference; Linguistics; Prominence theory; Psycholinguistics; Self-paced reading; Situation models; Transitivity hierarchy; Valence
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/10402/era.44282
https://era.library.ualberta.ca/items/dd96ac92-27d1-4246-b7c1-88ee57e56474
https://doi.org/10.7939/R3Z31P280
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20
Legible Grief: Discursive Liminality in Twentieth Century Literatures of Trauma
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