Browsing by Issue Date, starting with "2025-12-09"
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- A recipe for privacy: artists’ books and the role of culinary exchange in The Leaked Recipes CookbookPublication . Weinholtz, TeresaFollowing their investigation into the Enron accounting scandal in 2001, the US government released over 500,000 of the company’s emails to the public. In addition to insight into the professional and personal lives of former Enron employees, these leaked correspondences also include the occasional sharing of recipes. In her artist’s book The Leaked Recipes Cookbook (2022), artist and human rights researcher Demetria Glace collects over fifty recipes from the released Enron data as well as other publicly available, leaked email databases. Artists’ books as a genre are often associated with politically motivated activity, with the book format acting as the medium for the dissemination of ideas (Burkhart 2007, 25; Drucker 2004, 287). Accordingly, I argue, The Leaked Recipes Cookbook adopts the medium of the artist’s cookbook to provide social commentary on the topics of privacy, gender and food culture. In this paper, I examine the role of the compiled cookbook as both a unifying and humanising force in a context of corruption and loss of privacy, and as an agent of feminist critique in a world of gendered food culture. To achieve this, I analyse selected excerpts from The Leaked Recipes Cookbook within the context of their respective recipe exchange, through the lens of the artist’s book genre as an artistic vehicle of social commentary.
- Introdução à questão da relação entre natural e sobrenatural : de uma sistematização histórico-teológica à reflexão de Henri de LubacPublication . Bártolo, David Magalhães; Angélico, José Pedro LopesThroughout the christian theological tradition, the concepts of natural and supernatural have been chosen to describe the two elements involved in relationships such as those between God and humanity; between human beings and their fellow men; between the Church and the world; or even between creation and the divine. If the natural is understood as the category that pertains to the created reality 3 cosmic and/or human 3 the supernatural refers to the divine order in its relation to the natural. The way in which these categories are assumed deeply influences the interpretation that christians and/or non-christians offer of the universe, the human being, and God. This dissertation seeks to investigate how the christian theological tradition understands the natural, the supernatural, and their relationship. To this end, it follows a historical theological itinerary that traces the development of the question from biblical foundations to Modernity (Part I); and explores the reflection of Henri de Lubac 3 the author who most thoroughly addressed this issue within the context of twentieth-century theological renewal (Part II). Through this introduction to the theology of the natural-supernatural relationship, the aim is to highlight its importance for the development of a theological framework capable of offering interpretative keys for understanding the contemporary world and its challe
