Blar i Det humanistiske fakultet (HF) på tittel
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Where highbrow taste meets itinerant dance in eighteenth-century scandinavia: the dance entrepreneur Martin Nürenbach
(Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2016)Our spectacles smack of the most ugly barbarism that can be imagined for human beings by a human being. A boy from the western lands performs Holberg’s The Invisible. A whore from Drammen acts as Prima Donna. A Swede and ... -
Who Am I?: Creating the Narrator in Dungeons & Dragons
(Bachelor thesis, 2021)In this paper, we discuss a workable definition of the TTRPG, specifically, Dungeons & Dragons. We examine its relationship with genre and trope, taking a deeper dive into villain-coding and queer interpretations of the ... -
Who Are the Women Authors in NIME?—Improving Gender Balance in NIME Research
(Chapter, 2018)In recent years, there has been an increase in awareness of the underrepresentation of women in the sound and music computing fields. The New Interfaces for Musical Expression (NIME) conference is not an exception, with a ... -
Who Contributed to Late-Eighteenth-Century English Newspapers? Authorship, Accessibility and Public Debate (1790–92)
(Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2019)A dominant narrative shaping how we view the eighteenth-century English press is that newspapers were important forums for debate and opinion, and that they contributed significantly to the gradual broadening of political ... -
Who holds the key to heaven's doors? An Analysis of Symbolism in Images of Norwegian Oil Top Managers
(Master thesis, 2017)This thesis investigates symbolic aspects of gendered power relations in images produced by the Norwegian petroleum giant Statoil ASA (henceforth “Statoil”). Large organizations such as Statoil are amongst the significant ... -
Who is telling whose story? The effectiveness of peer-to-peer approaches as inclusive participatory interventions towards sustainability
(Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2019)Peer-to-peer approaches refer to a participatory style of teaching and learning, which increasingly gain popularity as inclusive and participatory interventions to encourage changes towards more sustainable energy practices. ... -
Who Should Pay for Pollution? The OECD, the European Communities and the Emergence of Environmental Policy in the early 1970s
(Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2017)Environmental policy emerged as a new European and global policy field within a very brief period of time during the early 1970s. Notably in Europe, international organizations played a central role in defining core ... -
Who to blame and for what? The discourse on immigration in the Brexit campaign
(Master thesis, 2017) -
Who was Ruskin? Ruskin's Reception in the Victorian Periodical Press
(Master thesis, 2020)Moderne forskere anser John Ruskin for å være en stor innflytelse i Victoriatiden i den grad han blir fremstilt som en representant for sin tid. Denne holdningen virker sant for enhver som generelt er kjent med Ruskins ... -
Who we are: konstruksjoner av feminisme, identitet og media på Muslimah Media Watch online forum - En kvalitativ analyse av muslimske kvinners forståelser av identitet i en moderne kontekst
(Master thesis, 2018)I masteroppgaven, Who We Are: konstruksjoner av feminisme, identitet og media på Muslimah Media Watch online forum, undersøker jeg den muslimfeministiske bloggen Muslimah Media Watch. En blogg som beskrives som en del av ... -
Whose self-determination? Barriers to access to Emergency Hormonal Contraception in Italy
(Peer reviewed; Journal article, 2013) -
Why are Actions but not Emotions Done Intentionally, if both are Reason-Responsive Embodied Processes?
(Peer reviewed; Journal article, 2023)Emotions, like actions, this paper argues, are typically embodied processes that are responsive to reasons, where these reasons connect closely with the agent’s desires, intentions, or projects. If so, why are emotions, ... -
"Why be moral?": Debatten mellom Charles Taylor og Jürgen Habermas
(Master thesis, 2009) -
Why energy retrofitting in private dwellings is difficult in Norway: Coordinating the framing practices of government, craftspeople and homeowners
(Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2018)Retrofitting private homes to meet strict energy demands is a prioritised goal in climate mitigation policy. In this article we approach the challenge by analysing how retrofitting is framed differently by the government, ... -
Why environmental philosophers should be buck-passers about value
(Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2021) -
Why green growth cannot solve the climate crisis
(Master thesis, 2015)Beslutningstakerne i Norge og resten av verden har forsøkt å løse klimakrisen ved å redusere klimagassutslippene i mer enn 25 år. Likevel, til tross for den langvarige innsatsen har de ikke klart å snu utviklingen: ... -
Why is integration so difficult? Shifting roles of ethics and three idioms for thinking about science, technology and society
(Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2015)Contemporary science and technology research are now expected to become more responsible through collaboration with social scientists and scholars from the humanities. This paper suggests a frame explaining why such current ... -
Why is the Locative NP in Kiswahili not Syntactically Oblique?
(Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2017)Kiswahili, a Bantu language, distinguishes between PPs, e.g. kutoka soko-ni 'Cl. 0 COP-a from market-Cl. 17/26, i.e. from market, lit. from in market' and NPs, e.g. m-pishi w-a soko-ni 'Cl. 1-cook Cl. 1 SM-COP-n of market-Cl. ... -
Why the Narrator Matters: Narrating Environmental Futures in Frank Herbert’s Dune and N. K. Jemisin’s Broken Earth Trilogy
(Master thesis, 2021)This thesis explores how works of speculative fiction engage in narrating environmental futures. The Anthropocene details how human intervention in nature has led to the current climate crisis, which makes speculating about ...