Tag: Possessors

Possessors and Possessed Museums, Archaeology, and the Visualization of History in the Late Ottoman Empire


Free Download Wendy Shaw, "Possessors and Possessed: Museums, Archaeology, and the Visualization of History in the Late Ottoman Empire"
English | ISBN: 0520233352 | 2003 | 280 pages | PDF | 2 MB
Possessors and Possessed analyzes how and why museums―characteristically Western institutions―emerged in the late-nineteenth-century Ottoman Empire. Shaw argues that, rather than directly emulating post-Enlightenment museums of Western Europe, Ottoman elites produced categories of collection and modes of display appropriate to framing a new identity for the empire in the modern era. In contrast to late-nineteenth-century Euro-American museums, which utilized organizational schema based on positivist notions of progress to organize exhibits of fine arts, Ottoman museums featured military spoils and antiquities long before they turned to the "Islamic" collections with which they might have been more readily associated. The development of these various modes of collection reflected shifting moments in Ottoman identity production. Shaw shows how Ottoman museums were able to use collection and exhibition as devices with which to weave counter-colonial narratives of identity for the Ottoman Empire. Impressive for both the scope and the depth of its research,

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Prominent Internal Possessors


Free Download András Bárány, "Prominent Internal Possessors"
English | ISBN: 0198812140 | 2019 | 304 pages | PDF | 2 MB
This volume is the first to provide a comprehensive cross-linguistic overview of an understudied typological phenomenon, the clause-level argument-like behavior of internal possessors. In some languages, adnominal possessors – or a subset thereof – figure more prominently than expected in the phrase-external syntax, by controlling predicate agreement and/or acting as a switch-reference pivot in same-subject relations. There is no independent evidence that such possessors are external to the possessive phrase or that they assume head status within it. This creates a puzzle for virtually all syntactic theories, as it is generally believed that agreement and switch-reference target phrasal heads rather than dependents.

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