Results for ' symbolical power'

983 found
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  1.  73
    Symbolic Power and Group-making: On Pierre Bourdieu's Reframing of Class.Loïc Wacquant - 2010 - Polis: Research and studies on Italian society and politics 26 (3):379-400.
  2.  22
    ‘Symbolic Power’ in the Official Covid-19 Field and Language.Costas S. Constantinou - 2022 - Human Review. International Humanities Review / Revista Internacional de Humanidades 11 (1):105-116.
    The covid-19 pandemic caused countries around the globe to take measures, and to construct a specific set of language to talk about the virus. The present discussion paper aims to unpack this language based on Pierre Bourdieu’s theory of ‘symbolic power’, and social observations. The analysis indicates that the covid-19 field was formulated where an official language was produced, including scientific, war, enforcement and censorship linguistic practices. The paper discusses why there is not one covid-19 field and linguistic practice, (...)
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  3.  14
    The Morality of State Symbolic Power.Goerge Tsai - 2016 - Social Theory and Practice 42 (2):318-342.
    Philosophical interest in state power has tended to focus on the state’s coercive powers rather than its expressive powers. I consider an underexplored aspect of the state’s expressive capacity: its capacity to use symbols (such as monuments, memorials, and street names) to promote political ends. In particular, I argue that the liberal state’s deployment of symbols to promote its members’ commitment to liberal ideals is in need of special justification. This is because the state’s exercise of its capacity to (...)
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  4.  25
    Religion, classification struggles, and the state’s exercise of symbolic power.Sadia Saeed - 2021 - Theory and Society 50 (2):255-281.
    The capacity to classify social groups legally is a central characteristic of modern states. Social groups, however, often resist the classificatory schemas of the state. This raises the following question: how do modern states exercise symbolic power in social fields beset by acute classification struggles? While existing scholarship has demonstrated that states exercise symbolic power, there has not been a concomitant effort to systematize and theorize the various strategies through which they do so. This article addresses this lacuna (...)
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  5. The Morality of State Symbolic Power.George Tsai - 2016 - Social Theory and Practice 42 (2):318-342.
    Philosophical interest in state power has tended to focus on the state’s coercive powers rather than its expressive powers. I consider an underexplored aspect of the state’s expressive capacity: its capacity to use symbols (such as monuments, memorials, and street names) to promote political ends. In particular, I argue that the liberal state’s deployment of symbols to promote its members’ commitment to liberal ideals is in need of special justification. This is because the state’s exercise of its capacity to (...)
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  6.  75
    Language and Symbolic Power.Ian Buchanan, Pierre Bourdieu, Gino Raymond & Matthew Adamson - 1993 - Substance 22 (2/3):342.
  7.  33
    Signs of the Sacred: The Confucian Body and Symbolic Power.Lim Tae-Seung - 2015 - Philosophy East and West 65 (4):1030-1051.
    The sociology of symbolic power, as put forth by Pierre Bourdieu, treats the relations between behavior and socio-cultural structure. Bourdieu comprehends culture as a form of capital that follows certain laws of accumulation, exchange, and operation, and emphasizes that its symbolic form plays an important role in establishing and maintaining power structures.1 Bourdieu’s concept of cultural capital comprises a variety of resources such as language capabilities, general cultural consciousness, aesthetic symbols, educational information, and level of education.2 His analysis (...)
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  8.  27
    Principle, Discretion, and Symbolic Power in Rousseau's Account of Judicial Virtue.Eoin Daly - 2016 - Ratio Juris 29 (2):223-245.
    Rousseau's understanding of legislation as the expression of the general will implies a constitutional principle of legislative supremacy. In turn, this should translate to a narrow, mechanical account of adjudication, lest creative judicial interpretation subvert the primacy of legislative power. Yet in his constitutional writings, Rousseau recommends open-textured and vague legislative codes, which he openly admits will require judicial development. Thus he apparently trusts a great deal in judicial discretion. Ostensibly, then, he overlooks the problem of how legislative indeterminacy—and (...)
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  9.  52
    Powerful emotions: symbolic power and the (productive and punitive) force of collective feeling. [REVIEW]Dawne Moon - 2013 - Theory and Society 42 (3):261-294.
    This article argues that emotions can be a medium of social power. Using qualitative interview material from American Jews discussing anti-Semitism and its relationship to contemporary politics, it engages recent scholarship on emotions and political contention and shows how emotions make effective the various forms of symbolic exclusion by which group members exercise what Bourdieu calls symbolic power. It also explores the emotional connections to group membership by which some “excluded” members can engage in symbolic struggle over “the (...)
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  10. (1 other version)Social space and symbolic power.Pierre Bourdieu - 1989 - Sociological Theory 7 (1):14-25.
  11. Pierre Bourdieu, Language and Symbolic Power.H. Feather - forthcoming - Radical Philosophy.
     
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  12.  48
    On the Tracks of Symbolic Power: Prefatory Notes to Bourdieu's `State Nobility'.Loïc J. D. Wacquant - 1993 - Theory, Culture and Society 10 (3):1-17.
  13.  9
    Literal and Metaphorical uses of Discourse in the Representation of God.William L. Power - 1988 - The Thomist 52 (4):627-644.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:LITERAL AND METAPHORICAL USES OF DISCOURSE IN THE REPRESENTATION OF GOD IN HIS SEMINAL work on the theory of signs, Charles Morris affirms that human beings are " the dominant sign-using animals" and that" the human mind is inseparable from the functioning of signs-if indeed mentality is not to be identified with such functioning." 1 By means of acculturation we learn to use and interpret signs, both linguistic and (...)
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  14.  37
    The Aesthetics of Politics: Symbol, Power and Narrative in Mussolini's Fascist Italy.Simonetta Falasca-Zamponi - 1992 - Theory, Culture and Society 9 (4):75-91.
  15.  34
    Why Do Medical Professional Regulators Dismiss Most Complaints From Members of the Public? Regulatory Illiteracy, Epistemic Injustice, and Symbolic Power.Orla O’Donovan & Deirdre Madden - 2018 - Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 15 (3):469-478.
    Drawing on an analysis of complaint files that we conducted for the Irish Medical Council, this paper offers three possible explanations for the gap between the ubiquity of official commitments to taking patients’ complaints seriously and medical professional regulators’ dismissal—as not warranting an inquiry—of the vast majority of complaints submitted by members of the public. One explanation points to the “regulatory illiteracy” of many complainants, where the remit and threshold of seriousness of regulators is poorly understood by the general public. (...)
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  16.  39
    Unavoidable Idealizations and the Reality of Symbolic Power.Hans-Herbert Kögler - 2013 - Social Epistemology 27 (3-4):302-314.
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  17. Habitus and body language: Towards a critical theory of symbolic power.Kevin Olson - 1995 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 21 (2):23-49.
  18.  51
    The particularity of the universal: critical reflections on Bourdieu’s theory of symbolic power and the state.Stephen Quilley & Steven Loyal - 2017 - Theory and Society 46 (5):429-462.
    A critical review of Bourdieu’s theory of the state is developed here against the backdrop of both his wider theoretical project and empirical studies. Elaborating the concepts of symbolic capital, symbolic violence, and symbolic domination, the centrality that Bourdieu accords to symbolic forms is compared to benchmark Weberian accounts that start with the state monopoly of violence. Reviewing also some of the burgeoning secondary literature discussing his theory of the state, Bourdieu’s writings, which encompass various antinomies, are shown to vacillate (...)
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  19.  55
    Drawing inspiration from Bourdieu's sociology of symbolic power.David L. Swartz - 2003 - Theory and Society 32 (5-6):519-528.
  20.  57
    Counting your blessings: Sacred numbers and the structure of reality.William K. Powers - 1986 - Zygon 21 (1):75-94.
    Although numerical systems have been regarded as static models of a symbolic system and treated as mythological behavior, it is postulated that these systems are more profitably analyzed as dynamic models, better understood as ritual behavior. As ritual, numerical systems, limited in number and expressive of rhythmicity, contribute to the biogenetic structuralist's notion of “equilibration” between the central nervous system and the environment.The relationship between concrete and abstract numeration is also examined, showing that counting behavior, requiring asymmetrical use of the (...)
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  21.  36
    Motherhood in France: Towards a Queer Maternity?Nina Power - 2012 - Paragraph 35 (2):254-264.
    This article examines the relationship between feminism, queer theory and the rise of popular debate over maternity and anti-maternity that has arisen in recent years in France. Through the image of ‘queer maternity’, that is to say, of women who question motherhood from the position of already having had children, the article tries to rethink the way in which feminism, queer theory and motherhood could be placed in relation to one another such that by questioning maternity, the symbolic order that (...)
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  22. The Moral Manager: Communicative Ethics and the Exxon Valdez Disaster.Michael G. Bowen & F. Clark Power - 1993 - Business Ethics Quarterly 3 (2):97-116.
    For many, the case of theExxon Valdezoil spill has become a symbol of unethical corporate behavior. Had Exxon’s managers not callously pursued their own interests at the expense of the environment and other parties, the accident would not have happened. In this paper, we (1) present a short case study of theValdezincident; (2) argue that many analyses of the case either ignore or fail to give sufficient weight to the uncertainties managers often face when they make decisions; and (3) propose (...)
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  23.  78
    Perceptual symbols: The power and limitations of a theory of dynamic imagery and structured frames.William F. Brewer - 1999 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 22 (4):611-612.
    The perceptual symbol approach to knowledge representation combines structured frames and dynamic imagery. The perceptual symbol approach provides a good account of the representation of scientific models, of some types of naive theories held by children and adults, and of certain reconstructive memory phenomena. The ontological status of perceptual symbols is unclear and this form of representation does not succeed in accounting for all forms of human knowledge.
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  24.  25
    (1 other version)The Symbolic independence from power.Luisa Muraro - 2009 - Cosmos and History 5 (1):57-67.
    Muraro’s article begins from the philosophical question of the ‘unthought’, and asks how our very image of thought is transformed when the thinking subject is a woman, and her thought is specifically linked to the experience of a body. On the basis of a feminist interrogation of sexual difference which reveals the forms of violence inherent in certain claims to universality, Muraro tries to develop a thinking of politics which would rest on its symbolic distance or independence from power. (...)
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  25. The Power of Symbols in Religion and Culture.F. W. Dillistone - 1986
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  26.  25
    The Liberating Power of Symbols: Philosophical Essays.Jürgen Habermas - 2001 - Cambridge, Mass.: Polity. Edited by Peter Dews.
    The liberating power of symbols -- The conflict of beliefs -- Between traditions -- Tracing the other of history in history -- A master builder with hermeneutic tact -- Israel or Athens : where does anamnestic reason belong? -- Communicative freedom and negative theology -- The useful mole who ruins the beautiful lawn.
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  27. Their 'Symbolic'Exists, It Holds Power—We the Sowers of Disorder Know It Only Too Well.Morag Shiach - 1989 - In Teresa Brennan (ed.), Between Feminism and Psychoanalysis. New York: Routledge. pp. 153--67.
     
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  28. Power, sacrality and mystical thought: The symbolic writings of the Marinid era 7th/13th-9th/15th centuries.S. Gubert - 1996 - Al-Qantara 17 (2):391-427.
     
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  29.  23
    Symbol, Desire and Power.Benoît Millot - 1988 - Theory, Culture and Society 5 (4):675-694.
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  30.  13
    Sexual Orientation as Symbolic Capital and as the "Object" of Symbolic Violence.Štefánia Kövérová - 2010 - Human Affairs 20 (1):23-32.
    Sexual Orientation as Symbolic Capital and as the "Object" of Symbolic Violence Sexual orientation is currently understood to be an innate disposition. Heterosexually oriented people are perceived to be in the majority and homosexually oriented people as the minority. Using Pierre Bourdieu's concepts of symbolic power, symbolic violence and symbolic capital, this paper aims to show how symbolic power and symbolic violence contribute to determining which sexual orientation is associated with the majority and minority populations, and establish what (...)
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  31. Obstetrical Forceps: Symbols of Power and Professionalism in Victorian Britain.Doreen Evenden Nagy - 1983 - Nexus 3 (1):6.
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  32. Choosing Our King: Powerful Symbols in American Politics.Michael Novak - 1976 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 9 (3):192-194.
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  33.  35
    Active symbols, limited storage and the power of natural intelligence.Eric Chown & Stephen Kaplan - 1992 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 15 (3):442-443.
  34.  8
    The Liberating Power of Symbols: Philosophical Essays.Peter Dews (ed.) - 2001 - MIT Press.
    In this collection, Jurgen Habermas engages with a wide range of twentieth-century thinkers. The essays display Habermas's appreciation for various intellectual traditions, his ability to distill the essence of other authors' work, and his outstanding critical powers.Habermas has described these essays as "fragments of a history of contemporary philosophy." They include explorations of the work of Ernst Cassirer, Karl Jaspers, and Gershom Scholem, as well as responses to friends and colleagues such as Karl-Otto Apel, writer and filmmaker Alexander Kluge, and (...)
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  35.  11
    Process, reality, and the power of symbols: thinking with A.N. Whitehead.Murray Code - 2007 - New York: Palgrave-Macmillan.
    Following A.N. Whitehead, this book takes up the principal challenge facing a natural philosopher who wishes to engage with Nature while rescuing both Life and Thought from materialistic approaches which rob them of their 'quicknesses'. Selecting certain insights and intuitions from the writings of Peirce, Coleridge, Deleuze and Nietzsche, the author proffers a remedy for the pervasive nihilism of 'the moderns' which illustrates Deleuze's suggestion that philosophy should be imaged as a dynamic collage that is forever in the making.
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  36.  42
    Post-Soviet academia and class power: Belarusian controversy over symbolic markets.Elena Gapova - 2009 - Studies in East European Thought 61 (4):271-290.
    The article demonstrates that post-Soviet academic debates about theoretical concepts and visions of truth can be usefully interpreted in terms of different “class positions” of knowledge producers. One academic faction is interested in academic freedom, autonomy, and corporate solidarity, as the social and cultural capitals of its members are involved with the global symbolic market. The capitals of the other group are invested into the slightly modified Soviet academic system and local symbolic fields. Intellectuals necessarily are aligned with more powerful (...)
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  37.  20
    The Liberating Power of Symbols. [REVIEW]Stephen Fields - 2003 - Review of Metaphysics 56 (3):650-651.
  38.  36
    Review of “The Liberating Power of Symbols”. [REVIEW]David Boersema - 2004 - Essays in Philosophy 5 (1):6.
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  39.  47
    Will They Ever Speak with Authority? Race, post‐coloniality and the symbolic violence of language.Awad Ibrahim - 2011 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 43 (6):619-635.
    Intersecting authority-language-and-symbolic power, this article tells the story of a group of continental Francophone African youth who find themselves in an urban French-language high school in southwestern Ontario, Canada. Through their narrative, one is confronted by the trauma of one's own language being declared an illegitimate child, hence becoming a ‘deceptive fluency’ in the ‘eyes of power’ thanks to race and post-coloniality. They are fully consciousness of this situation and their ‘linguistic return’, thus gazing back at the eyes (...)
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  40.  14
    Economics as symbolic capital: The consecration of elite business schools.Mikael Holmqvist - 2022 - Theory and Society 51 (3):435-455.
    Ever since the first elite business schools were founded in Europe and the United States during the late 1800s and early 1900s, they have enjoyed an intimate relationship with economics. Despite some notable analyses of economics’ importance for the successful institutionalization of business schools, an understanding of the relation between economics and elite business schools requires further development. As such, this paper focuses on ‘economics as symbolic capital’ for the consecration of business schools as elite settings, with particular emphasis on (...)
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  41. The Liberating Power of Symbols: Philosophical Essays. [REVIEW]S. J. Stephen Fields - 2003 - Review of Metaphysics 56 (3):650-650.
    Most of these eight essays on contemporary figures were given as lectures or speeches between 1990 and 1996. A piece on Ernst Cassirer’s humanistic legacy gives the collection its title, but the other subjects treated are far-ranging: Karl Jaspers on the clash of religious cultures, Georg Henrik von Wright’s noncognitive ethics, Gershom Scholem’s magisterial biography of the kabbalist Sabbatai Sevi, Karl-Otto Apel’s hermeneutics, Johann Baptist Metz on the Jewish element in Christianity, Michael Theunissen on the relation of negative theology to (...)
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  42.  19
    Elliot Is Brahman the Power of Children as Symbols Tillich, Whitehead, the Gita, and Sacredness.C. Robert Mesle - 2010 - Tattva - Journal of Philosophy 2 (2):1-8.
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  43.  10
    Symbolic Annihilation or Alternative Femininity? The (Linguistic) Portrayal of Women in Selected Polish Advertisements.Joanna Pawelczyk - 2008 - Lodz Papers in Pragmatics 4 (2):311-332.
    Symbolic Annihilation or Alternative Femininity? The Portrayal of Women in Selected Polish Advertisements The year 1989 marks the beginning of sweeping political, economic and social changes in Poland. Since that time an expansion of women into top professional positions can be observed. Data from the last national census clearly indicate that women in Poland are better educated than their male counterparts, increasingly careeroriented as well as aggressively pursuing managerial occupations. A modern woman is, by popular belief, no longer obliged to (...)
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  44.  11
    Biblical Symbols of the Struggle with Evil.Stephen R. Palmquist - 2015 - In Stephen Palmquist (ed.), Comprehensive commentary on Kant's Religion within the bounds of bare reason. Hoboken: Wiley. pp. 215–247.
    In Section Two of Second Piece of Religion, Immanuel Kant presents a step‐by‐ step assessment of the biblical account of salvation, starting with the Genesis narrative, proceeding from there to the life and teachings of Jesus, and concluding with his death and resurrection as the source of a new freedom. The main text of the Second Piece then ends with a summary interpretation of the rational meaning of biblical symbols regarding the struggle between good and evil. Kant gives an account (...)
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  45.  64
    Symbols are Grounded not in Things, but in Scaffolded Relations and their Semiotic Constraints.Donald Favareau - 2015 - Biosemiotics 8 (2):235-255.
    As the accompanying articles in the Special Issue on Semiotic Scaffolding will attest, my colleagues in biosemiotics have done an exemplary job in showing us how to think about the critically generative role that semiotic scaffolding plays “vertically” – i.e., in evolutionary and developmental terms – by “allowing access to the upper floors” of biological complexity, cognition and evolution.In addition to such diachronic considerations of semiotic scaffolding, I wish to offer here a consideration of semiotic scaffolding’s synchronic power, as (...)
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  46.  27
    Different Minority Groups Elicit Different Safety, Economic, Power, and Symbolic Threats.Dóra Kanyicska Belán & Miroslav Popper - 2023 - Human Affairs 33 (1):51-66.
    Populistic political discourse often portrays ethnic minorities as threats to the majority society. However, the deeper characteristics of perceived threats have not been sufficiently empirically investigated. The goal of this study is to identify the similarities and differences in intergroup threats perceived by Slovak majority from Roma, Muslims, and ethnic Hungarian minorities. The participants included 1244 adults who were instructed to write the first five associations that came to mind when thinking about one of the minorities. Our findings indicate that (...)
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  47.  72
    Power and Social Criticism: Reflections on Power, Domination and Legitimacy.Mark Haugaard - 2010 - Critical Horizons 11 (1):51-74.
    Both modernist and post-modern social criticism of power presuppose that agents frequently consent to power relations, which a political theorist may wish to critique. This raises the question: from what normative position can one critique power which is, as a sociological fact, legitimate in the eyes of those who reproduce it? This paper argues that "symbolic violence" is a useful metaphor for providing such a normative grounding. In order to provide an epistemological basis of critique, it is (...)
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  48.  10
    The Philosophy of Symbolic Forms: Volume 3: The Phenomenology of Knowledge.Ernst Cassirer - 1965 - Yale University Press.
    The _Symbolic Forms_ has long been considered the greatest of Cassirer’s works. Into it he poured all the resources of his vast learning about language and myth, religion, art, and science—the various creative symbolizing activities and constructions through which man has expressed himself and given intelligible objective form to this experience. “These three volumes alone make an outstanding contribution to epistemology and to the human power of abstraction. It is rather as if ‘The Golden Bough’ had been written in (...)
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  49.  46
    Martin Otto. The expressive power of fixed-point logic with counting. The journal of symbolic logic, vol. 61 , pp. 147–176. - Martin Otto. Bounded variable logics and counting. A study infinite models. Lecture notes in logic, no. 9. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg, New York, etc., 1997, ix + 183 pp. [REVIEW]Anuj Dawar - 1998 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 63 (1):329-331.
  50.  25
    Religiöse Symbole im öffentlichen Raum: Symbolwirkung als kollektive Intentionalität einer Deutungsgemeinschaft.Jens Schlieter - 2017 - Zeitschrift für Religionswissenschaft 25 (2):196-232.
    Name der Zeitschrift: Zeitschrift für Religionswissenschaft Jahrgang: 25 Heft: 2 Seiten: 196-232.
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