Here I am sharing my presentation of paper no 7 Literary theory & criticism 2.It is a part of my academic activity .It is submitted to Dr Dilip Barad .Department of English
Bahria Universiry Karachi Campus- Bs English, Semester 5.
Definition of literary criticism and theory.
Comparison between both the terms.
Types of theories and approaches to literary criticism.
In this you will learn about New Criticism.
You will learn Traditional Critical Practice.
You will learn about characteristics of New practical critisim.
You will also learn waht is Formalism.
What is close reading method of Formalism.
Here I am sharing my presentation of paper no 7 Literary theory & criticism 2.It is a part of my academic activity .It is submitted to Dr Dilip Barad .Department of English
Bahria Universiry Karachi Campus- Bs English, Semester 5.
Definition of literary criticism and theory.
Comparison between both the terms.
Types of theories and approaches to literary criticism.
In this you will learn about New Criticism.
You will learn Traditional Critical Practice.
You will learn about characteristics of New practical critisim.
You will also learn waht is Formalism.
What is close reading method of Formalism.
Lecture on influential conceptions of consciousness in psychology, social psychology and sociology and their relationship to ideas about identity and self.
UiPath Test Automation using UiPath Test Suite series, part 3DianaGray10
Welcome to UiPath Test Automation using UiPath Test Suite series part 3. In this session, we will cover desktop automation along with UI automation.
Topics covered:
UI automation Introduction,
UI automation Sample
Desktop automation flow
Pradeep Chinnala, Senior Consultant Automation Developer @WonderBotz and UiPath MVP
Deepak Rai, Automation Practice Lead, Boundaryless Group and UiPath MVP
Transcript: Selling digital books in 2024: Insights from industry leaders - T...BookNet Canada
The publishing industry has been selling digital audiobooks and ebooks for over a decade and has found its groove. What’s changed? What has stayed the same? Where do we go from here? Join a group of leading sales peers from across the industry for a conversation about the lessons learned since the popularization of digital books, best practices, digital book supply chain management, and more.
Link to video recording: https://bnctechforum.ca/sessions/selling-digital-books-in-2024-insights-from-industry-leaders/
Presented by BookNet Canada on May 28, 2024, with support from the Department of Canadian Heritage.
Accelerate your Kubernetes clusters with Varnish CachingThijs Feryn
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This presentation was delivered at K8SUG Singapore. See https://feryn.eu/presentations/accelerate-your-kubernetes-clusters-with-varnish-caching-k8sug-singapore-28-2024 for more details.
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Neuro-symbolic (NeSy) AI is on the rise. However, simply machine learning on just any symbolic structure is not sufficient to really harvest the gains of NeSy. These will only be gained when the symbolic structures have an actual semantics. I give an operational definition of semantics as “predictable inference”.
All of this illustrated with link prediction over knowledge graphs, but the argument is general.
DevOps and Testing slides at DASA ConnectKari Kakkonen
My and Rik Marselis slides at 30.5.2024 DASA Connect conference. We discuss about what is testing, then what is agile testing and finally what is Testing in DevOps. Finally we had lovely workshop with the participants trying to find out different ways to think about quality and testing in different parts of the DevOps infinity loop.
Software Delivery At the Speed of AI: Inflectra Invests In AI-Powered QualityInflectra
In this insightful webinar, Inflectra explores how artificial intelligence (AI) is transforming software development and testing. Discover how AI-powered tools are revolutionizing every stage of the software development lifecycle (SDLC), from design and prototyping to testing, deployment, and monitoring.
Learn about:
• The Future of Testing: How AI is shifting testing towards verification, analysis, and higher-level skills, while reducing repetitive tasks.
• Test Automation: How AI-powered test case generation, optimization, and self-healing tests are making testing more efficient and effective.
• Visual Testing: Explore the emerging capabilities of AI in visual testing and how it's set to revolutionize UI verification.
• Inflectra's AI Solutions: See demonstrations of Inflectra's cutting-edge AI tools like the ChatGPT plugin and Azure Open AI platform, designed to streamline your testing process.
Whether you're a developer, tester, or QA professional, this webinar will give you valuable insights into how AI is shaping the future of software delivery.
Generating a custom Ruby SDK for your web service or Rails API using Smithyg2nightmarescribd
Have you ever wanted a Ruby client API to communicate with your web service? Smithy is a protocol-agnostic language for defining services and SDKs. Smithy Ruby is an implementation of Smithy that generates a Ruby SDK using a Smithy model. In this talk, we will explore Smithy and Smithy Ruby to learn how to generate custom feature-rich SDKs that can communicate with any web service, such as a Rails JSON API.
Builder.ai Founder Sachin Dev Duggal's Strategic Approach to Create an Innova...Ramesh Iyer
In today's fast-changing business world, Companies that adapt and embrace new ideas often need help to keep up with the competition. However, fostering a culture of innovation takes much work. It takes vision, leadership and willingness to take risks in the right proportion. Sachin Dev Duggal, co-founder of Builder.ai, has perfected the art of this balance, creating a company culture where creativity and growth are nurtured at each stage.
GDG Cloud Southlake #33: Boule & Rebala: Effective AppSec in SDLC using Deplo...James Anderson
Effective Application Security in Software Delivery lifecycle using Deployment Firewall and DBOM
The modern software delivery process (or the CI/CD process) includes many tools, distributed teams, open-source code, and cloud platforms. Constant focus on speed to release software to market, along with the traditional slow and manual security checks has caused gaps in continuous security as an important piece in the software supply chain. Today organizations feel more susceptible to external and internal cyber threats due to the vast attack surface in their applications supply chain and the lack of end-to-end governance and risk management.
The software team must secure its software delivery process to avoid vulnerability and security breaches. This needs to be achieved with existing tool chains and without extensive rework of the delivery processes. This talk will present strategies and techniques for providing visibility into the true risk of the existing vulnerabilities, preventing the introduction of security issues in the software, resolving vulnerabilities in production environments quickly, and capturing the deployment bill of materials (DBOM).
Speakers:
Bob Boule
Robert Boule is a technology enthusiast with PASSION for technology and making things work along with a knack for helping others understand how things work. He comes with around 20 years of solution engineering experience in application security, software continuous delivery, and SaaS platforms. He is known for his dynamic presentations in CI/CD and application security integrated in software delivery lifecycle.
Gopinath Rebala
Gopinath Rebala is the CTO of OpsMx, where he has overall responsibility for the machine learning and data processing architectures for Secure Software Delivery. Gopi also has a strong connection with our customers, leading design and architecture for strategic implementations. Gopi is a frequent speaker and well-known leader in continuous delivery and integrating security into software delivery.
When stars align: studies in data quality, knowledge graphs, and machine lear...
Psychoanalytic Criticism
1. Psychoanalytic Criticism The text states that: “If psychoanalysis can help us better understand human behavior, it must be able to help us better understand literary texts, (and art) which is about human behavior.”
4. The Unconscious… *storehouse of painful experiences, emotions, wounds, fears, guilty desire and unresolved conflicts *comes into being when we are very young through repression *until we find a way to know and acknowledge to ourselves the true cause of our repressed wounds, fears, guilty desire and unresolved conflicts we hang onto them in disguised, distorted and self-defeating ways. *desires not to recognize or change our destructive behaviors because we have formed our identities around them. Stephanie Skalisky Another Day in...Surrealist School Date 1987-1997
5. Defenses: The processes by which the contents of our unconscious are kept in our unconscious…in other words…they are the processes by which we keep the repressed repressed in order to avoid knowing what we feel we can’t handle knowing. *selective memory *denial *avoidance *displacement *projection *regression *under ordinary circumstances keep us unaware of our unconscious experience, and our anxiety, even if it is somewhat prolonged or recurrent Standing Woman Giacometti, Alberto,... 1953
7. Poem-Object André Breton 1941 Carved wood bust of a man, oil lantern, framed photograph, toy boxing gloves and paper mounted on drawing board.
8. Rene Magritte Sensational News1926We have access to our unconscious, if we know how to use it, through our dreams and through any creative activities we engage in because both our dreams and our creativity, independent of our conscious will or desire, draw directly on the unconscious.
9. Dreams and Dreams Symbols During sleep our unconscious is free to express itself, and it does so in our dreams. Even in our dreams there is some censorship, some protections against frightening insights into our repressed experiences and emotions, and that takes the form of dream displacement. It may be helpful to think of the dream’s manifest content as a kind of dream symbolism that can be interpreted much the way we interpret symbols of any kind. There are some images that tend to have the same symbolic meaning from dreamer to dreamer, as least if those dreamers are members of the same culture. Joan Miro, Personages in the Night
10. These unconscious desires find symbolic expression in art as in dreams. Art is sublimation, the translation of instinctual desires into higher aims, and the goal of psychoanalytic criticism is to reveal the hidden content of the work that underlies and determines its manifest content.Greig E. Henderson and Christopher Brown,University of Toronto Dali’s “Old Age, Adolescence and Infancy” The Three Ages. 1940
11. Surrealism and Dreams Each person we dream about is really a part of our own psychological experience that we project during the dream onto a “stand in”. Dreams about children almost always reveal something about our feelings toward ourselves or toward the child that is still within us and probably still wounded in some way. Male imagery (phallic images) may represent sex, aggression or both. Female imagery may represent maternal control or a need for nurturing. Water, (fluid, changeable, soothing, dangerous, often deeper than it looks) can represent sexuality, emotions, or the realm of the unconscious. Water also is related to our experience in the womb…so dreams about water may relate to our relationship with our mother. Dreams about buildings may relate to the institution that the building represents for the dreamer. Woman, Old Man, and Max Ernst Paris 1923,
12. Instead of using psychoanalysis to cure themselves of any disturbances, the surrealists saw the unconscious as a wellspring of untapped creative ideas. "A dream that is not interpreted is like a letter that is not opened" is a famous quote from Freud. The surrealists were less interested in interpretation of their dream symbols than they were in the expressive capacity of such states. (eyecone art-modern surrealism web site)Jackson PollockPainting-1945
13. Telephone Receiver Cover in LobsterDali, Salvador, 1904-1989 According to the display caption at Tate Gallery: Dali drew a close analogy between food and sex.
15. Freud’s Death Drive Biological Drive-psychological and physical self destruction. This is Freud’s attempt to explain individuals intent on destroying themselves and warring nations. Death relates to our fear of abandonment and occurs to different degrees and with different results in each individual. Jackson Pollock Untitled 1943
16. She-WolfJackson Pollock1943 In suggesting that human beings have a death drive, Freud’s attempt was to account for the alarming degree of self-destructive behavior he saw both in individuals, who seemed bent on destroying themselves psychologically if not physically, and in whole nations, whose constant wars and internal conflicts could be viewed as little other than a form of mass suicide.
17. The Meaning of Sexuality *Freud called this drive eros and placed it in opposition to thanatos, the death drive. *For psychoanalysis, there is no meaningful difference between normal and abnormal, and the issue isn’t one of moral vs immoral behavior; there are merely psychological differences among individuals, and the issue is one of nondestructive vs destructive behavior. *Concerns the relationship of the superego (social values and taboos we internalize), id (psychological reservoir of our instincts, our libido or sexual energy), and the ego (conscious self that experiences the external world through the senses and plays referee between the id and superego). Dali, Salvador The Dream of Venus: costume design Date 1939
18. Lacanian Psychoanalysis From the Art Review: Who is Jacques Lacan… John Haber in New York City In his theory, the unconscious works like a language. The mind teems with desires that grow real only when translated into symbols, as in Freud’s device of free association. Like words in a language, the associations are arbitrary. Marc Chagall
22. Victor Brauner-1947 “Each painting that I make is projected from the deepest sources of my anxiety….” The painter’s notebook, given to Max PolFouchet
27. Equivocal ColorsYves Tanguy1943 Yves Tanguy was inspired to make art by the inner world of dreams and the subconscious mind. Rather than reflecting the external world.
29. Object Number One The Burning Giraffe 1937 Oil on panel 13.78 in x 10.63 in "...just because I don't know the meaning of my art, does not mean it has no meaning..." S.D
30. Object Number TwoLeonard Meiselman "Genocide" 2007 “Whenever I feel confused and hurt, I try to get into my studio. If I can make some marks with paint or pencil I can get closer to my feelings and I seem to understand things better. The process of paintings reveals me to myself.” http://www.lmeiselman.com