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Перевод: conjuncture
[существительное] конъюнктура ; стечение обстоятельств
Тезаурус:
- He argues that there must be an accumulation of "circumstances" and "currents" that "fuse" into a "ruptural unity" that involves not only the level of the relations of production but also the conditions of existence prevailing at the time and the international conjuncture (Althusser 1969: 100).
- Faced with the crisis of inner city decay, for that was really the problem of mid-19th century Paris, many of today's governments could wish for so favourable a conjuncture.
- In a comparable way, our concept of the individual must be seen as the conjuncture of the various practices which make up the complex whole.
- For rather than being the locus of action, choice, etc., the individual is to be seen as a "conjuncture" of social practices; each person's intentional properties can be "explained away" as the result of constraints imposed upon them by the structured whole.
- The present conjuncture is uniquely dreadful because, as I have been predicting emphatically for at least two years, we now have, all at the same time, unemployment rising towards three million, falling output and investment, and a balance of payments that is still in substantial deficit.
- Although Humphrey emphasises that one can not rule out the possibility of auto workers being a conservative force in the future, he does demonstrate that, at this particular historical-political conjuncture, their militant action provided a catalyst for change for the working class.
- Admittedly, explaining their achievements is not part of Althusser's project, and he might therefore be excused for failing to indicate the specific historical conjuncture from which Marxism arose.
- The end of the Second World War is marked by the incipient commodification of social life, and as such "the disintegration of the Modernist conjuncture" (pp. 60 - 1).
- But for the radical interpreter, this would be to throw in the towel at a crucial conceptual conjuncture, imputing our intentional framework to another, dumb species.
- The bipartisan commitment to the existing exchange rate within the ERM, and the endorsement of this by most commentators, would be understandable if the forecasts that the Treasury, the City and all the main conjuncture organisations have been making ever since we joined the ERM had turned out to be anywhere near correct.
- Chapters 6 and 7 attempt to develop one which enables local situations to be studied in relation to wider concerns, and, to use ugly but accurate jargon, to "theorise the conjuncture".
- The political defeats of the 1930s "shipwreck" the avant-garde, and furthermore, through a kind of extension (since one assumes Anderson's tripartite conjuncture fuelled even those Modernist forms which did not quite take the transformatory step into engaged avant-gardism) come to determine "the more general exhaustion of Modernism".
- Far from seeing the ascent of Labour in the immediate postwar period as a spontaneous response to frustrated hopes and deteriorating social conditions, it was rather a resolution or convergence of deeper currents at a specific historical conjuncture.
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