• Affecting Deleuze is a three-day conference that aims to focus on the practical philosophy of Gilles Deleuze, and on practices that engage the philosophy of Deleuze. (aap.org.au)
  • The thought of Gilles Deleuze (and Félix Guattari) bears on ambiguous relation with respect to the "affective turn" in social and political thought that it supposedly helped initiate. (maine.edu)
  • Shakespeare, Spinoza and Deleuze to Kafka, Sylvia Plath, Philip Roth, W. G. 27 aug. 2017 - NIKLAS JUTH - Does genetic modification of embryos affect their future Som bland andra Spinoza påpekat verkar ånger snarast från filosofen GIlles Deleuze, post-humanistisk teori och landskapsforskning studerar jag. (web.app)
  • He is especially interested in those which carries affects from his daily life or his memories Pour Gilles Deleuze, très proche des philosophies de Spinoza et de​ Affects, Actions and Passions in Spinoza. (web.app)
  • Affect (from Latin affectus or adfectus) is a concept, used in the philosophy of Baruch Spinoza and elaborated by Henri Bergson, Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari, that places emphasis on bodily or embodied experience. (wikipedia.org)
  • Subsequent philosophical usage by Gilles Deleuze, Félix Guattari and their translator Brian Massumi, while derived explicitly from Spinoza, tends to distinguish more sharply than Spinoza does between affect and what are conventionally called emotions. (wikipedia.org)
  • The terms "affect" and "affection" came to prominence in Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari's A Thousand Plateaus, the second volume of Capitalism and Schizophrenia. (wikipedia.org)
  • Pisters orients her work around its usefulness, the ways in which one can make the cinematic theories of Gilles Deleuze "work" within film analysis and, particularly, taught film courses. (sensesofcinema.com)
  • James Williams has emerged as one of the most important and accomplished readers of the philosophy of Gilles Deleuze. (nd.edu)
  • What kind of 'identity' is mobilized when the work of a philosopher becomes a major reference for certain schools of thought, as in the case of Gilles Deleuze and postcolonial theory? (bloomsbury.com)
  • For many years now, Réda Bensmaïa has been an important voice in the study of Gilles Deleuze, one of the most important philosophers of the late 20th century. (bloomsbury.com)
  • In this interview, Clayton Crockett , author of Deleuze Beyond Badiou: Ontology, Multiplicity, and Event and editor of the Insurrections series , discusses why he decided to defend Gilles Deleuze from Alain Badiou, and how, in the process, he came to write a radical reworking of Deleuze's political philosophy and discovered a continuity between the French philosopher's controversial and abstruse writings. (cupblog.org)
  • More recently, however, assemblage has gained traction as a translation and appropriation of the concept designated by the French word agencement in the work of Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari, especially A Thousand Plateaus . (australianhumanitiesreview.org)
  • The publication of Anna Powell's second book on Gilles Deleuze and cinema immediately illuminates two very important points. (sensesofcinema.com)
  • It reflects on the legacy and influence of Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari in the uptake of affect in architectural discourse and practice, and stresses the importance of the political in discussions of affect. (ucl.ac.uk)
  • In 1990, Gilles Deleuze published Postscript on the Societies of Control, an introduction to the potentially suffocating reality of the nascent control society. (berghahnjournals.com)
  • Our questions are inspired by the process thinking of French philosophers Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari and by the work of latter-day theorists who develop this thinking, such as Rosi Braidotti, Claire Colebrook, Rebecca Coleman, Elizabeth Grosz, and Brian Massumi. (columbia.edu)
  • Her thesis conceptualises the cinematic pulse in horror cinema using theorists Jean-François Lyotard, Gilles Deleuze, and Georges Bataille. (media-culture.org.au)
  • In particular, he mentions Alain Badiou's Being and Event , Jacques Derrida, and Gilles Deleuze. (kottke.org)
  • Drawing and departing from scholars and peers, philosopher Gilles Deleuze embodied change and perseverance by honoring difference as a concept and materializing it through repetition. (thecollector.com)
  • French philosopher and writer Gilles Deleuze came to be one of the most celebrated thinkers of the latter half twentieth century for his critique of rationalism and modern individualism. (thecollector.com)
  • The works of Gilles Deleuze, although considered seminal in understanding postmodern thought, are very difficult to get through. (thecollector.com)
  • This article, of a theoretical nature, aims to address contributions by Donna Haraway, Vincianne Despret and Gilles Deleuze in alliance with Félix Guattari to think of etologies, which adopt in the plural, Etologies, an end-of-life as singularities of the same values by which they are. (bvsalud.org)
  • From Deleuze's writings on Nietzsche and Spinoza through the collaborations of Capitalism and Schizophrenia, Deleuze and Guattari insist on the central role of the affects, joy, sadness, fear, and hope, as structuring individual and collective life. (maine.edu)
  • In that sense, Deleuze and Guattari are rightfully hailed as central figures in a turn towards affect. (maine.edu)
  • Moreover, Deleuze and Guattari define capitalism as a socius that it reproduces itself in and through the encounter of abstract quantities of money and labor power, and as such is is indifferent to the beliefs, feelings, and meaning that we attach to it. (maine.edu)
  • The Affective Economy: Producing and Consuming Affects in Deleuze and Guattari. (maine.edu)
  • Köp Architectural Affects after Deleuze and Guattari av Marko Jobst, Helene Frichot på in particular the studies of Deleuze and Guattari, and Baruch Spinoza. (web.app)
  • In this thesis I read Deleuze's interpretation of Spinoza through the weird tales written Först något om musikens generella egenskaper hos Deleuze & Guattari. (web.app)
  • Neither word denotes a personal feeling (sentiment in Deleuze and Guattari). (wikipedia.org)
  • Anyway, Deleuze was critical of Badiou's understanding of multiplicity, and said so in his last book (written with Guattari), What is Philosophy? . (cupblog.org)
  • Yet some recent cognitive science, as well as the philosophy of Deleuze and Guattari, has called into question such individuality and rationality and emphasized social and emotional subjectivity. (umn.edu)
  • Following Deleuze and Guattari, the paper undertakes a mapping of gossip, subsequent to an encounter with a crack. (monash.edu)
  • 2012 Duke University Press 2012 Anti-Oedipus,- Kinship, and the Subject of Affect Reading Fanon with Deleuze and Guattari Amber Jamilla Musser In Frantz Fanon's universe, blackness begins with interpellation: " 'Dirty nigger! (dukeupress.edu)
  • delving into a Deleuzian nonnormative approach through his unique Spinozian-Nietzschean philosophy of difference, applying nonnormativity to the idea of the human generally and also in the specific ways that Deleuze and Guattari do through the concept of faciality , and introducing positive elements of their critique of transcendent normativity. (theanarchistlibrary.org)
  • As previously explained the concept of Haecceity stems from the philosopher John Duns Scotus, it is further explored by Deleuze and Guattari who use it to describe a change between states - the becoming individual by becoming different from what was before in a process of change or division. (a-n.co.uk)
  • Architectural Affects after Deleuze and Guattari. (ucl.ac.uk)
  • Architectural Affects after Deleuze and Guattari is the first sustained survey into ways of theorising affect in architecture. (ucl.ac.uk)
  • Deleuze and Guattari pursue this aim by aspiring to an ontology that is not grounded upon being but upon the processuality or primary dynamism of reality. (columbia.edu)
  • The translator of Deleuze and Guattari's A Thousand Plateaus, Canadian political philosopher Brian Massumi, has given influential definitions of affect (see above) and has written on the neglected importance of movement and sensation in cultural formations and our interaction with real and virtual worlds. (wikipedia.org)
  • However, if, as some argue, the "affective turn" is a turn towards the lived over the structural and the intimate over the public, then Deleuze and Guattari's thought has a much more complex relation to affects. (maine.edu)
  • The broader polemical target of Deleuze and Guattari's Anti-Oedipus , beyond the specific polemics with psychoanalysis, is any explanatory theory that would reduce social relations to expressions of individual passions and desires. (maine.edu)
  • Deleuze and Guattari's claim that there is only "the desire and the social, and nothing else" is oriented against such individualistic accounts of subjectivity. (maine.edu)
  • Thus, if affect is central to Deleuze and Guattari's thought it is necessary to add the caveats that affect must be thought of as anti-individualistic, as social rather than intimate, and as impersonal, reflecting the abstractions that dominant life. (maine.edu)
  • This interdisciplinary volume explores these issues in three directions that mirror Deleuze and Guattari's defense of the parallelism between philosophy, science, and the arts. (bloomsbury.com)
  • Furthermore, under a pseudonym, Badiou published an essay called "The Fascism of the Potato" where he attacked Deleuze and Guattari's concept of the rhizome, which is the root-structure of tubers. (cupblog.org)
  • Deleuze and Guattari's work can be regarded as an effort to contest transcendent ways of thinking. (columbia.edu)
  • In this text, Perlongher builds upon Guattari's concept of a "desiring cartography," based on affect and embodied practice, which would lead to the delineation of "the map of the other Brazil: the Brazil of the minoritarian becomings-becoming-black, becoming-woman, becoming-homosexual, becoming-child, etc.-from processes of marginalization and minoritization. (hemisphericinstitute.org)
  • Spinoza's concept of the body, therefore, does not solely refer to human … 2019-08-17 2012-08-27 Deleuze's engagement with affects is framed by two philosophers, Spinoza and Gilbert Simondon. (web.app)
  • 2015-02-23 Over the course of that essay Massumi develops this vocabulary, combining the work of thinkers inside the 'second' tradition of affect (especially Bergson, Deleuze, and Spinoza) to argue that affect is "a suspension of affect-reaction circuits and linear temporality in a sink of … 2008-05-23 Deleuze's model of the tree-like structure appears to be quite simple. (web.app)
  • This volume assembles some of the most distinguished scholars in the field of Deleuze studies in order to provide both an accessible introduction to key concepts in Deleuze's thought and to test them in view of the issue of normativity. (bloomsbury.com)
  • By engaging with recent innovations in North African culture and by examining the dissemination of Deleuze's identities across a broad range of postcolonial theory, Réda Bensmaïa shows that the 'encounter' between Deleuze and the postcolonial movement can only be understood through the idea of a 'transcendental' field, in which Deleuze and his postcolonial followers find themselves captured. (bloomsbury.com)
  • As I worked through Difference and Repetition I realized that my own understanding of Deleuze's philosophy was changed, and that I found a radical, revolutionary way to read Deleuze based on his work on repetition, intensity, energy and physics in chapter 5, and that this is consistent with his incredible book on the time-image, Cinema 2 . (cupblog.org)
  • Badiou agreed, but then referred to these letters in his book Deleuze: The Clamor of Being , and used their occasion to write a final critical response to Deleuze after Deleuze's death, which many readers of Deleuze felt was highly unfair, because Deleuze was unable to respond. (cupblog.org)
  • Badiou regards Deleuze seriously and respectively and his criticisms point toward a greater philosophical understanding of what Deleuze's achievement really is. (driftline.org)
  • Following Deleuze's depiction of affects as "blocs of sensations" (Deleuze 1994: 123), the audio paper is here suggested as an experimental encounter between the 'blocs of sensations' in art with a propositional mapping of concepts found in philosophy and science. (lu.se)
  • With the exception of "The Fold" Badiou concentrates on the early Deleuze and pretty much ignores Anti-Oedipus and 1,000 Plateaus) Regarding Levinas, I think my comments were close to the overall argument Badiou is making. (driftline.org)
  • In his notes on the terminology employed, the translator Brian Massumi gives the following definitions of the terms as used in the volume: AFFECT/AFFECTION. (wikipedia.org)
  • Deleuze, Spinoza: Practical Philosophy) For Deleuze, therefore, our knowledge of the body is a knowledge of the effects of these relations with others - if we really want to understand what relations our body is capable of, we need to experiment by putting it into those relationships. (web.app)
  • Deleuze relates Spinoza's ethical philosophy to the writings of Friedrich Nietzsche and Willem van Blijenbergh, a grain broker who corresponded with Spinoza in the first half of 1665 and questioned the ethics of his concept of evil. (web.app)
  • Artists create affects and percepts, "blocks of space-time", whereas science works with functions, according to Deleuze, and philosophy creates concepts. (wikipedia.org)
  • Even cursory readers of Deleuze will no doubt be familiar with the broad outlines of his approach to the philosophy of time. (nd.edu)
  • From the early 1960s until his death, Deleuze wrote many influential works on philosophy , literature, film, and fine art. (newworldencyclopedia.org)
  • as Paola Marrati says, it's the book where Deleuze works out his political philosophy. (cupblog.org)
  • Consider it this way: if we imagine the past as a hallway full of doors marked dualism, binary thinking, either/or, mind/body, transcendence, then Deleuze makes philosophy contemporary by drawing a series of escape hatches on the ceiling of that hallway and marking them multiplicity, schizoid thinking, both/and, non-dialectical materialism, immanence. (htmlgiant.com)
  • Firstly, the continued growth of work on Deleuze and cinema and the interchange it facilitates between philosophy and film. (sensesofcinema.com)
  • As this volume demonstrates, the impact of this cannot be isolated to the internet, but affect philosophy, literature, cinema, politics and the public space itself. (peterlang.com)
  • Deleuze stands alone in the philosophical plateau because he considered philosophy to be a means of creating concepts. (thecollector.com)
  • In What is Philosophy , Deleuze furthers that empiricism is also an endeavor of creation - removing Plato, Kant , and Descartes' designation of transcendentalism to empiricism. (thecollector.com)
  • On the one hand, the Philosophy of Difference with a proposal of ethology of affects and powers and others, such as Feminist Epistemologies in Science and Technology that emphasize as daily practices of animals entangled in understandings of nature. (bvsalud.org)
  • The recent turns to affect and aesthetics in the humanities and the interpretive social sciences have been productive for reflecting on the crucial role sensibility plays in the constitution of the social. (sunypress.edu)
  • The elicitation of affect in the audience stands firmly at the core of the film-going experience, figuring into the poetics, aesthetics, rhetoric, and ideology of film viewing. (blogspot.com)
  • Affects are not divisible in themselves, but consist as affective tonalities that opens up towards timely affective attunements in A: the process of production in which the academic producer engages with the sound material and its aesthetics, and in B: in the attunements of the listener.Through such affective attunements, the article suggests that the audio paper gives rise to thinking, producing and listening through temporality and sonic material. (lu.se)
  • Important contemporary philosophers such as Nancy, Derrida and Deleuze are engaged here, as are issues of ecology, community, automation, postcolonial identity and addiction. (peterlang.com)
  • it can be a linguistic corpus, a social body, a collectivity" (Deleuze 1988, p. 127). (web.app)
  • As such, the audio paper is a practical and relational encounter between bodies (thinking, audio production, listening) and their mutual capacity to affect and to be affected (See also Deleuze 1988). (lu.se)
  • Rather, what matters to Deleuze is the sheer fact of conceptual invention: the fact that Kant, and then Bergson, invent entirely new ways of conceiving time and temporality, leading to new ways of distributing, classifying, and understanding phenomena, new perspectives on Life and Being. (htmlgiant.com)
  • Rather than perceive affect and emotion as developing outward from the inner organs as Henri Bergson , William James , or Carl Lange had suggested, Tomkins and his colleagues Carrol Izard and Paul Ekman focused mostly on the face as "an organ for the maximal transmission of information, to the self and to others" and concluded that "the information it transmits is largely concerned with affects. (blogspot.com)
  • In his time at the Sorbonne, Deleuze wrote monographs on Hume , Spinoza , Nietzsche , Kant , and Bergson . (thecollector.com)
  • Affects, Actions and Passions in Spinoza. (web.app)
  • Affects, Actions and Passions För Spinoza (1632-1677) kan individen inte förstås som en på förhand given enhet. (web.app)
  • It was Spinoza who recognized both the ontological dimensions of affects, defining everything by its capacity to affect and be affected, and the political and social dimension of affects, affects orient not only individual striving but do so only in and through the encounters and relations with others. (web.app)
  • Deleuze har även repopulariserat Spinoza i vår samtid, och därmed If you don't admire something, if you don't love it, you have no reason to write a word about it. (web.app)
  • For Spinoza, as discussed in Parts Two and Three of his Ethics, affects are states of mind and body that are related to (but not exactly synonymous with) feelings and emotions, of which he says there are three primary kinds: pleasure or joy (laetitia), pain or sorrow (tristitia) and desire (cupiditas) or appetite. (wikipedia.org)
  • Affects are difficult to grasp and conceptualize because, as Spinoza says, "an affect or passion of the mind [animi pathema] is a confused idea" which is only perceived by the increase or decrease it causes in the body's vital force. (wikipedia.org)
  • In Part III, "Definitions of the Emotions/Affects", Spinoza defines 48 different forms of affect, including love and hatred, hope and fear, envy and compassion. (wikipedia.org)
  • Regarding Spinoza, Deleuze builds upon the finite modes of observation of substances- shifting the burden of reality from theory to practice. (thecollector.com)
  • multiplicity from multiplicite ) (Deleuze, 1968), make Deleuze especially challenging. (thecollector.com)
  • Instead, Deleuze prefers 'multiplicity'- wherein there is no "being", only a state of becoming. (thecollector.com)
  • His other books include Political Physics: Deleuze, Derrida, and the Body Politic and Time and Exteriority: Aristotle, Heidegger, Derrida . (umn.edu)
  • Living in Smooth Space: Deleuze, Postcolonialism and the Subaltern ,' in Deleuze and the Postcolonial (2010). (google.com)
  • However, this book contends that postcolonial and subaltern theorists have engaged with Deleuzean thought in ways that have perhaps produced a long series of misunderstandings - for which Deleuze himself is not responsible. (bloomsbury.com)
  • How to think the "postcolonial' with Deleuze? (bloomsbury.com)
  • Born in Paris in 1925, Deleuze authored more than twenty-five books in French, all but one of which have now been translated into English. (thecollector.com)
  • L'affect (Spinoza's affectus) is an ability to affect and be affected. (wikipedia.org)
  • L'affection (Spinoza's affectio) is each such state considered as an encounter between the affected body and a second, affecting, body (with body taken in its broadest possible sense to include "mental" or ideal bodies). (wikipedia.org)
  • In contrast to contemporary philosophical understandings of affect as emotion, affect is not a response to an event 'triggering bodily changes', but rather, affect designates a qualitative change, equally corporeal and mental, in the intensity of a being's power to persevere (Sharp 29). (australianhumanitiesreview.org)
  • In this sense, Deleuze is solitary in his philosophical undertaking, making him one of the most cited authorities in the humanities across all fields. (thecollector.com)
  • First, Deleuze cannot be grouped away into either Continental or Anglo-American philosophical traditions. (thecollector.com)
  • I stället måste man Hon har också givit ut böcker om Nietzsche och Deleuze. (web.app)
  • For Difference , Deleuze borrows the theory of eternal return from Nietzsche to explain the difference of repetition . (thecollector.com)
  • Nonetheless, Deleuze also found the work of non-academic thinkers such as Jean-Paul Sartre strongly attractive. (newworldencyclopedia.org)
  • Deleuze is always closely attentive to the words, and the concepts, of the thinkers he is writing about. (htmlgiant.com)
  • Deleuze supported the student movements in 1968 while teaching at Lyon, even though he was ill with tuberculosis. (cupblog.org)
  • Later, Deleuze would publish Difference and Repetition (1968) and Logic of Sense (1969). (thecollector.com)
  • John Protevi not only draws Deleuze and complexity theory into fruitful conversations about affect, attractors and emergence, he carries the result into valuable explorations of recent events. (umn.edu)
  • A: Badiou charges Deleuze with being a hidden philosopher of the One, with being aristocratic, quietist, and with being obsessed with the past. (cupblog.org)
  • I really felt that Badiou created this caricature of Deleuze that was set up as a foil for Badiou to present himself as this master-philosopher. (cupblog.org)
  • Q: What is specifically your problem with Badiou's interpretation of Deleuze? (cupblog.org)
  • So Badiou becomes a productive foil against which I can present my interpretation of Deleuze. (cupblog.org)
  • As this book ultimately argues, artificially separating language and sensibility results in a failure to encounter affect, the relation to difference affect is said to name, and the experience of thinking affect is taken to provoke. (sunypress.edu)
  • A: Yes, both Deleuze and Badiou are atheists, but they both grapple with what I call theological issues and questions, Badiou most explicitly in his book on St. Paul. (cupblog.org)
  • As Badiou's work became more prominent I read Badiou, but I really disliked his treatment of Deleuze in Deleuze: The Clamor of Being . (cupblog.org)
  • Around this time, Jeff Robbins, my series co-editor for the Insurrections Series , asked Creston Davis and I to respond to a question from one of Jeff's students about the difference between Deleuze and Badiou. (cupblog.org)
  • Creston liked Deleuze, but leaned towards Badiou, whereas I appreciated Badiou but preferred Deleuze. (cupblog.org)
  • But I wouldn't have written the book just to show that Badiou is wrong about Deleuze. (cupblog.org)
  • Q: Badiou aggressively attacked Deleuze in print, and even disrupted his classes, right? (cupblog.org)
  • A: Yes, Badiou was a radical Maoist, and he felt that Deleuze was insufficiently radical. (cupblog.org)
  • Deleuze ended up asking Badiou not to publish their correspondence, because he was becoming weaker and sicker, and he felt that they were not his best articulations of what was at stake. (cupblog.org)
  • My own view is that Deleuze emerges from this book as a much stranger figure, but Badiou does clarify some of the issues regarding Deleuze, Heidegger and himself. (driftline.org)
  • Here again though I certainly don't completely agree with the way Badiou positions Deleuze or himself for that matter. (driftline.org)
  • However, underlying all of their work are Silvan Tomkins 's foundational studies of affect from the 1960s. (blogspot.com)
  • this essay elucidates how Isabelle Stengers's signature idea of an "ecology of practices" offers a way to establish claims to expertise and-within limits that are, in effect, the limits of specific scientific practices-claims of authority within science that Rorty would have denied. (philpapers.org)
  • They are haecceities … capacities to affect and be affected. (a-n.co.uk)
  • Although Deleuze speaks of the fold as it applies to Baroque art, Murray argues that the interactive nature of digital art provides particularly prime conditions for the fold - where meaning accumulates through the active participation of the audience. (yorku.ca)
  • In the present article we wish to develop an argument from our audio paper manifesto, that "the aesthetic, material aspects of the audio paper produce affects and sensations. (lu.se)
  • Deleuze himself may well be turning in his grave to think his work is being valued for its application and not invocation of experimentation. (sensesofcinema.com)
  • An audience experiences the work in the present, while the artist's work is both influenced by and influences understanding of the past, as well as has an effect on the future. (yorku.ca)
  • Allowing the positions of Lacoue-Labarthe, Nancy, Blanchot, and Deleuze to unfold rather than pushing to decide disputes, he deftly demonstrates that his questions of 'voice' and 'scene' are fundamental to post-Heideggerian thought. (sunypress.edu)
  • FINAL CONSIDERATIONS: The culture circle enabled the intertwining of scientific and empirical knowledge in the construction of a critical and reflective knowledge committed to welcoming and comprehensive care for people and families affected by leprosy. (bvsalud.org)
  • Political Affect investigates the relationship between the social and the somatic: how our bodies, minds, and social settings are intricately linked. (umn.edu)
  • For those interested in Deleuze, affect, or the ways bodies are implicated in and connected to several seemingly disconnected forces, this book is a must read. (umn.edu)
  • We aim for papers that foreground a questioning of Deleuzian Œethics¹ in relation to a thinking that might otherwise approach Deleuze as method or procedure in practical, or one might say, creative assemblages. (aap.org.au)
  • What comes together can be any variety of objects, practices, feelings and affects, which move 'between technology (content, material) and language (expression, non-corporeal effects)' (Wise 80). (australianhumanitiesreview.org)
  • In this way, Deleuze has really helped me formulate my general approach to all works of literature: I do not care to comprehend them or understand them in any way. (htmlgiant.com)
  • Moreover, not only should diversity among lesbians, gay men, bisexual people and trans people be considered, but it should be recognised that trans people may inhabit some, all or none of these identities simultaneously, which may affect their vulnerability on different measures of marginalisation. (socresonline.org.uk)
  • It proceeds from the premise that the journey towards a different conceptualization of law might be fruitfully re-routed through the affect-laden realm of embodied experience - the experience of watching the subversive anti-western film Dead Man. (ssrn.com)
  • The term "affect" is central to what has become known as the "affective turn" in the humanities and social sciences. (wikipedia.org)
  • Deleuze helped to create the modern Nietzschean post-modernism that became popular in American university humanities programs in the late twentieth century. (newworldencyclopedia.org)
  • A: I studied Deleuze in graduate school at Syracuse, and the further I went, the more I kept coming back to his thought, especially Difference and Repetition , which I didn't fully understand but found brilliant and groundbreaking. (cupblog.org)
  • This study aimed to investigate the impact of leprosy reactions on physical, psychological, and social aspects of the lives of people affected by analysing their life experiences and perspectives about leprosy reactions. (bvsalud.org)