TL;DR: In this article, the authors describe the nature of the Hindu Images and their use in the creation and consecration of images, including the Temple and the Image, and the image and Pilgrimage.
Abstract: Preface to the Third EditionPreface to the Second EditionSeeing the SacredA. DarsanB. The Visible IndiaC. Film ImagesD. The Image of GodE. The Polytheistic ImaginationThe Nature of the Hindu ImagesA. The Aniconic and the Iconic ImagesB. The Ritual Uses of the ImagesC. Creation and Consecration of ImagesD. Festivals and ImagesImage, Temple, and PilgrimageA. The Temple and the ImageB. Image and PilgrimageAfterword: Seeing the Divine Image in AmericaA. America's Murtis and TemplesB. Sri Lakshmi Temple: The Process of Divine EmbodimentNotesAppendix I. BibliographyAppendix II. Note on PronunciationAppendix III. GlossaryIndex
TL;DR: In this article, the authors discuss the importance of ordinary things and the need to care for them in the context of death and the harvest in a house with a pool and the Consecration of the House.
Abstract: Part 1: The Importance of Ordinary Things 1. Death and the Harvest 2. The Consecration of the House 3. A Duty of Care Part 2: Where the Stress Falls 4. A House with a Pool 5. Multiplication and Division 6. The Rites of Separation 7. What Remains to be Seen
TL;DR: In this article, the authors discuss the history of the preservation of historic monuments and their role in the development of the contemporary culture industry, including the creation of an urban heritage and the creation and preservation of monuments.
Abstract: 1. Humanisms and the ancient monument 2. The age of antiquarians: real monuments and represented monuments 3. The French Revolution 4. The consecration phase: institutionalization of the historic monument, 1820-1960 5. The invention of an urban heritage 6. Historic heritage and the contemporary culture industry.
TL;DR: This paper examined the effect of contemporaneous critical, professional, and popular recognition, as well as the effects of the extent of subsequent critical discourse about films and their directors, on the retrospective cultural consecration of American films.
Abstract: This research examines the effects of contemporaneous critical, professional, and popular recognition, as well as the effects of the extent of subsequent critical discourse about films and their directors, on the retrospective cultural consecration of American films. Specifically, it examines a sample of 1,277 films released from 1929 to 1991 that received three or more major Academy Award nominations or were selected among the ten best films of the year by either the New York Times or the National Board of Review or were among the top ten films in terms of box-office revenues in a given year. The analysis focuses on the characteristics of those films that were retrospectively consecrated either by inclusion among the 100 greatest films by the American Film Institute or by inclusion in the National Film Registry. Contemporaneous professional and recognition of the director of a film is especially important in determining the likelihood of retrospective consecration. In addition, the extent of critical discourse both about a film and about its director is important in determining the likelihood of retrospective consecration. Overall, the findings confirm that the retrospective consecration of films is affected by the discourse produced by film critics and scholars who function, in effect, as reputational entrepreneurs. However, this discourse is influenced by the availability of certain cultural schemas. Specifically, the ascendancy of "auteur theory" as a discourse of value within film studies serves to privilege the director as the primary creative agent in film production. It also serves to privilege certain directors over others.
TL;DR: The Great Crusades: Prayer and Politics in Postwar America Part II: Consecration 3. "Government Under God" 4. Pledging Allegiance 5. Pitchmen for Piety Part III: Conflict 6. "Whose Religious Tradition?" 7. "Our So-Called Religious Leaders" 8. "Which Side Are You On?" Epilogue
Abstract: Introduction Part I: Creation 1. "Freedom Under God" 2. The Great Crusades: Prayer and Politics in Postwar America Part II: Consecration 3. "Government Under God" 4. Pledging Allegiance 5. Pitchmen for Piety Part III: Conflict 6. "Whose Religious Tradition?" 7. "Our So-Called Religious Leaders" 8. "Which Side Are You On?" Epilogue