0
Catttt Posted 10 years ago
Vocabulary

public appropriation

1. Does "public appropriation" here mean "public ownership"?

2. Can anyone please explain the processes of "fermentation, agitation and disruption"?

An intriguing conflation of supposed opposites appears to present itself, then, involving conceptions of ‘play’ and ‘work’. On the one hand, the city in itself is a ‘work’ (of art), or oeuvre, which invokes the citizen’s right to participation (or public appropriation) as play. On the other hand, art – which, as Johnstone points out, acts for Lefebvre ‘as a kind of “play-generating yeast” in the everyday; an action that suggests both the splitting down into simpler substances and the process of fermentation, agitation and disruption’.
  

Top answer

red apple 1. Does "public appropriation" here mean "public ownership"? I don't think so.

  • red apple 1.
  • Does "public appropriation" here mean "public ownership"?
  • I don't think so.
  • org/wiki/Appropriation_(art ) red apple 2.
  • Can anyone please explain the processes of "fermentation, agitation and disruption"?
Free · every Monday

Get the Weekly English Kit 📬

New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.

6 Answers
0
red apple1. Does "public appropriation" here mean "public ownership"?
I don't think so.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Appropriation_(art)
red apple2. Can anyone please explain the processes of "fermentation, agitation and disruption"?
0
@AlpheccaStars It seems that "agitation" and "disruption" are also two processes of fermentation. Am I right? I think they mean "mixing and separating". Yes?
0
red apple "agitation" and "disruption" are also two processes of fermentation. Am I right?
No, there are three different processes: fermentation (brewing, stewing), agitation (riling, stirring up, aggravating), and disruption (breaking up, interrupting, severing).
0
@AlpheccaStars I mean It seems that three of the above processes are referencing to baking processes. As you can see in this link "agitation" is one of the processes of "fermentation" that means "stirring and mixing". I think "disruption" also refers to chemical or physical dissolu
0
red applebaking processes
The baking process consists of several steps. Letting the yeast ferment and raise the dough is the first step. After it rises in a quiet, warm place, you agitate the dough by slapping it and rolling it and kneading it, After a second rise, you disrupt the fermentation process by baking the dough, which kills the yeast. (I used to bake
0
I got it. I am interested to know you used to bake bread yourself!

Related Questions