Ephemerality (from the Greek word ἐφήμερος, meaning 'lasting only one day'[2]) is the concept of things being transitory, existing only briefly. Academically, the term ephemeral constitutionally describes a diverse assortment of things and experiences, from digital media to types of streams.[3] "There is no single definition of ephemerality".[4] With respect to unique performances, for example, it has been noted that "[e]phemerality is a quality caused by the ebb and flow of the crowd's concentration on the performance and a reflection of the nostalgic character of specific performances".[5] Because different people may value the passage of time differently, ephemerality may be a relative, perceptual concept: "In brief, what is short-lived may not be the object itself, but the attention we afford it".[6][7]

The ephemeral nature of Granite Plateau Creek on the Mawson Plateau means the creek is usually a series of waterholes
The travelling festival Burning Man was described by one scholar as the "very definition of ephemerality".[1]

Ephemerality and nature

edit

Geographical features

edit

An ephemeral stream is that which only exists following precipitation.[8] They are not the same as intermittent or seasonal waterbodies, which exist for longer periods, but not all year round.[citation needed] Ephemeral streams can be difficult to "conceptually defin[e]"; those that are discontinuous, due to altering between aggradation or degradation, have the appearance of continual change.[9][10] Furthermore, the characteristics of terrain and rainfall are profound in affecting ephemeral streams.[11] Ephemeral waterbodies experience formative change upon the end of a hydroperiod.[12] "Due to lack of continuous hydrology data, the designation of sites as ephemeral or intermittent is necessarily tenuous".[8] Ephemeral streams feature a low degree of hydrological connectivity.[13]

 
Staircase Falls in Yosemite National Park only flows after heavy rainfall or snowmelt
 
A lake formed at Badwater within Death Valley National Park during the unusually wet winter and spring of 2005

Small wetlands are often ephemeral and ephemeral ecosystems are often aquatic; ephemeral wetlands, streams and ponds are a varied and global occurrence.[14][12][15] In northeastern United States, ephemeral freshwater systems are abundant and are "critical to the maintenance of forest biodiversity".[16] Hydroperiod, predation, competition and food availability are among the "highly heterogeneous" elements of these features.[15] In tropical biomes, amphibians often reside in ephemeral habitats during dry seasons; opportunistic species utilise similar and ephemeral habitats for food, sleep or mating.[17] Environments akin to ephemeral ponds can be very significant sites of reproduction for amphibians; many other organism make use of ephemeral ponds, pools and streams to breed.[18][19] Those which do utilise these sites are significantly constrained by time thus they mature, reproduce or disperse before evaporation.[20] Ephemeral pools lasting only days or weeks are exclusively used for breeding by Fletcher's frog regardless of the precarious survival of offspring.[19] Fletcher's frogs use these sites to exploit them, by-passing predation and competition.[19] Tadpoles, however, are hindered by ephemeral streams, as can surrounding systems.[11][15] Limited and unpredictable food availability means ephemeral waterbodies may be rife with cannibalism.[21] Specific adaptions to ephemeral pools are abundant.[22] Human alterations to the habitats of ephemeral nectar that flying foxes consume has led to urban migration.[23] Climate change significantly affects ephemeral freshwater systems and changes in climates may be precisely identified by the ecosystems of ephemeral pools.[16][24]

Ephemeral habitat patches have repeatedly been assessed as detrimental to metapopulation persistence, although metapopulations are not always negatively affected by ephemeral landscapes.[25] These patches occur as a result of the habitat's turnover.[26] Ephemeral streams have, relative to their perennial counterparts, lower species richness; the streams are "potentially demanding" for inhabitants, although some species do reside.[27]

Ephemeral rivers sometimes form waterholes in geological depressions or areas scoured by erosion, and are common in arid regions of Australia.[28][29]

The ephemerality of a river network is a particularly significant element in the hydrological transmission of waterborne diseases, via a direct and indirect presence in the transmission cycle – the nature of the disease and area covered are important factors as well.[30] Diseases like malaria, dengue fever, chikungunya, zika and schistosomiasis are found in ephemeral waterbodies due to their vectors relation and/or reliance.[31]

Examples of ephemeral streams are the Luni river in Rajasthan, India, Ugab River in Southern Africa, and a number of small ephemeral watercourses that drain Talak in northern Niger. Other notable ephemeral rivers include the Todd River and Sandover River in Central Australia as well as the Son River, Batha River, and the Trabancos River.

Any endorheic basin, or closed basin, that contains a playa (dry lake) at its drainage lowpoint can become an ephemeral lake. Examples include Lake Carnegie in Western Australia, Lake Cowal in New South Wales, Mystic Lake and Rogers Lake in California, and Sevier Lake in Utah. Even the driest and lowest place in North America, Death Valley (more specifically Badwater Basin), became flooded with a short-lived ephemeral lake in the spring of 2005.[32] Costelloe et al. (2009) describes salt lakes found in the arid zone of Australia as profoundly ephemeral.[33]

There are also ephemeral islands such as Banua Wuhu and Home Reef. These islands appear when volcanic activity increases their height above sea level, but disappear over several years due to wave erosion. Bassas da India, on the other hand, is a near-sea level island that appears only at low tide.[citation needed] On account of changing demarcation, shores exist as ephemeral.[34]

Only a small amount of southern Costa Rica's secondary forests reach maturity, indicating that they may be "generally ephemeral".[35] Deciduous forests, via the seasonal change of leaves, are subject to natural ephemeral changes.[36] Ephemeral pools located in forests are commonly known as "vernal pools", often lasting in a seasonal manner.[16] Landscapes feature ephemeral changes of both natural and man-made origin.[36] Furrows, haystacks and sheaves are ephemeral aspects of a landscape.[36]

Biological processes

edit

Plants whose life cycle is significantly less than the time of a growing season are deemed ephemeral.[37] Winter annuals, Epilobium and Senecio vulgaris are examples of ephemeral plants.[37][38] The conditions for ephemeral plants are markedly present in deserts.[38]

Animals can be ephemeral, with brine shrimp and the mayfly being examples. The placenta is considered an ephemeral organ present during gestation and pregnancy.

Ephemerality is a component of olfaction, breathing, speech and memory, aligned with permanency in the latter.[39][40][41][42] With regards to witnessing an artwork in a museum, limited research indicates that the ephemerality of solely gazing at the artwork results in greater remembrance compared to the resulting memory from taking a photograph.[43] Psychologists have studied why ephemerality may improve memory retention; social psychologist Karl E. Scheibe, conversely, suggested that ephemeral images are only memorable if repeated.[44][45] The ephemerality of memory leads objects to assume the function of begeting remembrance on account of their greater stability.[46]

Ephemerality and society

edit

Ephemeral objects

edit

Objects which are ephemeral, per one perspective, are those whose compositional material experience chemical or physical changes and are thus permanently altered; this process occurs in a matter of decades.[47] Furthermore, ephemerality can be perceived as defiance of value or durability; common uses of the term indicate a "complicated relationship between temporality and value".[7][48] Ephemerality is a matter of varying scale and can affect the entire spectrum of literature, from a "finely bound" Bible to a "hastily printed" handbill: "Paper is the medium of permanence and ephemerality at once".[49][50][51] Due to them often outlasting their expressed purpose, these objects can be perceived as temporal and ontological oddities; ephemerality has been described as constitutionally liminal.[52][53][54] Ephemerality has been seen as indicative of epochs like the Printing Revolution, a greater expansion thereof, the Baroque era, the Victorian era, the Georgian era, modernity, or the "emergent post-print age".[55][56][57][58][59][60] The likes of food, clothes, novels, zines, illnesses, breath, regimes, persons, glass, ash and ephemera have been said to illustrate and/or be affected by ephemerality.[61][62][63][64][65][66][67] The new media of the 20th century conditioned perceptions of ephemerality in the 21st century—the advent of the telegraph, camera, and film projector instilled an understanding of ephemeral media.[68][69] Scholars such as Charles Baudelaire, Georg Simmel, and Walter Benjamin saw the distinctly and intentionally ephemeral practice of fashion as emblematic of modernity.[70] Scholars have described ephemerality as affixed to the present, a present that is ephemeral insofar as it is contingent.[71][64][72]

Baudelaire, who considered aesthetics to be centered around an interplay of the perennial and the ephemeral, defined the artistic component of modernity by its ephemeral quality.[73][74] Sarah Kofman posited that art is utilised to abate the "intolerable nature of all ephemeral things".[75] Ephemerality has been relevant to a considerable amount of art; various artists have drawn upon the matter to explore time, memory, politics, emotions, spirituality and death.[53][76] The Dada, Fluxus, Surreal, and Futurist movements all incorporated ephemerality as have Kuba, Mono-ha, and ukiyo-e.[77][78][79][80][53][81] Perceptions of ephemerality vary between cultures, from melancholy and mitigation to embrace.[57][82][a] Performance art has frequently been described as ephemeral in nature; with regards to historical performances, the traces: playbills, scrapbooks of newspaper clippings and material artifacts are themselves ephemeral.[85][86]

Literature is ephemeral, including definitions and "all printed texts".[87][88][60][89] Ephemeral was first used colloquially in reference to printed matters.[90] By 1750, an "expansion of all kinds of ephemeral print" had occurred.[91] Hazlitt contended that such ephemerality was the result of widespread aestheticism, thus the creations were subject to being abruptly disregarded due to the cascading "gaze of fashion".[60] Wallace Stevens adjusted his poetic standards due to a "perception of ephemerality" that living in New York City instigated.[92] Art Spiegelman asserted that the format of comics, even during degradation, defies ephemerality, although they have been deemed as such.[93] Women's writing, the likes of diaries and political pamphlets, have amassed a status as long being ephemeral, acknowledged by some affected in the then-present.[94][95] The ubiquity of digital media has spurred the opinion that print material is comparatively less ephemeral.[96] Elisa New and Anna Akhmatova varyingly opined that poetry is a means of repealing mortal ephemerality, with Akhamatova invoking the aphorism ars longa, vita brevis ("skillfulness takes time and life is short").[97][98]

Ephemeral objects chiefly disappear; when preserved it is often knowingly, having been "rescued from ephemerality", though this practice is still fraught with uncertainty and an object's ephemerality may only be suspended, thus still capable of being transitory.[99][62][100] The legacy of ephemerality often manifests as "traces, glimmers, residues, and specks of things".[101] Literature may contest, document or approximate ephemerality although the immateral nature means that there can only be an approximation: "In other words, there must always be an ephemeral beyond the ephemeral".[102][87][103][104] Film has been used to document and combat ephemeral aspects of human development.[105] Digital media's encompassing archival process means that information of varying importance can either be affixed or ephemeral, the former seen as the more generally common outcome.[106][107] Digital personas, on account of precariousness and whim, can be entirely ephemeral, without any record.[106][108] Grey literature has prove particularly vulnerable to the internet's ephemerality.[109]

 
Art Spiegelman, in reference to the September 11 attacks, described the World Trade Center as “ephemeral as...old newspapers”.[110]

Ephemeral acquired its common meaning of short-living in the mid-19th century and has connotations of passing time, fragility, change, disappearance, transformation, and the "philosophically ultimate vision of our own existence".[111][112][113][b] Sarah Kofman questioned if "the beauty that conceals the evanescent nature of all things were itself ephemeral".[75] Rather than melancholic, Sigmund Freud and Walter Pater viewed ephemerality as valuable; awareness and acceptance were to Freud commendable.[115][116]

Ephemerality as a human condition

edit

Multiple scholars have viewed ephemerality as intrinsic to the human condition, a phenomenon of physicality.[6][117][118][119][120] A significant amount of living is ephemeral, considered by some as a component of everyday life: "we might best understand the ephemeral as a routine and constant force... that establishes the presence of the everyday".[7][121][66][122] Ephemeral aspects are evident in communication, of both digitial and physical origin.[123][124] In the digital realm, online interactions straddle permanency and ephemerality, new posts proliferate such that participants adopt a social norm that "the discourse will pass and be forgotten as the past".[123] Ephemerality is a technologically and socially reliant concept – relative and historically changing.[96] The rudimentary technology of early radio led to the media broadcast being ephemeral and for a substantial amount of time spoken communication was ephemeral.[125][126][c] Written communication, historically and presently, has been influenced by ephemerality.[128] The emergence of new digital media and technology develops what we deem ephemeral, to the point that ephemerality is perhaps an "outdated concept".[96][129]

 
Visualisation of ephemerality in synchronous, in-person, communication between two or more parties.

Within the context of modern media dissemination, YouTube videos, viral emails and photos have been identified as ephemeral; as have means of advertising, both physical and digital and the internet collectively.[130][131][132][d] Ephemeral media has been described as that which is brief in duration and/or circulation, adjacent to "the primary texts of contemporary entertainment culture".[134] YouTube has "become a hugely successful aggregator of ephemeral media".[133] In 2009, Ian Christie considered that a substantial amount of modern media, aligned with "rapid proliferati[on]", "may prove much more ephemeral than the flip-book".[135]

Due to its fragile and solid nature, Buci-Glucksmann used glass figurines as a metaphor for ephemerality.[54] Plastic has similarly "become the archetypal expression of...ephemerality".[136]

Wang Tao, Stevens and Rubem Fonseca evoked ephemerality via female characters; Virginia Woolf used the rainbow as a symbol whereas grass occupies a similar role in the Bible; F. Scott Fitzgerald and John Keats elicited melancholic ephemerality in showcases of consumption.[137][138][84][139][140][141][142] Historically, the ephemerality of dreams was utilised in ample East Asian literature as a metaphor for immaterial reality whereas Baroque writings depicted the matter as analogous to life.[143][144] Scholar of comparative literature Stuart Lasine noted that writers have frequently invoked ephemerality as a negative aspect of the human condition.[145] Ephemerality was profound to Dōgen and was intertwined with sorrow and regret; he used "the imagery of ephemerality" in a waka concerning death.[146]

Ephemerality has received increased attention from modern academics, in fields such as: literary studies, art history, book history, digital media studies, performance studies – "and the 'archival turn' in the humanities as a whole".[102][147] The ephemerality of dance has engendered concern since at least the sixteenth century.[148] Curators of modern and contemporary art have increasingly expressed a similar interest; curator of said genres Jan Schall described them as varyingly ephemeral.[99][149][e] Ephemerality present in digital literature and poetry has seen critical analysis.[99] Russell questioned if scholarly conceptions of "the everyday" was deeply intertwined with ephemerality, despite attention to a relation being thus far faint.[150] Social historians and historians of sound have contended their subject's ephemerality by utilising more material forms; creative soundwork has long been subordinate to these forms on account of its ephemerality.[127][151][152] The ephemerality of the internet and features that engender ephemerality, such as link rot, has elicited concern in regards to scholarly practice.[107][153]

Like a blade of grass,
My frail body
Treading the path to Kyoto
Seeming to wander
Amid the cloudy mist on Kinobe Pass.

Dōgen.[154]

Ephemerality has been studied in the context of dancing.[155] Witnessing a dance that will be rendered ephemeral is resultingly commodified and of greater desire to prospecting audiences; the same is true of fairs.[156][157][f] Muñoz posited that the physical proximation of dance, which coupled with the "shared rhythm", results in a unified yet ephemeral status of those engaged.[158] La Sylphide sees ephemerality as a notable theme.[84] Professor of Dance Mark Franko contended that the artform is approaching a state of being "post-ephemeral" while Diane Taylor viewed the lasting impact a performance may have as negating notions of ephemerality.[148][159] The documentation of other ephemeral events: protests, installations, exhibitions, are often meager – public events, of varying size, naturally generate ephemeral material.[160][161][g]

"[Ephemerality] and disposability" have been perceived as components "of an American ethos"; alternative history novels such as The Man in the High Castle and The Plot Against America depict Americana and the nation itself as ephemeral.[162][163] Ephemerality has been central to Buddhism; Yogācāra teaches a version of ontology that centers around universal ephemerality.[164] Ephemerality has been identified as relevant to queer cultures; José Esteban Muñoz argued that queerness and ephemerality are intertwined, as the former has been expressed in methods which are prone to fade upon the "touch of those who would erase queer possibility".[165][166] Freud considered culture as the prevailing element exempt from ephemerality.[115] Scheibe saw the likes of live theater, travel abroad, stand-up comedy, and political pundits as engendering greater ephemerality by reducing attention spans and sense of personal history.[45]

 
On Death, Part One, by Max Klinger which depicts life's ephemeral nature.[167]

Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels' perception of ephemerality "represents a thoroughly modern experience".[168] Ephemerality was furthermore prominent in the late 20th century, on account of multiple social features; Reiko Tomii described ephemerality as a "defining issue of the 1960s".[169][170] In the 21st century, ephemerality "continues to signify concerns about the overflow of information, its evanescence, and questions of what or should be preserved".[128] David Harvey defined postmodernism as "a total acceptance of ephemerality".[171]

Architecture of an ephemeral nature appears as increasingly commonplace, on account of global and capricious hyper-mobility and mass displacement.[172] Marc Augé observed ephemerality as key to the likes of airports, malls, supermarkets, office blocks, and hotels thus rendering them, per his definition, "non-places".[173] Architecture scholar Anastasia Karandinou argued that the practice's modern relation to ephemerality correlated with digital media's evolution, which she says has enabled new conceptions of space and everyday thinking.[174] Of an indefinite and contentious nature, the definition of a region is ephemeral.[175]

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ Literature scholar Peter Schwenger further stated that "the traditional lament of the ephemeral object" is one of sadness at witnessing beauty fade away.[83] Professor of English Andrea Henderson wrote that said lament occurs as a result of "attaching oneself to ephemeral objects", which are "made lovely" due to their short-lived nature.[84] John Keats defined melancholy as profound desire resulting from ephemeral objects.[84]
  2. ^ Ephemeral in early archival theorisation often indicated little value.[114]
  3. ^ Lance Sieveking's oeuvre provides a common example of early radio's ephemerality and the resulting effect; his extensive work was eventually rendered lost.[127]
  4. ^ YouTube videos, according to film scholar Paul Grainge, are ephemeral due to "the brevity of its clips".[133]
  5. ^ At least half of the San Diego Museum of Contemporary Art's collection was deemed by curator Elizabeth Armstrong to be "some degree ephemeral".[149]
  6. ^ Discussing ephemerality in relation to artworks, Purpura posited that it defies the commodification of art.[53]
  7. ^ Archivist Katrina Windon described the process of documenting the ephemeral as dialetical.[149]
  1. ^ Popov, Lubomir; Ellison, Michael Bruce (2013-03-01). "Performance, Space, Time: The Production of Interiority in Black Rock City". Interiors. 4 (1): 53–74. doi:10.2752/204191213X13601683874163. ISSN 2041-9112. S2CID 129716791.
  2. ^ Ephemeros, Henry George Liddell, Robert Scott, "A Greek-English Lexicon", at Perseus
  3. ^ Charman, Karen; Dixon, Mary (2022). "Theorizing the "Public"—Recognizing Ephemeral and Migrating Publics and the Educative Agent". Cultural Studies ↔ Critical Methodologies. 22 (3): 282–289. doi:10.1177/15327086221087661. ISSN 1532-7086. S2CID 247969223.
  4. ^ Vélez-Serna, Maria (2020). Ephemeral Cinema Spaces : Stories of Reinvention, Resistance and Community. Amsterdam University Press. p. 48. ISBN 978-90-485-3782-2. OCLC 1158015759.
  5. ^ Will Straw, Alexandra Boutros, Circulation and the City: Essays on Urban Culture (2010), p. 148.
  6. ^ a b Ronald Beiner, Political Philosophy: What It Is and Why It Matters (2014), p. 10.
  7. ^ a b c Hughes, Kit (2017). "Disposable: Useful cinema on early television". Critical Studies in Television: The International Journal of Television Studies. 12 (2): 102–120. doi:10.1177/1749602017698476. ISSN 1749-6020. S2CID 219960862.
  8. ^ a b De Jong, Grant D.; Canton, Steven P. (2013). "Presence of long-lived invertebrate taxa and hydrologic permanence". Journal of Freshwater Ecology. 28 (2): 277–282. doi:10.1080/02705060.2012.738252. ISSN 0270-5060. S2CID 83612253.
  9. ^ Bull, William B. (1997). "Discontinuous ephemeral streams". Geomorphology. 19 (3): 227–276. Bibcode:1997Geomo..19..227B. doi:10.1016/S0169-555X(97)00016-0. ISSN 0169-555X.
  10. ^ Tramblay, Yves; Rutkowska, Agnieszka; Sauquet, Eric; Sefton, Catherine; Laaha, Gregor; Osuch, Marzena; Albuquerque, Teresa; Alves, Maria Helena; Banasik, Kazimierz; Beaufort, Aurelien; Brocca, Luca (2021). "Trends in flow intermittence for European rivers". Hydrological Sciences Journal. 66 (1): 37–49. doi:10.1080/02626667.2020.1849708. hdl:10261/266227. ISSN 0262-6667. S2CID 228921477.
  11. ^ a b Serrano-Notivoli, Roberto; Martínez-Salvador, Alberto; García-Lorenzo, Rafael; Espín-Sánchez, David; Conesa-García, Carmelo (2022). "Rainfall–runoff relationships at event scale in western Mediterranean ephemeral streams". Hydrology and Earth System Sciences. 26 (5): 1243–1260. Bibcode:2022HESS...26.1243S. doi:10.5194/hess-26-1243-2022. ISSN 1027-5606. S2CID 247332775.
  12. ^ a b O'Neill, Brian J. (2016). "Community disassembly in ephemeral ecosystems". Ecology. 97 (12): 3285–3292. doi:10.1002/ecy.1604. ISSN 0012-9658. JSTOR 44082190. PMID 27861768.
  13. ^ Segev, Ori; Blaustein, Leon (2014). "Influence of water velocity and predation risk on fire salamander (Salamandra infraimmaculata) larval drift among temporary pools in ephemeral streams". Freshwater Science. 33 (3): 950–957. doi:10.1086/676634. ISSN 2161-9549. JSTOR 10.1086/676634. S2CID 85331539.
  14. ^ Ogden, Lesley Evans (2017). "Dried Out: Aquatic biodiversity faces challenges in a drying climate". BioScience. 67 (11): 949–956. doi:10.1093/biosci/bix115. ISSN 0006-3568.
  15. ^ a b c Oh, Dogeun; Kim, Yongsu; Yoo, Sohee; Kang, Changku (2021). "Habitat ephemerality affects the evolution of contrasting growth strategies and cannibalism in anuran larvae". PeerJ. 9: e12172. doi:10.7717/peerj.12172. ISSN 2167-8359. PMC 8445080. PMID 34603854.
  16. ^ a b c Brooks, Robert T. (2009). "Potential impacts of global climate change on the hydrology and ecology of ephemeral freshwater systems of the forests of the northeastern United States". Climatic Change. 95 (3–4): 469–483. Bibcode:2009ClCh...95..469B. doi:10.1007/s10584-008-9531-9. ISSN 0165-0009. S2CID 154713741.
  17. ^ Brandão, Reuber A.; Fenker, Jéssica; Lopes, Bruno E. Pires de Carmago; de Sena, Vitor M. de Alcantara; Vasconcelos, Beatriz D. (2020). "Diet of terrestrial anurans in an ephemeral and simplified habitat during the dry season in the Brazilian Cerrado". Ethology Ecology & Evolution. 32 (6): 527–550. doi:10.1080/03949370.2020.1755373. ISSN 0394-9370. S2CID 219744576.
  18. ^ Almeida-Gomes, Mauricio; Rocha, Carlos F. D.; Vieira, Marcus V. (2016). "Local and Landscape Factors Driving the Structure of Tropical Anuran Communities: Do Ephemeral Ponds have a Nested Pattern?". Biotropica. 48 (3): 365–372. doi:10.1111/btp.12285. ISSN 0006-3606. JSTOR 48574984. S2CID 87000604.
  19. ^ a b c Gould, John; Clulow, John; Clulow, Simon (2022). "High clutch failure rate due to unpredictable rainfall for an ephemeral pool-breeding frog". Oecologia. 198 (3): 699–710. Bibcode:2022Oecol.198..699G. doi:10.1007/s00442-022-05139-2. ISSN 0029-8549. PMC 8956532. PMID 35247072.
  20. ^ Jocqué, Merlijn; Riddoch, Bruce J.; Brendonck, Luc (2007). "Successional phases and species replacements in freshwater rock pools: towards a biological definition of ephemeral systems". Freshwater Biology. 52 (9): 1734–1744. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2427.2007.01802.x. ISSN 0046-5070.
  21. ^ Gould, John; Clulow, John; Clulow, Simon (2020). Goymann, Wolfgang (ed.). "Food, not friend: Tadpoles of the sandpaper frog ( Lechriodus fletcheri ) cannibalise conspecific eggs as a food resource in ephemeral pools". Ethology. 126 (4): 486–491. doi:10.1111/eth.12995. ISSN 0179-1613. S2CID 213241715.
  22. ^ Wellborn, Gary A.; Skelly, David K.; Werner, Earl E. (1996). "Mechanisms Creating Community Structure Across a Freshwater Habitat Gradient". Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics. 27 (1): 337–363. doi:10.1146/annurev.ecolsys.27.1.337. ISSN 0066-4162.
  23. ^ Ortega, Jorge, ed. (2016). Sociality in Bats. Springer. pp. 105–139. doi:10.1007/978-3-319-38953-0. ISBN 978-3-319-38953-0. S2CID 44759441.
  24. ^ Hulsmans, Ann; Vanschoenwinkel, Bram; Pyke, Chris; Riddoch, Bruce J.; Brendonck, Luc (2008). "Quantifying the Hydroregime of a Temporary Pool Habitat: A Modelling Approach for Ephemeral Rock Pools in SE Botswana". Ecosystems. 11 (1): 89–100. doi:10.1007/s10021-007-9110-3. ISSN 1435-0629. S2CID 3242106.
  25. ^ Reigada, Carolina; Schreiber, Sebastian J.; Altermatt, Florian; Holyoak, Marcel; Berger, Uta; Bronstein, Judith L. (2015). "Metapopulation Dynamics on Ephemeral Patches". The American Naturalist. 185 (2): 183–195. doi:10.1086/679502. ISSN 0003-0147. JSTOR 10.1086/679502. PMID 25616138. S2CID 15472069.
  26. ^ Altermatt, Florian; Bieger, Annette; Morgan, Steven G. (2012). "Habitat characteristics and metapopulation dynamics of the copepod Tigriopus californicus". Marine Ecology Progress Series. 468: 85–93. Bibcode:2012MEPS..468...85A. doi:10.3354/meps09994. ISSN 0171-8630. JSTOR 24876158.
  27. ^ Pohe, Stephen R.; Wade, M. Lyn; Winterbourn, Michael J.; Ball, Olivier J.-P. (2020). "Invertebrate fauna of ephemeral streams on Hauturu-o-Toi/Little Barrier Island in northern New Zealand". New Zealand Journal of Zoology. 47 (1): 53–70. doi:10.1080/03014223.2019.1576214. ISSN 0301-4223. S2CID 91835792.
  28. ^ Cockayne, Bernie (2021). "Climate change effects on waterhole persistence in rivers of the Lake Eyre Basin, Australia". Journal of Arid Environments. 187. Elsevier BV: 104428. doi:10.1016/j.jaridenv.2020.104428. ISSN 0140-1963.
  29. ^ "The Wondrous Waterholes of Northern Australia". Australian River Restoration Centre. 4 December 2015. Retrieved 9 February 2024.
  30. ^ Perez-Saez, Javier; Mande, Theophile; Larsen, Joshua; Ceperley, Natalie; Rinaldo, Andrea (2017). "Classification and prediction of river network ephemerality and its relevance for waterborne disease epidemiology". Advances in Water Resources. 110: 263–278. Bibcode:2017AdWR..110..263P. doi:10.1016/j.advwatres.2017.10.003. ISSN 0309-1708.
  31. ^ Rinaldo, Andrea; Rodriguez-Iturbe, Ignacio (2022). "Ecohydrology 2.0". Rendiconti Lincei. Scienze Fisiche e Naturali. 33 (2): 245–270. Bibcode:2022RLSFN..33..245R. doi:10.1007/s12210-022-01071-y. ISSN 2037-4631. PMC 9165276. PMID 35673327.
  32. ^ "Death Valley Alive With Wildflowers", MSNBC (March 14, 2005).
  33. ^ Costelloe, Justin F.; Irvine, Elizabeth C.; Western, Andrew W.; Herczeg, Andrew L. (2009). "Groundwater Recharge and Discharge Dynamics in an Arid-Zone Ephemeral Lake System, Australia". Limnology and Oceanography. 54 (1): 86–100. Bibcode:2009LimOc..54...86C. doi:10.4319/lo.2009.54.1.0086. ISSN 0024-3590. JSTOR 40058399. S2CID 129599417.
  34. ^ Gulick, Sean P.S.; Miller, Kenneth; Keleman, Peter; Morgan, Joanna; Proust, Jean-Noel; Takazawa, Eiichi (2019). "Scientific Drilling across the Shoreline". Oceanography. 32 (1): 157–159. doi:10.5670/oceanog.2019.139. ISSN 1042-8275. JSTOR 26604970. S2CID 134824825.
  35. ^ Reid, J. Leighton; Fagan, Matthew E.; Lucas, James; Slaughter, Joshua; Zahawi, Rakan A. (2019). "The ephemerality of secondary forests in southern Costa Rica". Conservation Letters. 12 (2). doi:10.1111/conl.12607. ISSN 1755-263X. S2CID 91258573.
  36. ^ a b c Brassley, Paul (1998). "On the unrecognized significance of the ephemeral landscape". Landscape Research. 23 (2): 119–132. doi:10.1080/01426399808706531. ISSN 0142-6397.
  37. ^ a b Hine, Roberts, ed. (2019). "Ephemeral". A Dictionary of Biology (8th ed.). Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-186081-2. OCLC 1100041140.
  38. ^ a b Allaby, Michael, ed. (2010). "Ephemeral". A Dictionary of Ecology (4th ed.). Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-956766-9. OCLC 619552330.
  39. ^ Crowther, Thomas; Mac Cumhaill, Clare, eds. (2018-07-19). Perceptual Ephemera. Vol. 1. Oxford University Press. p. 89. doi:10.1093/oso/9780198722304.001.0001. ISBN 978-0-19-872230-4.
  40. ^ Chun, Wendy Hui Kyong (2008). "The Enduring Ephemeral, or the Future Is a Memory". Critical Inquiry. 35 (1): 148–171. doi:10.1086/595632. ISSN 0093-1896. S2CID 162327675.
  41. ^ Fuller, Saunders & Macnaughton 2021, p. 486.
  42. ^ Goldman, Jerry; Renals, Steve; Bird, Steven; de Jong, Franciska; Federico, Marcello; Fleischhauer, Carl; Kornbluh, Mark; Lamel, Lori; Oard, Douglas W.; Stewart, Claire; Wright, Richard (2005). "Accessing the spoken word". International Journal on Digital Libraries. 5 (4): 287–298. doi:10.1007/s00799-004-0101-0. ISSN 1432-1300. S2CID 8047589.
  43. ^ van Nimwegen, Christof; Bergman, Kristi (2019). "Effects on cognition of the burn after reading principle in ephemeral media applications". Behaviour & Information Technology. 38 (10): 1060–1067. doi:10.1080/0144929x.2019.1659853. ISSN 0144-929X. S2CID 202782412.
  44. ^ Campbell, Colin; Sands, Sean; Treen, Emily; McFerran, Brent (2021). "Fleeting, But Not Forgotten: Ephemerality as a Means to Increase Recall of Advertising". Journal of Interactive Marketing. 56: 96–105. doi:10.1016/j.intmar.2021.06.001. ISSN 1094-9968. S2CID 239629237.
  45. ^ a b Marcum, James W. (2006). "Ephemeral Knowledge in the Visual Ecology". Counterpoints. 231: 89–106. ISSN 1058-1634. JSTOR 42978851.
  46. ^ Zarzycka, Marta; Mogul, Jonathan (2015). "Introduction: Souvenirs and Objects of Remembrance". The Journal of Decorative and Propaganda Arts. 27: 7–11. ISSN 0888-7314. JSTOR 24739829.
  47. ^ Hornbeck, Stephanie E. (2009). "A Conservation Conundrum: Ephemeral Art at the National Museum of African Art". African Arts. 42 (3): 52–61. doi:10.1162/afar.2009.42.3.52. ISSN 0001-9933. JSTOR 20627009. S2CID 57570843.
  48. ^ The Multigraph Collective 2018, p. 127.
  49. ^ The Multigraph Collective 2018, p. 126.
  50. ^ Schaffer, Talia (2011). Novel Craft: Victorian Domestic Handicraft and Nineteenth-Century Fiction. Oxford University Press. p. 68. doi:10.1093/acprof:osobl/9780195398045.001.0001. ISBN 978-0-19-539804-5.
  51. ^ Wasserman 2020, p. 110.
  52. ^ Wasserman 2020, p. 6.
  53. ^ a b c d Purpura, Allyson (2009). "Framing the Ephemeral". African Arts. 42 (3): 11–15. doi:10.1162/afar.2009.42.3.11. ISSN 0001-9933. JSTOR 20627005. S2CID 57568572.
  54. ^ a b Parkins, Ilya (2010). "Fashion as Methodology". Time & Society. 19 (1): 98–119. doi:10.1177/0961463x09354420. ISSN 0961-463X. S2CID 145724698.
  55. ^ Russell, Gillian (2014). "The neglected history of the history of printed ephemera". Melbourne Historical Journal. 42 (1): 7–37.
  56. ^ Wahrman, Dror (2012). Mr. Collier's Letter Racks: A Tale of Art & Illusion at the Threshold of the Modern Information Age. Oxford University Press. p. 20. ISBN 978-0-19-973886-1. OCLC 813232892.
  57. ^ a b Quinz, Emanuele (2014). "For an Esthetics of the Ephemeral". Hybrid. 1: 49–59.
  58. ^ Stubenrauch, Joseph (2016). The Evangelical Age of Ingenuity in Industrial Britain. Oxford Univ. Press. p. 16. doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780198783374.001.0001. ISBN 978-0-19-878337-4.
  59. ^ Fyfe, Paul (2015). By Accident or Design: Writing the Victorian Metropolis. Oxford Univ. Press. p. 133. doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780198732334.001.0001. ISBN 978-0-19-873233-4.
  60. ^ a b c Stewart, David (2013). "Hazlitt, The Living Poets, and Ephemerality" (PDF). The Hazlitt Review. 6 (1): 47–59.
  61. ^ Christensen, Danille Elise (2017). "Materializing the Everyday: "Safe" Scrapbooks, Aesthetic Mess, and the Rhetorics of Workmanship". Journal of Folklore Research. 54 (3): 233–284. doi:10.2979/jfolkrese.54.3.04. ISSN 0737-7037. JSTOR 10.2979/jfolkrese.54.3.04. S2CID 149123338.
  62. ^ a b Wasserman 2020, p. 2.
  63. ^ Human, Deléne (2021). "Catching Ghosts and Consecrating the Forgotten: The Seen and Unseen in the Work of Diane Victor". Pharos Journal of Theology. 102 (1): 66–84. doi:10.46222/pharosjot.102.16. ISSN 2414-3324. S2CID 237865158.
  64. ^ a b Attfield, Judy (2000). Wild Things: The Material Culture of Everyday Life. Bloomsbury Academic. p. 63. ISBN 978-1-350-07229-9.
  65. ^ Bennett, Tony; Joyce, Patrick, eds. (2010). Material Powers: Cultural Studies, History and the Material Turn. Tony Bennett, Patrick Joyce. Routledge. p. 65. ISBN 978-1-134-01516-0. OCLC 847131730.
  66. ^ a b The Multigraph Collective 2018, p. 130.
  67. ^ Fuller, Saunders & Macnaughton 2021, p. 17.
  68. ^ Zieger 2018, p. 11.
  69. ^ Fraser, Alison (2019). "Mass Print, Clipping Bureaus, and the Pre-Digital Database: Reexamining Marianne Moore's Collage Poetics through the Archives". Journal of Modern Literature. 43 (1): 19–33. doi:10.2979/jmodelite.43.1.02. ISSN 1529-1464. S2CID 213899584.
  70. ^ Pecorari, Marco (2021). Fashion Remains: Rethinking Ephemera in the Archive. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 14. ISBN 9781350074774.
  71. ^ Eeckhout & Goldfarb 2012, p. 112, 118.
  72. ^ Germain, Gilbert G. (2009). Spirits in the Material World: The Challenge of Technology. Lexington Books. p. 92. ISBN 978-0-7391-3368-2. OCLC 423389300.
  73. ^ Salmon, Richard; Crossley, Alice, eds. (2016). Thackeray in Time: History, Memory and Modernity. Richard Salmon, Alice Crossley. Routledge. p. 17. ISBN 978-1-4724-1415-1. OCLC 949884201.
  74. ^ Moran, Claire (2012). "Baudelaire, Daumier, and the Reinvention of History Painting". Dix-Neuf. 16 (1): 49–61. doi:10.1179/1478731811Z.00000000011. S2CID 193194312.
  75. ^ a b Naas, Michael (2015). "Echoing Sentiments: Art and Melancholy in the Work of Pleshette DeArmitt". Journal of French and Francophone Philosophy. 23 (2): 76–83. doi:10.5195/jffp.2015.696. ISSN 2155-1162.
  76. ^ Smith, Makr; Bondi, Liz; Davidson, Joyce, eds. (2016). Emotion, Place and Culture. Mick Smith. Routledge. p. 149. ISBN 978-1-315-57923-8. OCLC 952728867.
  77. ^ Ferriani, Barbara; Pugliese, Marina, eds. (2013). Ephemeral Monuments: History and Conservation of Installation Art. Getty Conservation Institute. pp. 7, 23. ISBN 9781606061343.
  78. ^ Ravicz, Marilyn Ekdahl (2009). "Ephemeral art: A case for the functions of aesthetic Stimuli". Semoitca. 30 (1–2): 115–134. doi:10.1515/semi.1980.30.1-2.115. S2CID 170322468.
  79. ^ Noriyuki, Haraguchi; Susumu, Koshimizu; Ufan, Lee; Nobuo, Sekine; Kishio, Suga; Goodall, Hollis; Hiro, Rika Iezumi (2013). "Roundtable". Review of Japanese Culture and Society. 25 (25): 235–237. doi:10.1353/roj.2013.0001. ISSN 2329-9770. S2CID 246283112.
  80. ^ Liu-Brennan, Damien; Bryce, Mio (2010). "Japanese Fireworks (Hanabi): The Ephemeral Nature and Symbolism". International Journal of the Arts in Society. 4 (5): 189–201.
  81. ^ Bouchard, Norma (1997). "Rereading Beckett's 'Dream of Fair to Middling Women'". Samuel Beckett Today. 6: 137–148. doi:10.1163/18757405-90000056. ISSN 0927-3131. JSTOR 25781215.
  82. ^ Campoli, Alessandra (2010). "Tropical Melancholy: The Ephemeral in Thai Visual Imagination". 4th Annual International ACSA Conference, the Visual Imagination: Across Boundaries: 14.
  83. ^ Wasserman 2020, p. 30.
  84. ^ a b c d Henderson, Andrea (2009). "Mastery and Melancholy in Suburbia". The Eighteenth Century. 50 (2–3): 221–244. doi:10.1353/ecy.0.0034. ISSN 1935-0201. S2CID 143018535.
  85. ^ Elkins, James; McGuire, Kristi; Burns, Maureen; Chester, Alica; Kuennen, Joel, eds. (2013). Theorizing Visual Studies: Writing Through the Discipline. Routledge. p. 113. ISBN 978-0-415-87793-0. OCLC 526106420.
  86. ^ Russell, Gillian (2015). "Sarah Sophia Banks's Private Theatricals: Ephemera, Sociability, and the Archiving of Fashionable Life". Eighteenth-Century Fiction. 27 (3): 535–555. doi:10.3138/ecf.27.3.535. ISSN 1911-0243. S2CID 162841068.
  87. ^ a b Phillpot, Clive (1995). "Flies in the Files: Ephemera in the Art Library". Art Documentation. 14 (1): 13–14. doi:10.1086/adx.14.1.27948707. ISSN 0730-7187. JSTOR 27948707. S2CID 193272024.
  88. ^ Calè, Luisa (2020). "Extra-Illustration and Ephemera: Altered Books and the Alternative Forms of the Fugitive Page". Eighteenth-Century Life. 44 (2): 111–135. doi:10.1215/00982601-8218624. ISSN 1086-3192. S2CID 192946334.
  89. ^ Russell, Gillian (2008). Truth in Virtue of Meaning: A Defence of the Analytic/Synthetic Distinction. Oxford Univ. Press. p. 145. doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199232192.001.0001. ISBN 978-0-19-923219-2.
  90. ^ Russell 2020, p. 56.
  91. ^ Russell 2020, p. 33, 44.
  92. ^ Eeckhout & Goldfarb 2012, p. 105.
  93. ^ Spiegelman, Art; Johnston, Phillip; Randich, Jean; Moore, Alice Rebecca (2003). "The Ephemeral Page Meets the Ephemeral Stage: Comix in Performance". Theater. 33 (1): 4–27. doi:10.1215/01610775-33-1-5. ISSN 1527-196X. S2CID 144410203.
  94. ^ Garret, Nicole (2017). "Recovering a Sentimental Past". The Eighteenth Century. 58 (4): 515–519. doi:10.1353/ecy.2017.0042. ISSN 1935-0201. S2CID 166046765.
  95. ^ Wasserman 2020, p. 33, 183.
  96. ^ a b c Iskin, Ruth E.; Salsbury, Britany, eds. (2019). Collecting Prints, Posters, and Ephemera. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 123. ISBN 9781501338519. Retrieved 2021-12-19.
  97. ^ Amert, Susan (1992). In a Shattered Mirror: The Later Poetry of Anna Akhmatova. Stanford Univ. Press. p. 29. ISBN 9780804765688.
  98. ^ Anderson, Linda (2013). Elizabeth Bishop: Lines of Connection. Edinburgh Univ. Press. p. 43. ISBN 978-0-7486-6575-4.
  99. ^ a b c Angello, Aaron (2015). "To Archive or Not to Archive: The Resistant Potential of Digital Poetry". Text Matters. 5 (1): 13–27. doi:10.1515/texmat-2015-0002. S2CID 64210339.
  100. ^ Frederick, Samuel (2021). The Redemption of Things: Collecting and Dispersal in German Realism and Modernism. Cornell University Press. p. 101. ISBN 978-1-5017-6158-4. OCLC 1245956071.
  101. ^ Haber, Benjamin (2019). "The digital ephemeral turn: queer theory, privacy, and the temporality of risk". Media, Culture & Society. 41 (8): 1069–1087. doi:10.1177/0163443719831600. ISSN 0163-4437. S2CID 150849886.
  102. ^ a b Russell, Gillian (2018). "Ephemeraphilia". Angelaki. 23 (1): 174–186. doi:10.1080/0969725x.2018.1435393. ISSN 0969-725X. S2CID 214613899.
  103. ^ Franzel, Sean (2017). "Kleist's Magazines: Archiving the Ephemeral in the Berliner Abendblättern". German Studies Review. 40 (3): 487–507. doi:10.1353/gsr.2017.0090. ISSN 2164-8646. S2CID 158590919.
  104. ^ Taylor, Joanna E.; Gregory, Ian N.; Donaldson, Christopher (2018). "Combining Close and Distant Reading: A Multiscalar Analysis of the English Lake District's Historical Soundscape". International Journal of Humanities and Arts Computing. 12 (2): 163–182. doi:10.3366/ijhac.2018.0220. ISSN 1753-8548. S2CID 134360215.
  105. ^ Anselmo-Sequeira, Diana (2013). "Apparitional Girlhood: Material Ephemerality and the Historiography of Female Adolescence in Early American Film" (PDF). Spectator. 33 (1): 25–35.
  106. ^ a b Lothian, Alexis (2013). "Archival anarchies: Online fandom, subcultural conservation, and the transformative work of digital ephemera". International Journal of Cultural Studies. 16 (6): 541–556. doi:10.1177/1367877912459132. ISSN 1367-8779. S2CID 145568162.
  107. ^ a b Ringel, Sharon; Davidson, Roei (2022). "Proactive ephemerality: How journalists use automated and manual tweet deletion to minimize risk and its consequences for social media as a public archive". New Media & Society. 24 (5): 1216–1233. doi:10.1177/1461444820972389. ISSN 1461-4448. S2CID 228863154.
  108. ^ Kim, Joohan (2001). "Phenomenology of Digital-Being". Human Studies. 24 (1–2): 87–111. doi:10.1023/a:1010763028785. ISSN 0163-8548. S2CID 145208972.
  109. ^ Witt, Steven W.; Rudasill, Lynne M. (2015). "World Sustainable Development Web Archive: Preserving and disseminating knowledge for sustainable growth". Archived from the original on 1 June 2022. Paper presented at: IFLA WLIC 2015 - Cape Town, South Africa in Session 90 - Preservation and Conservation with Information Technology.
  110. ^ Stein, Daniel; Thon, Jan-Noël, eds. (2015). From Comic Strips to Graphic Novels: Contributions to the Theory and History of Graphic Narrative. De Gruyter. p. 310. ISBN 978-3-11-042766-0.
  111. ^ Anghelescu, Hermina G. B. (2001). "A Bit of History in the Library Attic". Collection Management. 25 (4): 61–75. doi:10.1300/j105v25n04_07. ISSN 0146-2679. S2CID 60723329.
  112. ^ Roylance, Dale (1976). "Graphie Americana: The E. Lawrence Sampter Collection of Printed Ephemera". The Yale Univ. Library Gazette. 51 (2): 104–114. ISSN 0044-0175. JSTOR 40858619.
  113. ^ Dezeuze, Anna (2017). Almost Nothing: Observations on precarious practices in contemporary art. Manchester Univ. Press. p. 4. doi:10.7228/manchester/9780719088575.001.0001. ISBN 978-0-7190-8857-5.
  114. ^ Wisniewski, Timothy (2007). "Framers of the Kept: Against the Grain Appraisal of Ephemeral Moving Images". The Moving Image. 7 (2): 1–24. doi:10.1353/mov.2008.0002. ISSN 1542-4235. S2CID 194031057.
  115. ^ a b Razinsky, Liran (2015). "On Time, Transience and Literary Creation: Freud and Rilke a Century Ago". Forum for Modern Language Studies. 51 (4): 464–479. doi:10.1093/fmls/cqv056. ISSN 0015-8518.
  116. ^ Gallagher, Catherine (2000). "Formalism and Time". Modern Language Quarterly. 61 (1): 229–251. doi:10.1215/00267929-61-1-229. ISSN 1527-1943. S2CID 161169531.
  117. ^ Kirshenblatt-Gimblett, Barbara (1998). Destination Culture: Tourism, Museums, and Heritage. University of California Press. p. 30. ISBN 9780520204676. The ephemeral encompasses all forms of behavior – everyday activities, story-telling, ritual, dance, speech, performance of all kinds.
  118. ^ Becker, Becky (2012). "Prosceniums and Screens: Audience Embodiment into the Digital Age". Theatre Symposium. 20 (1): 30–38. doi:10.1353/tsy.2012.0001. ISSN 2166-9937. S2CID 191318485.
  119. ^ Rickman, H. P. (1959). "Poetry and the Ephemeral: Rilke's and Eliot's Conceptions of the Poet's Task". German Life and Letters. 12 (3): 174–185. doi:10.1111/j.1468-0483.1959.tb00564.x.
  120. ^ Sapino, Roberta (2021). "Ephemeral identities, blurred geographies, and social media in twenty-first-century French fiction: a reading of Licorne by Nora Sandor and Un amour d'espion by Clément Bénech". Neohelicon. 48 (1): 95–111. doi:10.1007/s11059-021-00590-1. ISSN 0324-4652. S2CID 235448233.
  121. ^ Russell 2020, p. 31, 33, 40.
  122. ^ Andrews, Martin J. (2006). "The stuff of everyday life: a brief introduction to the history and definition of printed ephemera". Art Libraries Journal. 31 (4): 5–8. doi:10.1017/S030747220001467X. ISSN 0307-4722. S2CID 190490100.
  123. ^ a b Park, Sora (2018). "FOMO, Ephemerality, and Online Social Interactions among Young People". East Asian Science, Technology and Society. 12 (4): 439–458. doi:10.1215/18752160-7218675. ISSN 1875-2152. S2CID 158239655.
  124. ^ Xu, Bin; Chang, Pamara; Welker, Christopher L.; Bazarova, Natalya N.; Cosley, Dan (2016-02-27). "Automatic Archiving versus Default Deletion". Proceedings of the 19th ACM Conference on Computer-Supported Cooperative Work & Social Computing. Vol. 2016. ACM. pp. 1662–1675. doi:10.1145/2818048.2819948. ISBN 978-1-4503-3592-8. PMC 6169781. PMID 30294721.
  125. ^ Long, Paul (2009). "'Ephemeral work': Louis MacNeice and the Moment of 'Pure Radio'". Key Words: A Journal of Cultural Materialism (7): 73–91. ISSN 1369-9725. JSTOR 26920256.
  126. ^ Oard, Douglas W. (2004). "Transforming access to the spoken word" (PDF). Proc. International Symposium on Large-scale Knowledge Resources: 57–59.
  127. ^ a b Hilmes, Michele (2013). "On a Screen Near You: The New Soundwork Industry". Cinema Journal. 52 (3): 177–182. doi:10.1353/cj.2013.0021. ISSN 2578-4919. S2CID 143792011.
  128. ^ a b Russell 2020, p. 254.
  129. ^ Wasserman 2020, p. 67.
  130. ^ London, Justin (2013-02-04). "Ephemeral Media, Ephemeral Works, and Sonny Boy Williamson's "Little Village"". The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism. 71 (1): 45–53. doi:10.1111/j.1540-6245.2012.01540.x. ISSN 0021-8529.
  131. ^ Bauer, Dominique; Murgia, Camilla, eds. (2021). Ephemeral Spectacles, Exhibition Spaces and Museums. Amsterdam University Press. p. 76. doi:10.1017/9789048542932. ISBN 978-90-485-4293-2. S2CID 241718872.
  132. ^ Slania, Heather (2013). "Online Art Ephemera: Web Archiving at the National Museum of Women in the Arts". Art Documentation. 32 (1): 112–126. doi:10.1086/669993. ISSN 0730-7187. S2CID 58248647.
  133. ^ a b Grainge 2011, p. 8.
  134. ^ Grainge 2011, p. 10.
  135. ^ Christie, Ian (2009). "Moving-Picture Media and Modernity: Taking Intermediate and Ephemeral Forms Seriously". Comparative Critical Studies. 6 (3): 299–318. doi:10.3366/E1744185409000809. ISSN 1744-1854.
  136. ^ Resnick, Elana (2018). "Durable Remains: Glass Reuse, Material Citizenship and Precarity in EU-era Bulgaria". Journal of Contemporary Archaeology. 5 (1): 103–115. doi:10.1558/jca.33425. ISSN 2051-3437. S2CID 158671551.
  137. ^ Liang, Samuel Y. (2007). "Ephemeral Households, Marvelous Things: Business, Gender, and Material Culture in "Flowers of Shanghai"". Modern China. 33 (3): 377–418. doi:10.1177/0097700407301549. ISSN 0097-7004. JSTOR 20062676. S2CID 145282629.
  138. ^ Waldemer, Thomas P. (2006). "Rubem Fonseca's Cold Case: the Ephemeral and the Historical in Agosto". Romance Notes. 47 (1): 33–39. ISSN 0035-7995. JSTOR 90011876.
  139. ^ Corradi, Massimo (2016). "A short history of the rainbow". Lettera Matematica. 4 (1): 49–57. doi:10.1007/s40329-016-0127-3. hdl:11567/833542. ISSN 2281-6917. S2CID 192901932.
  140. ^ Dipasquale, Theresa M. (2020). "Prosody, Poetics, and Mutability in Donne's "Spring" ("Love's Growth") and Shakespeare's Sonnets 115 and 116". Modern Philology. 117 (4): 470–496. doi:10.1086/708347. ISSN 0026-8232. S2CID 219020431.
  141. ^ Wasserman 2020, p. 24.
  142. ^ Eeckhout & Goldfarb 2012, p. 117.
  143. ^ Heine 2020, p. 170.
  144. ^ Richter, Isabel (2014). "Dreams in Cultural History: Dream Narratives and the History of Subjectivity". Cultural History. 3 (2): 126–147. doi:10.3366/cult.2014.0067. ISSN 2045-290X.
  145. ^ Lasine, Stuart (2019). Jonah and the Human Condition : Life and Death in Yahweh's World. Bloomsbury. p. 3. ISBN 978-0-567-68324-3. OCLC 1111954968.
  146. ^ Heine 2020, p. 121, 143, 144.
  147. ^ Harris, Michael (2010). "Printed Ephemera". In Suarez, Michael F.; Woudhuysen, H.R. (eds.). The Oxford companion to the book. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-957014-0. OCLC 502389441.
  148. ^ a b D'Amato, Alison (2021). "Movement as Matter: A Practice-Based Inquiry into the Substance of Dancing". Dance Research Journal. 53 (3): 69–86. doi:10.1017/S0149767721000346. ISSN 0149-7677. S2CID 246612552.
  149. ^ a b c Windon, Katrina (2012). "The Right to Decay with Dignity: Documentation and the Negotiation between an Artist's Sanction and the Cultural Interest". Art Documentation: Journal of the Art Libraries Society of North America. 31 (2): 142–157. doi:10.1086/668108. ISSN 0730-7187. S2CID 191614867.
  150. ^ Russell 2020, p. 33.
  151. ^ Huang, Nicole (2013). "Listening to films: Politics of the auditory in 1970s China". Journal of Chinese Cinemas. 7 (3): 187–206. doi:10.1386/jcc.7.3.187_1. ISSN 1750-8061. S2CID 194082843.
  152. ^ Clarke, Paul; Warren, Julian (2009). "Ephemera: Between Archival Objects and Events". Journal of the Society of Archivists. 30 (1): 45–66. doi:10.1080/00379810903264617. ISSN 0037-9816. S2CID 109010637.
  153. ^ Russell, Edmund; Kane, Jennifer (2008). "The Missing Link: Assessing the Reliability of Internet Citations in History Journals". Technology and Culture. 49 (2): 420–429. doi:10.1353/tech.0.0028. hdl:1808/13144. ISSN 1097-3729. S2CID 111270449.
  154. ^ Heine 2020, p. 144.
  155. ^ Diaz Ruiz, Carlos A.; Penaloza, Lisa; Holmqvist, Jonas (2020-03-07). "Assembling tribes: An assemblage thinking approach to the dynamics of ephemerality within consumer tribes". European Journal of Marketing. 54 (5): 999–1024. doi:10.1108/EJM-08-2018-0565. ISSN 0309-0566. S2CID 216399732.
  156. ^ Rosenberg, Douglas (2012). Screendance: Inscribing the Ephemeral Image. Oxford University Press. p. 25. doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199772612.003.0001. ISBN 978-0-19-977261-2.
  157. ^ Wasserman 2020, p. 45.
  158. ^ Newman, Eric H. (2015). "Ephemeral Utopias: Queer Cruising, Literary Form, and Diasporic Imagination in Claude McKay's "Home to Harlem" and "Banjo"". Callaloo. 38 (1): 167–185. doi:10.1353/cal.2015.0017. ISSN 0161-2492. JSTOR 24265107. S2CID 161746319.
  159. ^ Davis, Tracy C., ed. (2008). The Cambridge Companion to Performance Studies. Cambridge Companions to Literature. Cambridge University Press. p. 92. doi:10.1017/CCOL9780521874014. ISBN 978-0-521-87401-4.
  160. ^ Ault, Julie, ed. (2002). Alternative Art New York, 1965-1985. Drawing Center, University of Minnesota Press. p. 11. ISBN 0-8166-3793-8. OCLC 50253087.
  161. ^ Stone, Richard (2005). Fragments of the everyday: a book of Australian ephemera. National Library of Australia. p. 5. ISBN 978-0-642-27601-8.
  162. ^ Wasserman 2020, p. 23.
  163. ^ Wasserman 2020, p. 74, 77.
  164. ^ Chang, Ku-Ming (2017). ""Ceaseless Generation": Republican China's Rediscovery and Expansion of Domestic Vitalism". Asia Major. 30 (2): 101–131. ISSN 0004-4482. JSTOR 26571402.
  165. ^ Cvetkovich, Ann (2003). An Archive of Feelings. Duke University Press. p. 316. ISBN 978-0-8223-8443-4. OCLC 1139770505.
  166. ^ Muñoz, José Esteban (1996-01-01). "Ephemera as Evidence: Introductory Notes to Queer Acts". Women & Performance. 8 (2): 5–16. doi:10.1080/07407709608571228. ISSN 0740-770X.
  167. ^ Klinger, Max (1889). "On Death, Part I". Cleveland Museum of Art. Retrieved 12 November 2021.
  168. ^ Sandbacka, Kasimir (2015). ""All That Endures Turns to Dust": The Melancholy Retrospection of Modern Utopias in Kreisland by Rosa Liksom". Scandinavian Studies. 87 (2): 189–213. doi:10.1353/scd.2015.0017. ISSN 2163-8195. S2CID 162633405.
  169. ^ Tomii, Reiko (2005). ""Art Outside the Box" in 1960s Japan: An Introduction and Commentary". Review of Japanese Culture and Society. 17: 1–11. ISSN 0913-4700. JSTOR 42801108.
  170. ^ Wasserman 2020, p. 27.
  171. ^ Rojek, Chris (1995). Decentring Leisure: Rethinking Leisure Theory. SAGE Publications. p. 7. ISBN 9780803988132.
  172. ^ Ferreri, Mara (2021). The Permanence of Temporary Urbanism: Normalising Precarity in Austerity London. Amsterdam University Press. p. 154. ISBN 978-90-485-3582-8.
  173. ^ Janz, Bruce B., ed. (2017). Place, Space and Hermeneutics. Springer. p. 128. ISBN 978-3-319-52214-2. OCLC 980874927.
  174. ^ Karandinou, Anastasia (2016). No Matter: Theories and Practices of the Ephemeral in Architecture. Routledge. p. i. ISBN 978-1-138-26722-0. OCLC 975872838.
  175. ^ Wood, Andrew (2012). "Regionalization and the Construction of Ephemeral Co-Location". Rhetoric Society Quarterly. 42 (3): 289–296. doi:10.1080/02773945.2012.682847. ISSN 0277-3945. JSTOR 41722436. S2CID 145050355.

Further reading

edit