Book Description
A sophisticated new view of power as a network of social boundaries.
Author : Clarissa Rile Hayward
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Page : 228 pages
File Size : 29,40 MB
Release : 2000-09-14
Category : Political Science
ISBN : 9780521785648
A sophisticated new view of power as a network of social boundaries.
Author : Charles Cordier
Publisher :
Page : 264 pages
File Size : 36,95 MB
Release : 2004-10
Category : Art
ISBN :
Under the Second Empire in France, Cordier received several assignments in North Africa and there he completed scientific busts that were just as much works of art. His busts in silver or gilt bronze, onyx and coloured marble are delicate gems, reflecting Cordier's interest in other civilizations, most notably African. The Musee d'Orsay in Paris has organized an unprecedented international exhibition of Cordier's work, highlighting seventy-five sculptures and approximately forty ethnographic photographs. Filled with several texts on his life and work compiled by the exhibition's organizers, this book was created and based on the research by Jeanine Durand-Revillon for the Ecole du Louvre in 1980.
Author : Daniel Castro
Publisher : Duke University Press
Page : 247 pages
File Size : 25,13 MB
Release : 2007-01-24
Category : History
ISBN : 0822389592
The Spanish cleric Bartolomé de Las Casas is a key figure in the history of Spain’s conquest of the Americas. Las Casas condemned the torture and murder of natives by the conquistadores in reports to the Spanish royal court and in tracts such as A Short Account of the Destruction of the Indies (1552). For his unrelenting denunciation of the colonialists’ atrocities, Las Casas has been revered as a noble protector of the Indians and as a pioneering anti-imperialist. He has become a larger-than-life figure invoked by generations of anticolonialists in Europe and Latin America. Separating historical reality from myth, Daniel Castro provides a nuanced, revisionist assessment of the friar’s career, writings, and political activities. Castro argues that Las Casas was very much an imperialist. Intent on converting the Indians to Christianity, the religion of the colonizers, Las Casas simply offered the natives another face of empire: a paternalistic, ecclesiastical imperialism. Castro contends that while the friar was a skilled political manipulator, influential at what was arguably the world’s most powerful sixteenth-century imperial court, his advocacy on behalf of the natives had little impact on their lives. Analyzing Las Casas’s extensive writings, Castro points out that in his many years in the Americas, Las Casas spent very little time among the indigenous people he professed to love, and he made virtually no effort to learn their languages. He saw himself as an emissary from a superior culture with a divine mandate to impose a set of ideas and beliefs on the colonized. He differed from his compatriots primarily in his antipathy to violence as the means for achieving conversion.
Author : Brent J Steele
Publisher : University of Michigan Press
Page : 247 pages
File Size : 42,76 MB
Release : 2012-03-19
Category : Political Science
ISBN : 0472034960
How do nations create and maintain images of power?
Author : Henry Clark BARLOW
Publisher :
Page : 102 pages
File Size : 24,91 MB
Release : 1870
Category :
ISBN :
Author : Aurin Squire
Publisher : Original Works Publishing
Page : 101 pages
File Size : 12,64 MB
Release : 2019-11-22
Category : Drama
ISBN : 1630921254
Synopsis: Set among the swamps and canals of rural Florida, Defacing Michael Jackson follows a motley group of African-American teenagers who create their own Michael Jackson fan club in 1984. But when a white family moves to the neighborhood, their son tries to join the club, all the rules of the community are challenged, and everyone's relationships starts to crumble. Defacing Michael Jackson is a dark comedy about the loss of innocence, hero worship, and American identity. Cast Size: 1 Female, 3 Males
Author : Vladimir Biti
Publisher : Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG
Page : 391 pages
File Size : 12,60 MB
Release : 2016-01-15
Category : Social Science
ISBN : 3110457067
Focused on the recently hotly debated topic at the crossroads of various human and social sciences, this book investigates the emergence of the cosmopolitan idea of literature and its impact on the reconfiguration of the European and non-European political spaces. The birthplace of this idea is its designers’ traumatic experience as induced by the disconcerting condition of their abode.The thesis is that the eighteenth and nineteenth century’s cosmopolitan projects that grow out of such deep frustrations trace the twentieth century’s global democracy. This hidden origin of cosmopolitan projects dismantles the usual European representation of modernization as universal progress as myopic. Rather than being a generous action of prominent subjects such as Voltaire, Kant, and Goethe, or Bakhtin, Derrida and Deleuze, cosmopolitanism is an enforced reaction of the instances dispossessed by injury that search for the ways of healing it. Yet as soon as their remedy establishes itself as the ground for universal reconciliation, it risks suppressing other’s trauma, i.e. turns from politics into a police. Articulating the author’s position in the recent debates on the structure of democracy, the epilogue suggests an alternative strategy.
Author : Susan Briante
Publisher :
Page : 0 pages
File Size : 12,91 MB
Release : 2020
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 9781934819906
Frames, Erasures, Graffiti --Writing in Relation --Guidestars, Tangles, Hauntologies.
Author : Ajmer-Merwara (India)
Publisher :
Page : 130 pages
File Size : 46,70 MB
Release : 1918
Category : Ajmer-Merwara (India)
ISBN :
Author : Claude Lévi-Strauss
Publisher : Harvard University Press
Page : 101 pages
File Size : 46,67 MB
Release : 2013-03-05
Category : Social Science
ISBN : 0674075188
Gathering for the first time all of Claude Lévi-Strauss’s writings on Japanese civilization, The Other Face of the Moon forms a sustained meditation into the French anthropologist’s dictum that to understand one’s own culture, one must regard it from the point of view of another. Exposure to Japanese art was influential in Lévi-Strauss’s early intellectual growth, and between 1977 and 1988 he visited the country five times. The essays, lectures, and interviews of this volume, written between 1979 and 2001, are the product of these journeys. They investigate an astonishing range of subjects—among them Japan’s founding myths, Noh and Kabuki theater, the distinctiveness of the Japanese musical scale, the artisanship of Jomon pottery, and the relationship between Japanese graphic arts and cuisine. For Lévi-Strauss, Japan occupied a unique place among world cultures. Molded in the ancient past by Chinese influences, it had more recently incorporated much from Europe and the United States. But the substance of these borrowings was so carefully assimilated that Japanese culture never lost its specificity. As though viewed from the hidden side of the moon, Asia, Europe, and America all find, in Japan, images of themselves profoundly transformed. As in Lévi-Strauss’s classic ethnography Tristes Tropiques, this new English translation presents the voice of one of France’s most public intellectuals at its most personal.