Declarations of Dependence


Book Description

Critique after modern monetary theory -- Transcending the aesthetic -- Declarations of dependence -- Medium congruentissimum -- Allegories of the aesthetic -- Becoming second nature




Selected Declarations of Dependence


Book Description

First published in 1977, Selected Declarations of Dependence has, like all the books by Harry Mathews, grown in reputation over the years of its unavailability. Sun and Moon Press now returns this remarkable text to print with a new introduction and the original Alex Katz illustrations. Selected Declarations of Dependence is based on a set of forty-six familiar proverbs, used and abused in various ways. The proverbs provide the entire vocabulary of the opening story, "Their Words, For You". In the section called "Perverbs and Paraphrases", Mathews explores the narrative implications of the crossed proverb or "perverb", in which two regular proverbs are mixed ("A rolling stone leads to Rome".). The remaining uses of proverbs and perverbs and the "Sorites" - which bows to Lewis Carroll's demonstration of the form - all produce an hilarious text of familiar quotations gone amuck and reveal Mathews' involvement with the Oulipo.




Declarations of Dependence


Book Description

Declarations of Dependence rethinks the historical relationship between money and aesthetics in an effort to make critical theory newly answerable to politics. Scott Ferguson regrounds critical theory in the alternative conception of money articulated by the contemporary heterodox school of political economy known as Modern Monetary Theory. Applying the insights of this theory, Ferguson contends that money, rather than representing a private, finite, and alienating technology, is instead a public and fundamentally unlimited medium that harbors still-unrealized powers for inclusion, cultivation, and care. Ferguson calls Modern Monetary Theory's capacious ontology of money the "unheard-of center" of modern life. Here he installs this unheard-of center at the heart of critique to inaugurate a new critical theory that aims to actualize money's curative potential in a sensuous here-and-now. Declarations of Dependence reimagines the relation between money and aesthetics in a manner that points beyond neoliberal privation and violence and, by doing so, lends critical theory fresh relevance and force.




Declarations of Dependence


Book Description

In this highly original study, Gregory Downs argues that the most American of wars, the Civil War, created a seemingly un-American popular politics, rooted not in independence but in voluntary claims of dependence. Through an examination of the pleas and







A Declaration of Dependence


Book Description

Declaration of Dependence is a gift and ministry book containing inspirational images on each page with declarations of faith meant to inspire young and old to stand firmly in the Word of God. This book grew out of one couples definitive stand for God in their familys battle against popular culture. They write, We believe that lives lived according to Gods plan and devoted to His purpose though not easy will be richly blessed. We believe that God is unerringly faithful in keeping his promises and that true and ultimate joy, peace, success and satisfaction can only be achieved through Him. We pray that each of our childrens lives will be meaningful and rewarding in ways that lead for themselves and others to eternal life. To that end we pledge our marriage and our lives










Declaration of Dependence


Book Description

It could be said that there is no dependence that is not total. You cannot depend on something by half measures. It could also be said that dependence has nothing to do with us but everything to do with who it is focused on. Church, it's time we reckoned with our Source. Make no mistake: what's required here and now isn't a mere declaration but a demonstration of what we believe because faith without works is dead. The gospel is preached with words but proved with lives. Maybe we have too many preachers and not enough practitioners. Christopher Paul White shares these and other insights purchased at great cost from the vaults of life experience. Church hurt, family hurt, world hurt, you name it; the true test is holding fast to Jesus Christ and turning loose of all bitterness, regret, shame, and unmet expectation. Walking with Jesus is an adventure, and it's often not what we thought it was going to be. It is infinitely more awesome and terrible than we could ever imagine. That's as it should be, for there can be no going back from here.