Book Description
Born in Tijuana to a Mexican father and an Anglo mother, Urrea moved to San Diego at age three. In this memoir of his childhood, Urrea describes his experiences growing up in the barrio and his search for cultural identity.
Author : Luis Alberto Urrea
Publisher : University of Arizona Press
Page : 204 pages
File Size : 21,80 MB
Release : 1998
Category : Poetry
ISBN : 9780816522705
Born in Tijuana to a Mexican father and an Anglo mother, Urrea moved to San Diego at age three. In this memoir of his childhood, Urrea describes his experiences growing up in the barrio and his search for cultural identity.
Author : Paul Breslin
Publisher : University of Chicago Press
Page : 345 pages
File Size : 30,73 MB
Release : 2009-02-15
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 0226074285
Nobody's Nation offers an illuminating look at the St. Lucian, Nobel-Prize-winning writer, Derek Walcott, and grounds his work firmly in the context of West Indian history. Paul Breslin argues that Walcott's poems and plays are bound up with an effort to re-imagine West Indian society since its emergence from colonial rule, its ill-fated attempt at political unity, and its subsequent dispersal into tiny nation-states. According to Breslin, Walcott's work is centrally concerned with the West Indies' imputed absence from history and lack of cohesive national identity or cultural tradition. Walcott sees this lack not as impoverishment but as an open space for creation. In his poems and plays, West Indian history becomes a realm of necessity, something to be confronted, contested, and remade through literature. What is most vexed and inspired in Walcott's work can be traced to this quixotic struggle. Linking extensive archival research and new interviews with Walcott himself to detailed critical readings of major works, Nobody's Nation will take its place as the definitive study of the poet.
Author : Marc Lamont Hill
Publisher : Simon and Schuster
Page : 272 pages
File Size : 41,75 MB
Release : 2016-07-26
Category : Political Science
ISBN : 1501124943
An "analysis of deeper meaning behind the string of deaths of unarmed citizens like Michael Brown, Eric Garner, and Freddie Gray, providing ... [commentary] on the intersection of race and class in America today"--
Author : Ken Fischer
Publisher : University of MICHIGAN REGIONAL
Page : 217 pages
File Size : 41,5 MB
Release : 2020-07-20
Category : Biography & Autobiography
ISBN : 0472132024
Housed on the campus of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, the University Musical Society is one of the oldest performing arts presenters in the country. A past recipient of the National Medal of Arts, the nation’s highest public artistic honor, UMS connects audiences with wide-ranging performances in music, dance, and theater each season.Between 1987 and 2017, UMS was led by Ken Fischer, who over three decades pursued an ambitious campaign to expand and diversify the organization’s programming and audiences—initiatives inspired by Fischer’s overarching philosophy toward promoting the arts, “Everybody In, Nobody Out.” The approach not only deepened UMS’s engagement with the university and southeast Michigan communities, it led to exemplary partnerships with distinguished artists across the world. Under Fischer’s leadership, UMS hosted numerous breakthrough performances, including the Vienna Philharmonic’s final tour with Leonard Bernstein, appearances by then relatively unknown opera singer Cecilia Bartoli, a multiyear partnership with the Royal Shakespeare Company, and artists as diverse as Yo-Yo Ma, Jawole Willa Jo Zollar, Elizabeth Streb, and Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan. Though peppered with colorful anecdotes of how these successes came to be, this book is neither a history of UMS nor a memoir of Fischer’s significant accomplishments with the organization. Rather it is a reflection on the power of the performing arts to engage and enrich communities—not by handing down cultural enrichment from on high, but by meeting communities where they live and helping them preserve cultural heritage, incubate talent, and find ways to make community voices heard.
Author :
Publisher :
Page : 658 pages
File Size : 10,43 MB
Release : 1886
Category :
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Author : Michael J. Shapiro
Publisher : Psychology Press
Page : 282 pages
File Size : 13,14 MB
Release : 2004
Category : Art
ISBN : 9780415945325
Annotation Methods and Nationscritiques one of the primary deployments of twentieth-century social science: comparative politics whose major focus has been "nation-building" in the "Third World," often attempting to universalize and render self-evident its own practices. International relations theorists, unable to resist the "cognitive imperialism" of a state-centric social science, have allowed themselves to become colonized. Michael Shapiro seeks to bring recognition to forms of political expression-alternative modes of intelligibility for things, people, and spaces-that have existed on the margins of the nationhood practices of states and the complicit nation-sustaining conceits of social science
Author :
Publisher :
Page : 632 pages
File Size : 26,50 MB
Release : 2006
Category :
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Author : Richard Holt Hutton
Publisher :
Page : 516 pages
File Size : 21,68 MB
Release : 1858
Category : Books
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Publisher :
Page : 516 pages
File Size : 23,32 MB
Release : 1858
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Author : United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Military Affairs
Publisher :
Page : 32 pages
File Size : 40,40 MB
Release : 1916
Category : World War, 1914-1918
ISBN :