The WholeWorld is Texting


Book Description

The authors of this volume address multiple questions involving the nature of youth protest in the twenty-first century. Through their use of a case study approach, they comment upon the ways in which youth protest has been influenced by the electronic and social media and evaluate the effectiveness of protest activities, many of which were framed in reaction to neo-liberalism and state authoritarianism. A number of the authors further comment upon the utility of employing social movement theory to analyze the nature and character of protest actions, while others situate such events within specific political, social and cultural contexts. The case studies focus upon protest activities in Bahrain, Turkey, Iran, Cambodia, South Africa, China, Russia, Chile, Spain, and the U.S., and together, they offer a comparative analysis of an important global phenomenon. In so doing, the authors further address issues involving the changing nature of globalized protest participation, its immediate and long-term consequences, and the ways in which protests have encouraged a re-evaluation of the nature of inequality, as constructed within educational, social, and political spheres.




The Whole World Is Watching


Book Description

New preface for this classic of media studies. One of the founders of SDS describes the response of the various news organizations and arrives at the way the New Left came to be characterized.




Reconceiving Texts as Speech Acts


Book Description

Reconceiving Texts as Speech Acts attempts a reading of the Christological confessions and ethical exhortations in I John from the perspective of speech act theory. Speech act theory is explored with particular reference to J.L. Austin, Donald Evans, and J. Derrida. At the heart of the approach is the insight of the rhetorical character of historiography and the view that language in written discourse is a form of action and power. Discourse in I John becomes responsible for creating reality and not merely reflecting it. In effect the Christological and ethical texts are effective acts which change situations in the public domain in terms of confession and conduct. A tentative methodological proposal is developed and then in succeeding chapters applied to a series of key passages in I John.




A Bunch of Everlastings


Book Description







The Text of the New Testament of Iesus Christ, Translated Out of the Vulgar Latine by the Papists of the Traiterous Seminarie at Rhemes. With Arguments of Bookes, Chapters and Annotations, Pretending to Discouer the Corruptions of Diuers Translations, and to Cleare the Controuersies of These Dayes. Whereunto is Added the Translation Out of the Original Greeke, Commonly Used in the Church of England. With a Confutation of All Such Arguments, Glosses, and Annotations, as Conteine Manifest Impietie, of Heresie, Treason, and Slander Against the Catholic Church of God and the True Teachers Thereof, Or the Translations Vsed in the Church of England Both by Auctoritie of the Holy Scriptures, and by the Testimonie of the Ancient Fathers. By William Fulke


Book Description