|
|
Books > Reference & Interdisciplinary > Interdisciplinary studies > Cultural studies
For an element so firmly fixed in American culture, the frontier
myth is surprisingly flexible. How else to explain its having taken
two such different guises in the twentieth century - the
progressive, forward-looking politics of Rough Rider president
Teddy Roosevelt and the conservative, old-fashioned character and
Cold War politics of Ronald Reagan? This is the conundrum at the
heart of Cowboy Presidents, which explores the deployment and
consequent transformation of the frontier myth by four U.S.
presidents: Theodore Roosevelt, Lyndon B. Johnson, Ronald Reagan,
and George W. Bush. Behind the shape-shifting of this myth,
historian David A. Smith finds major events in American and world
history that have made various aspects of the 'Old West' frontier
more relevant, and more useful, for promoting radically different
political ideologies and agendas. And these divergent adaptations
of frontier symbolism have altered the frontier myth. Theodore
Roosevelt, with his vigorous pursuit of an activist federal
government, helped establish a version of the frontier myth that
today would be considered liberal. But then, Smith shows, a series
of events from the Lyndon Johnson through Jimmy Carter presidencies
- including Vietnam, race riots, and stagflation - seemed to give
the lie to the progressive frontier myth. In the wake of these
crises, Smith's analysis reveals, the entire structure and popular
representation of frontier symbols and images in American politics
shifted dramatically from left to right, and from liberal to
conservative, with profound implications for the history of
American thought and presidential politics. The now popular idea
that 'frontier American' leaders and politicians are naturally
Republicans with conservative ideals flows directly from the Reagan
era. Cowboy Presidents gives us a new, clarifying perspective on
how Americans shape and understand their national identity and
sense of purpose; at the same time, reflecting on the essential
mutability of a quintessentially national myth, the book suggests
that the next iteration of the frontier myth may well be on the
horizon.
Food Rebellions! takes a deep look at the world food crisis and its
impact on the global South and underserved communities in the
industrial North. Eric Holt-Gimenez and Raj Patel unpack the
planet's environmentally and economically vulnerable food systems
to reveal the root causes of the crisis. They shows us how the
steady erosion of local and national control over their food
systems has made nations dependent on a volatile global market and
subject to the short-term interests of a handful of transnational
agri-food monopolies. Food Rebellions! is a powerful handbook for
those seeking to understand the causes and potential solutions to
the current food crisis now affecting nearly half of the world's
people. Why are food riots occurring around the world in a time of
record harvests? What are the real impacts of agrofuels and
genetically engineered crops? Food Rebellions! suggests that to
solve the food crisis, we must change the global food system-from
the bottom up and from the top down. The book frames the current
food crisis as unique opportunity to develop productive local food
systems that are engines for sustainable economic development.
Hunger and poverty, the authors insist, can be eliminated by
democratising food systems and respecting people's right to safe,
nutritious and culturally appropriate food and to food-producing
resources-in short, by advancing food sovereignty.
 |
Machines
(Hardcover)
Abraham P. DeLeon; Series edited by Richard Diem, Jeff Passe
|
R2,551
Discovery Miles 25 510
|
Ships in 18 - 22 working days
|
|
|
This book is about machines: those that have been actualized,
fantastical imaginal machines, to those deployed as metaphorical
devices to describe complex social processes. Machines argues that
they transcend time and space to emerge through a variety of spaces
and places, times and histories and representations. They are such
an integral fabric of daily reality that their disappearance would
have immediate and dire consequences for the survival of humanity.
They are part and parcel to our contemporary social order. From
labor to social theory, art or consciousness, literature or
television, to the asylums of the 19th century, machines are a
central figure; an outgrowth of affective desire that seeks to
transcend organic limitations of bodies that whither, age and die.
Machines takes the reader on an intellectual, artistic, and
theoretical journey, weaving an interdisciplinary tale of their
emergence across social, cultural and artistic boundaries. With the
deep engagement of various texts, Machines offers the reader
moments of escape, alternative ways to envision technology for a
future yet to materialize. Machines rejects the notion that
technological innovations are indeed neutral, propelling us to
think differently about those "things" created under specific
economic or historical paradigms. Rethinking machines provides a
rupture to our current technocratic impetus, shining a critical
light on possible alternatives to our current reality. Let us sit
back and take a journey through Machines, holding mechanical parts
as guides to possible alternative futures.
Farmers markets are much more than places to buy produce. According
to advocates for sustainable food systems, they are also places to
"vote with your fork" for environmental protection, vibrant
communities, and strong local economies. Farmers markets have
become essential to the movement for food-system reform and are a
shining example of a growing green economy where consumers can shop
their way to social change.
"Black, White, and Green" brings new energy to this topic by
exploring dimensions of race and class as they relate to farmers
markets and the green economy. With a focus on two Bay Area
markets--one in the primarily white neighborhood of North Berkeley,
and the other in largely black West Oakland--Alison Hope Alkon
investigates the possibilities for social and environmental change
embodied by farmers markets and the green economy.
Drawing on ethnographic and historical sources, Alkon describes the
meanings that farmers market managers, vendors, and consumers
attribute to the buying and selling of local organic food, and the
ways that those meanings are raced and classed. She mobilizes this
research to understand how the green economy fosters visions of
social change that are compatible with economic growth while
marginalizing those that are not.
"Black, White, and Green" is one of the first books to carefully
theorize the green economy, to examine the racial dynamics of food
politics, and to approach issues of food access from an
environmental-justice perspective. In a practical sense, Alkon
offers an empathetic critique of a newly popular strategy for
social change, highlighting both its strengths and limitations.
In The Rhythm of Modernization, Raul Tormos analyses the pace at
which belief systems change across the developed world during the
modernization process. It is often assumed that value change
follows the slow rhythm of generational replacement. This book,
however, reports trends that contradict this assumption in the
field of values. Challenging Inglehart's modernization theory, the
transition from traditional to modern values happens much quicker
than predicted. Many "baby-boomers" who were church-going, morally
conservative materialists when they were young, become unchurched
and morally tolerant postmaterialists in their later years. Using
surveys from multiple countries over many years, and applying
cutting-edge statistical techniques, this book shows how citizens
quickly adapt their belief systems to new circumstances throughout
their lives.
Throughout time and in every culture, human beings have eaten
together. Commensality - eating and drinking at the same table - is
a fundamental social activity, which creates and cements
relationships. It also sets boundaries, including or excluding
people according to a set of criteria defined by the society.
Particular scholarly attention has been paid to banquets and
feasts, often hosted for religious, ritualistic or political
purposes, but few studies have considered everyday commensality.
Commensality: From Everyday Food to Feast offers an insight into
this social practice in all its forms, from the most basic and
mundane meals to the grandest occasions. Bringing together insights
from anthropologists, archaeologists and historians, this volume
offers a vast historical scope, ranging from the Late Neolithic
period (6th millennium BC), through the Middle Ages, to the present
day. The sixteen chapters include case studies from across the
world, including the USA, Bolivia, China, Southeast Asia, Iran,
Turkey, Portugal, Denmark and the UK. Connecting these diverse
analyses is an understanding of commensality's role as a social and
political tool, integral to the formation of personal and national
identities. From first experiences of commensality in the sharing
of food between a mother and child, to the inaugural dinner of the
American president, this collection of essays celebrates the
variety of human life and society.
Modern Conspiracy attempts to sketch a new conception of conspiracy
theory. Where many commentators have sought to characterize
conspiracy theory in terms of the collapse of objectivity and
Enlightenment reason, Fleming and Jane trace the important role of
conspiracy in the formation of the modern world: the scientific
revolution, social contract theory, political sovereignty,
religious paranoia and mass communication media. Rather than see in
conspiratorial thinking the imminent death of Enlightenment reason,
and a regression to a new Dark Age, Modern Conspiracy contends that
many characteristic features of conspiracies tap very deeply into
the history of the Enlightenment itself: among other things, its
vociferous critique of established authorities, and a conception of
political sovereignty fuelled by fear of counter-plots. Drawing out
the roots of modern conspiratorial thinking leads us to truths less
salacious and scandalous than the claims of conspiracy theorists
themselves yet ultimately far more salutary: about mass
communication; about individual and crowd psychology; and about our
conception of and relation to knowledge.Perhaps, ultimately, what
conspiracy theory affords us is a renewed opportunity to reflect on
our very relationship to the truth itself.
The 19th century witnessed an explosion of writing about
unproductivity, with the exploits of various idlers, loafers, and
"gentlemen of refinement" capturing the imagination o fa country
that was deeply ambivalent about its work ethic. Idle Threats
documents this American obsession with unproductivity and its
potentials, while offering an explanation of the profound
significance of idle practices for literary and cultural
production. While this fascination with unproductivity memorably
defined literary characters from Rip Van Winkle to Bartleby to
George Hurstwood, it also reverberated deeply through the entire
culture, both as a seductive ideal and as a potentially corrosive
threat to upright, industrious American men. Drawing on an
impressive array of archival material and multifaceted literary and
cultural sources, Idle Threats connects the question of
unproductivity to other discourses concerning manhood, the value of
art, the allure of the frontier, the usefulness of knowledge, the
meaning of individuality, and the experience of time, space, and
history. Andrew Lyndon Knighton offers a new way of thinking about
the largely unacknowledged "productivity of the unproductive,"
revealing the incalculable and sometimes surprising ways in which
American modernity transformed the relationship between subjects
and that which is most intimate to them: their own activity.
After a 35 year-long career on worldwide TV screens, Lieutenant
Columbo has become one of the most famous fictional detectives.
Lilian Mathieu shows that the Columbo series owes its success to
its implicit but formidable political dimension, as each episode is
structured as a class struggle between a rich, famous, cultured or
powerful criminal and an apparently humble and blunderer police
officer dressed in a crumpled raincoat and driving an antique car.
Highlighting the contentious context that gave birth to the series
in 1968, he shows that the sociology of culture offers intellectual
tools to understand how a TV detective story can be appreciated as
a joyful class revenge.
Once associated with astrology and occultist prophecy, the art of
interpreting personal character based on facial and other physical
features dates back to antiquity. About Face tells the intriguing
story of how physiognomics became particularly popular during the
Enlightenment, no longer as a mere parlor game but as an
empirically grounded discipline. The story expands to illuminate an
entire tradition within German culture, stretching from Goethe to
the rise of Nazism. In About Face, Richard T. Gray explores the
dialectical reversal - from the occult to the scientific realm -
that entered physiognomic thought in the late eighteenth century,
beginning with the positivistic writings of Swiss pastor Johann
Caspar Lavater. Originally claimed to promote understanding and
love, physiognomics devolved into a system aimed at valorizing a
specific set of physical, moral, and emotional traits and stamping
everything else as ""deviant."" This development not only
reinforced racial, national, and characterological prejudices but
also lent such beliefs a presumably scientific grounding. In the
period following World War I, physiognomics experienced yet another
unprecedented boom in popularity. Gray explains how physiognomics
had by then become a highly respected ""super-discipline"" that
embraced many prominent strands of German thought: the Romantic
philosophy of nature, the ""life philosophy"" propagated by Dilthey
and Nietzsche, the cultural pessimism of Schopenhauer, Husserl's
method of intuitive observation, Freudian psychoanalysis, and
early-twentieth-century eugenics and racial biology. A rich
exploration of German culture, About Face offers fresh insight into
the intellectual climate that allowed the dangerous thinking of
National Socialism to take hold.
A Cultural History of The Human Body presents an authoritative
survey from ancient times to the present. This set of six volumes
covers 2800 years of the human body as a physical, social,
spiritual and cultural object. Volume 1: A Cultural History of the
Human Body in Antiquity (1300 BCE - 500 CE) Edited by Daniel
Garrison, Northwestern University. Volume 2: A Cultural History of
the Human Body in The Medieval Age (500 - 1500) Edited by Linda
Kalof, Michigan State University Volume 3: A Cultural History of
the Human Body in the Renaissance (1400 - 1650) Edited by Linda
Kalof, Michigan State University and William Bynum, University
College London. Volume 4: A Cultural History of the Human Body in
the Enlightenment (1600 - 1800) Edited by Carole Reeves, Wellcome
Trust Centre for the History of Medicine, University College
London. Volume 5: A Cultural History of the Human Body in the Age
of Empire (1800 - 1920) Edited by Michael Sappol, National Library
of Medicine in Washington, DC, and Stephen P. Rice, Ramapo College
of New Jersey. Volume 6: A Cultural History of the Human Body in
the Modern Age (1900-21st Century) Edited by Ivan Crozier,
University of Edinburgh, and Chiara Beccalossi, University of
Queensland. Each volume discusses the same themes in its chapters:
1. Birth and Death 2. Health and Disease 3. Sex & Sexuality 4.
Medical Knowledge and Technology 5. Popular Beliefs 6. Beauty and
Concepts of the Ideal 7. Marked Bodies I: Gender, Race, Class, Age,
Disability and Disease 8. Marked Bodies II: the Bestial, the Divine
and the Natural 9. Cultural Representations of the Body 10. The
Self and Society This means readers can either have a broad
overview of a period by reading a volume or follow a theme through
history by reading the relevant chapter in each volume. Superbly
illustrated, the full six volume set combines to present the most
authoritative and comprehensive survey available on the human body
through history.
This book examines the rhetorical force of certain key words in the
discourses of Russian state, political thought, and literature. It
shows how terms for cultured conduct (kul'turnost'), political
affection (love, liubov', joy-radost' etc.), personhood
(lichnost'), truth (pravda) and geographical integrity (tsel'nost')
assumed almost sacral meaning. It considers how these terms took on
a life of their own, imposing the designs of the Russian state and
defining the hopes of educated society in the process. By exploring
the usage of these words in a wide range of texts, Richard Wortman
provides glimpses into the ideas and feelings of leading figures
and thinkers in Russian history, from Peter the Great to Alexander
Herzen and Nicholas Berdiaev, as well as writers like Mikhail
Lermontov, Ivan Turgenev, and Fedor Dostoevsky, giving a sense of
the intellectual and emotional universe they inhabited. The Power
of Language and Rhetoric in Russian Political History provides both
students and scholars with a specific focus through which to
approach Russian culture and history. This book is essential
reading for students of Russian government, thought, literature and
political action.
Contemporary philosophers frequently assume that Kant never
seriously engaged with Spinoza or Spinozism-certainly not before
the break of Der Pantheismusstreit, or within the Critique of Pure
Reason. Offering an alternative reading of key pre-critical texts
and to some of the Critique's most central chapters, Omri Boehm
challenges this common assumption. He argues that Kant not only is
committed to Spinozism in early essays such as "The One Possible
Basis" and "New Elucidation," but also takes up Spinozist
metaphysics as Transcendental Realism's most consistent form in the
Critique of Pure Reason. The success -- or failure -- of Kant's
critical projects must be evaluated in this light. Boehm here
examines The Antinomies alongside Spinoza's Substance Monism and
his theory of freedom. Similarly, he analyzes the refutation of the
Ontological Argument in parallel with Spinoza's Causa-sui. More
generally, Boehm places the Critique of Pure Reason's separation of
Thought from Being and Is from Ought in dialogue with the Ethics'
collapse of Being, Is and Ought into Thought.
 |
David Hume
(Hardcover)
Robert Case
|
R947
R811
Discovery Miles 8 110
Save R136 (14%)
|
Ships in 18 - 22 working days
|
|
|
Across Rampart Street from the French Quarter, the Faubourg Treme
neighborhood is arguably the most important location for African
American culture in New Orleans. Closely associated with
traditional jazz and "second line" parading, Treme is now the
setting for an eponymous television series created by David Simon
(best known for his work on The Wire). Michael Crutcher argues that
Treme's story is essentially spatial-a story of how neighborhood
boundaries are drawn and take on meaning and of how places within
neighborhoods are made and unmade by people and politics. Treme has
long been sealed off from more prominent parts of the city,
originally by the fortified walls that gave Rampart Street its
name, and so has become a refuge for less powerful New Orleanians.
This notion of Treme as a safe haven-the flipside of its reputation
as a "neglected" place-has been essential to its role as a cultural
incubator, Crutcher argues, from the antebellum slave dances in
Congo Square to jazz pickup sessions at Joe's Cozy Corner. Treme
takes up a wide range of issues in urban life, including highway
construction, gentrification, and the role of public architecture
in sustaining collective memory. Equally sensitive both to
black-white relations and to differences within the African
American community, it is a vivid evocation of one of America's
most distinctive places.
This non-technical introduction to modern European intellectual
history traces the evolution of ideas in Europe from the turn of
the 19th century to the modern day. Placing particular emphasis on
the huge technological and scientific change that has taken place
over the last two centuries, David Galaty shows how intellectual
life has been driven by the conditions and problems posed by this
world of technology. In everything from theories of beauty to
studies in metaphysics, the technologically-based modern world has
stimulated a host of competing theories and intellectual systems,
often built around the opposing notions of 'the power of the
individual' versus collectivist ideals like community, nation,
tradition and transcendent experience. In an accessible,
jargon-free style, Modern European Intellectual History unpicks
these debates and historically analyses how thought has developed
in Europe since the time of the French Revolution. Among other
topics, the book explores: * The Kantian Revolution * Feminism and
the Suffrage Movement * Socialism and Marxism * Nationalism *
Structuralism * Quantum theory * Developments in the Arts *
Postmodernism * Big Data and the Cyber Century Highly illustrated
with 80 images and 10 tables, and further supported by an online
Instructor's Guide, this is the most important student resource on
modern European intellectual history available today.
Gender and Pop Culture provides a foundation for the study of
gender, pop culture, and media. This newly updated edition is
comprehensive and interdisciplinary, providing both text-book style
introductory and concluding chapters written by the editor. The
text includes eight original contributor chapters on key topics and
written in a variety of writing styles, discussion questions,
additional resources, and more. Coverage includes: - Foundations
for studying gender and pop culture (history, theory, methods, key
concepts). - Contributor chapters on social media, technology,
advertising, music, television, film, and sports. - Ideas for
activism and putting this book to use beyond the classroom. -
Pedagogical features. - Suggestions for further readings on topics
covered and international studies of gender and pop culture. Gender
and Pop Culture was designed with students in mind, to promote
reflection and lively discussion. With features found in both
textbooks and anthologies, this sleek book can serve as a primary
or supplemental reading in courses across disciplines.
From as early as the 1600s, Dutch scholars and scholarship have
displayed a keen interest in the studies of the Islamic world. Over
the centuries, they have collected a wealth of source texts in
various languages, Turkish texts being prominent among them. The
present catalogue is the fourth and final volume in a series that
covers the Turkish manuscripts preserved in public libraries and
museums in the Netherlands. The volume gives a detailed description
of Turkish manuscripts in minor Dutch collections, found in
libraries and museums in Amsterdam, Groningen, The Hague, Leiden,
Rotterdam and Utrecht, which hitherto have received little or no
attention.
This stimulating and timely collection examines the Taino revival
movement, a grassroots conglomeration of Puerto Ricans and other
Latinos who promote or have adopted the culture and pedigree of the
pre-Columbian Taino Indian population of Puerto Rico and the
western Caribbean. The Tainos became a symbol of Puerto Rican
identity in the 19th century, when local governments and
intellectuals began to appropriate the Tainos for the conception of
a socially and racially balanced Puerto Rican society. Modern
critics now claim that the Taino heritage has been canonized
through state-sponsored institutions, such as festivals, museums,
and textbooks, at the expense of blacks. In the past, officials,
alarmed at the black majorities on other the Caribbean Islands,
tried to ""whiten"" Puerto Rican society by calling all people of
color Tainos. Others complain that the Taino revival lost its
fervor, evolving from an anti-colonialist movement to a mere
fashionable trend.
Interest in food and drink as an academic discipline has been
growing significantly in recent years. This sourcebook is a unique
asset to many courses on food as it offers a thematic approach to
eating and drinking in antiquity. For classics courses focusing on
ancient social history to introductory courses on the history of
food and drink, as well as those offerings with a strong
sociological or anthropological approach this volume provides an
unparalleled compilation of essential source material. The
chronological scope of the excerpts extends from Homer in the
Eighth Century BCE to the Roman emperor Constantine in the Fourth
Century CE. Each thematic chapter consists of an introduction along
with a bibliography of suggested readings. Translated excerpts are
then presented accompanied by an explanatory background paragraph
identifying the author and context of each passage. Most of the
evidence is literary, but additional sources - inscriptional, legal
and religious - are also included.
|
You may like...
Law@Work
A. Van Niekerk, N. Smit
Paperback
R1,367
R1,195
Discovery Miles 11 950
|