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Books > Humanities > History > World history > General
This issue offers a theoretical and methodological imagining of
what constitutes trans* before the advent of the terms that
scholars generally look to for the formation of modern conceptions
of gender, sex, and sexuality. What might we find if we look for
trans* before trans*? While some historians have rejected the
category of transgender to speak of experiences before the
mid-twentieth century, others have laid claim to those living
gender-non-conforming lives before our contemporary era. By using
the concept of trans*historicity, this volume draws together trans*
studies, historical inquiry, and queer temporality while also
emphasizing the historical specificity and variability of gendered
systems of embodiment in different time periods. Essay topics
include a queer analysis of medieval European saints, discussions
of a nineteenth-century Russian religious sect, an exploration of a
third gender in early modern Japanese art, a reclamation of Ojibwe
and Plains Cree Two-Spirit language, and biopolitical genealogies
and filmic representations of transsexuality. The issue also
features a roundtable discussion on trans*historicities and an
interview with the creators of the 2015 film Deseos. Critiquing
both progressive teleologies and the idea of sex or gender as a
timeless tradition, this issue articulates our own desires for
trans history, trans*historicities, and queerly temporal forms of
historical narration. Contributors. Kadji Amin, M. W. Bychowski,
Fernanda Carvajal, Howard Chiang, Leah DeVun, Julian Gill-Peterson,
Jack Halberstam, Asato Ikeda, Jacob Lau, Kathleen P. Long, Maya
Mikdashi, Robert Mills, Carlos Motta, Marcia Ochoa, Kai Pyle, C.
Riley Snorton, Zeb Tortorici, Jennifer Louise Wilson
Selected by Guernica magazine as an "Editors' Picks: Best of
2013"Unfurling like a medieval book of days, each page of Eduardo
Galeano's Children of the Days has an illuminating story that takes
inspiration from that date of the calendar year, resurrecting the
heroes and heroines who have fallen off the historical map, but
whose lives remind us of our darkest hours and sweetest
victories.Challenging readers to consider the human condition and
our own choices, Galeano elevates the little-known heroes of our
world and decries the destruction of the intellectual, linguistic,
and emotional treasures that we have all but forgotten.Readers will
discover many inspiring narratives in this collection of vignettes:
the Brazilians who held a smooch-in" to protest against a
dictatorship for banning kisses that undermined public morals" the
astonishing day Mexico invaded the United States and the
sacrilegious" women who had the effrontery to marry each other in a
church in the Galician city of A Coruna in 1901. Galeano also
highlights individuals such as Pedro Fernandes Sardinha, the first
bishop of Brazil, who was eaten by Caete Indians off the coast of
Alagoas, as well as Abdul Kassem Ismael, the grand vizier of
Persia, who kept books safe from war by creating a walking library
of 117,000 tomes aboard four hundred camels, forming a mile-long
caravan.Beautifully translated by Galeano's longtime collabourator,
Mark Fried, Children of the Days is a majestic humanist treasure
that shows us how to live and how to remember. It awakens the best
in us.
Welcome to another round of history's most absurd stories and the
timeless lessons that come with them. In More Lessons from History,
Alex Deane has unearthed yet more bizarre tales that you certainly
haven't heard before. If you're wondering how large, flightless
birds might organise themselves against a military regiment, how
you should respond to the glare of an international rugby player
whose glass eye you just knocked out, exactly why carrots are
orange, or whether the world's worst-run battleship ever ceased
firing upon her comrades-in-arms, then look no further. In this
second volume of his acclaimed series, Alex Deane reminds us that,
throughout history, human nature has remained exactly the same, and
the way that people responded to the most amusing, horrifying and
convoluted of circumstances in the past can teach us everything we
need to know about who we are today.
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