|
|
Books > Philosophy
American Disaster Movies of the 1970s is the first scholarly book
dedicated to the disaster cycle that dominated American cinema and
television in the 1970s. Through examining films such as Airport
(1970), The Poseidon Adventure (1972), Two-Minute Warning (1976)
and The Swarm (1978), alongside their historical contexts and
American contemporaneous trends, the disaster cycle is treated as a
time-bound phenomenon. This book further contextualises the cycle
by drawing on the longer cultural history of modernist reactions to
modern anxieties, including the widespread dependence on technology
and corporate power. Each chapter considers cinematic precursors,
such as the ‘ark movie’, and contemporaneous trends, such as
New Hollywood, vigilante and blaxploitation films, as well as the
immediate American context: the end of the civil rights and
countercultural era, the Watergate crisis, and the defeat in
Vietnam.As Scott Freer argues, the disaster movie is a modern,
demotic form of tragedy that satisfies a taste for the macabre. It
is also an aesthetic means for processing painful truths, and many
of the dramatized themes anticipate present-day monstrosities of
modernity.
Recovers the religious origins of the War on Drugs Many people view
the War on Drugs as a contemporary phenomenon invented by the Nixon
administration. But as this new book shows, the conflict actually
began more than a century before, when American Protestants began
the temperance movement and linked drug use with immorality.
Christian Nationalism and the Birth of the War on Drugs argues that
this early drug war was deeply rooted in Christian impulses. While
many scholars understand Prohibition to have been a Protestant
undertaking, it is considerably less common to consider the War on
Drugs this way, in part because racism has understandably been the
focal point of discussions of the drug war. Antidrug activists
expressed—and still do express--blatant white supremacist and
nativist motives. Yet this book argues that that racism was
intertwined with religious impulses. Reformers pursued the
“civilizing mission,” a wide-ranging project that sought to
protect “child races” from harmful influences while remodeling
their cultures to look like Europe and the United States. Most
reformers saw Christianity as essential to civilization and
missionaries felt that banning drugs would encourage religious
conversion and progress. This compelling work of scholarship
radically reshapes our understanding of one of the longest and most
damaging conflicts in modern American history, making the case that
we cannot understand the War on Drugs unless we understand its
religious origins.
HarperCollins is proud to present its incredible range of
best-loved, essential classics… Despite dating from the 4th
century BC, The Art of Rhetoric continues to be regarded by many as
the single most important work on the art of persuasion. As
democracy began emerging in 5th-century Athens, public speaking and
debate became an increasingly important tool to garner influence in
the assemblies, councils, and law courts of ancient Greece. In
response to this, both politicians and ordinary citizens became
desperate to learn greater skills in this area, as well as the
philosophy behind it. This treatise was one of the first to provide
just that, establishing methods and observations of informal
reasoning and style, and has continued to be hugely influential on
public speaking and philosophy today. Aristotle, the grandfather of
philosophy, student of Plato, and teacher of Alexander the Great,
was one of the first people to create a comprehensive system of
philosophy, encompassing logic, morality, aesthetics, politics,
ethics, and science. Although written over 2,000 years ago, The Art
of Rhetoric remains a comprehensive introduction for philosophy
students into the subject of rhetoric, as well as a useful manual
for anyone today looking to improve their oratory skills of
persuasion.
Creativity and Morality summarizes and integrates research on
creativity used to achieve bad or immoral ends. The book includes
the use of deception, novel ideas to commit wrongdoings across
contexts, including in organizations, the classroom and terrorism.
Morality is discussed from an individual perspective and relative
to broader sociocultural norms that allow people to believe actions
are justified. Chapters explore this research from an
interdisciplinary perspective, including from psychology,
philosophy, media studies, aesthetics and ethics.
The first comprehensive scrutiny of the theories associated with
new materialisms including speculative realism, new materialism,
Object-oriented ontology and actor-network theory. One of the most
influential trends in the humanities and social sciences in the
last decades, new materialisms embody a critique of modernity and a
pledge to regain immediate reality by focusing on the materiality
of the world – human and nonhuman – rather than a
post-structuralist focus upon texts. Against New Materialisms
examines the theoretical and practical problems connected with
discarding modernity and the human subject from a number of
interdisciplinary angles: ontology and phenomenology to political
theory, mythology and ecology. With contributions from
international scholars, including Markus Gabriel, Andrew Cole, and
Dipesh Chakrabarty, the essays here challenge the capacity of new
materialisms to provide solutions to current international crises,
whilst also calling into question what the desire for such theories
can tell us about the global situation today.
'Why do I know a few more things? Why am I so clever altogether?'
Self-celebrating and self-mocking autobiographical writings from
Ecce Homo, the last work iconoclastic German philosopher Nietzsche
wrote before his descent into madness. One of 46 new books in the
bestselling Little Black Classics series, to celebrate the first
ever Penguin Classic in 1946. Each book gives readers a taste of
the Classics' huge range and diversity, with works from around the
world and across the centuries - including fables, decadence,
heartbreak, tall tales, satire, ghosts, battles and elephants.
 |
The Ethical Demand
(Hardcover)
Knud Ejler Logstrup; Introduction by Hans Fink, Alasdair MacIntyre
|
R3,317
Discovery Miles 33 170
|
Ships in 18 - 22 working days
|
|
|
|
|