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Books > Humanities > History > History of specific subjects > Social & cultural history
In the last fifty years, folklorists have amassed an extraordinary
corpus of contemporary legends including "the Choking Doberman,"
"the Eaten Ticket," and "the Vanishing Hitchhiker." But what about
the urban legends of the past? These legends and tales have rarely
been collected, and when they occasionally appear, they do so as
ancestors or precursors of the urban legends of today, rather than
as stories in their own right. In The Nail in the Skull and Other
Victorian Urban Legends, Simon Young fills this gap for British
folklore (and for the wider English-speaking world) of the 1800s.
Young introduces seventy Victorian urban legends ranging from
"Beetle Eyes" to the "Shoplifter's Dilemma" and from "Hands in the
Muff" to "the Suicide Club." While a handful of these stories are
already known, the vast majority have never been identified, and
they have certainly never received scholarly treatment. Young
begins the volume with a lengthy introduction assessing
nineteenth-century media, emphasizing the importance of the written
word to the perpetuation and preservation of these myths. He draws
on numerous nineteenth-century books, periodicals, and ephemera,
including digitized newspaper archives-particularly the British
Newspaper Archive, an exciting new hunting ground for folklorists.
The Nail in the Skull and Other Victorian Urban Legends will appeal
to an academic audience as well as to anyone who is interested in
urban legends.
In 1974, the Brazilian sports official Joao Havelange was elected
FIFA's president in a two-round election, defeating the incumbent
Stanley Rous. The story told by Havelange himself describes a
private odyssey in which the protagonist crisscrosses two thirds of
the world canvassing for votes and challenging the institutional
status quo. For many scholars, Havelange's triumph changed FIFA's
(International Federation of Football Association) identity,
gradually turning it into a global and immensely wealthy
institution. Conversely, the election can be analyzed as a
historical event. It can be thought of as a political window by
means of which the international dynamic of a specific moment in
the Cold War can be perceived. In this regard, this book seeks to
understand which actors were involved in the election, how the
networks were shaped, and which political agents were directly
engaged in the campaign.
Incorporating a wide range of visual and translated written
sources, The Modern Spain Sourcebook documents Spain's history from
the Enlightenment to the present. The book is thematically arranged
and includes six key primary sources on ten significant areas of
Spanish history, including the arts, work, education, religion,
politics, sexuality and empire. As well as the book's overarching
introduction, there are theme-specific introductions and vital
historical context sections provided for the sources that are
presented. There are also useful suggested analytical questions and
helpful web link lists included throughout. The Modern Spain
Sourcebook covers political and economic history, but moves beyond
this to provide a more complete picture of Spanish history through
the sources selected with gender history, social history and
cultural history coming to the fore. This is a crucial text
containing a vital trove of primary material for all students of
Spain and its history.
This multi-disciplinary volume is one of the few collections about
social change covering various cases of mass violence and genocide.
In life under persecution, social relations and social structures
were not absent and not simply replaced by an ethno-racial order.
The studies in this book show the influence of social structures
like gender, age and class on life under persecution. Exploring
practices in family and labor relations and of collective action,
they counter claims of an atomization of society or total
uprootedness of victims. Despite being exposed to poverty and want
and under the permanent threat of political violence, persecuted
people tried to develop their own agency. Case studies are about
the Jewish and Armenian persecutions, Rwanda, the war of
decolonization in Mozambique and civilian refuges in Belarus during
World War II. The authors are a mix of experienced scholars and
young researchers.
In Gin, Jesus, and Jim Crow, Brendan J. J. Payne reveals how
prohibition helped realign the racial and religious order in the
South by linking restrictions on alcohol with political preaching
and the disfranchisement of Black voters. While both sides invoked
Christianity, prohibitionists redefined churches' doctrines,
practices, and political engagement. White prohibitionists
initially courted Black voters in the 1880s but soon dismissed them
as hopelessly wet and sought to disfranchise them, stoking fears of
drunken Black men defiling white women in their efforts to reframe
alcohol restriction as a means of racial control. Later, as the
alcohol industry grew desperate, it turned to Black voters, many of
whom joined the brewers to preserve their voting rights and
maintain personal liberties. Tracking southern debates about
alcohol from the 1880s through the 1930s, Payne shows that
prohibition only retreated from the region once the racial and
religious order it helped enshrine had been secured.
Skill formation in Central and Eastern Europe. A search for
patterns and directions of development offers holistic analytical
insight into skill formation processes and institutions in Central
and Eastern European countries by referring to the timeframe of
historical development of skill formation from the fall of
communism to the present time and future development trends.
Leading researchers of skill formation from Lithuania, Latvia,
Estonia, Poland, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Hungary, Slovenia,
Croatia, Bulgaria, Romania and Ukraine refer to critical junctures
and the findings are compared and discussed in five concluding
chapters focused on important cross-cutting topics: development of
social dialogue over skill formation, qualifications policy and
development of qualifications systems, implications of European
integration and EU policies for governance and institutional reform
of skill formation, features and implications of policy borrowing
and policy learning from the Anglo-Saxon and German speaking
countries, respectively.
The greatest conversation in the history of Hollywood.
From the archives of the American Film Institute comes a unique picture of what it was like to work in Hollywood from its beginnings to its present day. Hollywood: The Oral History, lets a reader ‘listen in’ on candid remarks from the biggest names in front of the camera – Bette Davis, Meryl Streep, Tom Hanks, Jane Fonda, Harold Lloyd – the biggest behind it – Frank Capra, Steven Spielberg, Alfred Hitchcock, Jordan Peele, as well as the musicians, writers, sound men, editors, make-up artists, and even script timers, messengers, and publicists who shaped what was heard and seen on screen.
Legendary film scholar Jeanine Basinger and New York Times bestselling author Sam Wasson have undertaken the monumental task of weaving these thousands of hours of talk into a conversation that is lively, funny, insightful, historically accurate and authentically honest in its portrait of workaday Hollywood.
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Broken Memories
(Hardcover)
Yosef Kutner; Cover design or artwork by Rachel Kolokoff Hopper
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R1,144
R934
Discovery Miles 9 340
Save R210 (18%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Since its first publication in 1984, Night Falls in Ardnamurchan
has become a classic account of the life and death of a Highland
community. The author weaves his own humorous and perceptive
account of crofting with extracts from his father's journal - a
terse, factual and down to earth vision of the day-to-day tasks of
crofting life. It is an unusual and memorable story that also
illuminates the shifting, often tortuous relationships between
children and their parents. Alasdair Maclean reveals his own
struggle to come to terms with his background and the isolated
community he left so often and to which he returned again and
again. In this isolated community is seen a microcosm of something
central to Scottish identity - the need to escape against the tug
of home.
This book is an interdisciplinary study aimed at re-imagining and
re-routing contemporary migrations in the Mediterranean. Drawing
from visual arts, citizenship studies, film, media and cultural
studies, along with postcolonial, border, and decolonial
discourses, and examining the issues from within a human rights
framework, the book investigates how works of cultural production
can offer a more complex and humane understanding of mobility in
the Mediterranean beyond representations of illegality and/or
crisis. Elvira Pulitano centers the discourse of cultural
production around the island of Lampedusa but expands the island
geography to include a digital multi-media project, a social
enterprise in Palermo, Sicily, and overall reflections on race,
identity, and belonging inspired by Toni Morrison's guest-curated
Louvre exhibit The Foreigner's Home. Responding to recent calls for
alternative methodologies in thinking the modern Mediterranean,
Pulitano disseminates a fluid archive of contemporary migrations
reverberating with ancestral sounds and voices from the African
diaspora along a Mediterranean-TransAtlantic map. Adding to the
recent proliferation of social science scholarship that has drawn
attention to the role of artistic practice in migration studies,
the book features human stories of endurance and survival aimed at
enhancing knowledge and social justice beyond (and notwithstanding)
militarized borders and failed EU policies.
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