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In a provocative and insightful exposition, Jane Flax posits that
Americans have never properly mourned slavery and its lingering
effects on American subjects and politics. Using an
interdisciplinary approach, the book shows that a reciprocal
relationship exists between unconscious processes and race/gender
domination and that unless we attend to these unconscious
processes, no adequate remedy for the malignant consequences of our
current race/gender practices and relations can be devised.
Wide-ranging, Flax supports her arguments using a variety of
sources, including psychoanalytic theory, feminist theory,
political theory, Michel Foucault's writings, Obama's books and
speeches, critical race theory, data on race/gender disparities,
and analysis of contemporary films.
The historic election of Barack Obama, the first African-American
president is analyzed from the perspective of racial relations. To
trace the effect of time, Liu links Obama's multiracial winning
coalition to the two-party system and the profound impact of racial
changes since 1965.
A history of capitalism in nineteenth- and twentieth-century China
and India that explores the competition between their tea
industries Tea remains the world's most popular commercial drink
today, and at the turn of the twentieth century, it represented the
largest export industry of both China and colonial India. In
analyzing the global competition between Chinese and Indian tea,
Andrew B. Liu challenges past economic histories premised on the
technical "divergence" between the West and the Rest, arguing
instead that seemingly traditional technologies and practices were
central to modern capital accumulation across Asia. He shows how
competitive pressures compelled Chinese merchants to adopt abstract
industrial conceptions of time, while colonial planters in India
pushed for labor indenture laws to support factory-style tea
plantations. Characterizations of China and India as premodern
backwaters, he explains, were themselves the historical result of
new notions of political economy adopted by Chinese and Indian
nationalists, who discovered that these abstract ideas corresponded
to concrete social changes in their local surroundings. Together,
these stories point toward a more flexible and globally oriented
conceptualization of the history of capitalism in China and India.
If all politics are local, then all economics are also
international, regional and local. Globalisation, for all its
mystery and so-called inevitability, has its foundations and
bloodlines in urban and regional economics. The economic impacts of
poverty, housing, transportation, education, and crime are
included. This book includes within its scope: multiplier and
impact analysis, input-output models, growth theory, migration,
urban and regional labour markets, urban and regional public
policy, regional devolution, small firms policy, and foreign direct
investment.
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