|
Showing 1 - 24 of
24 matches in All Departments
Rejecting the vocabulary and presuppositions common in Western talk
about men, this book considers the ways in which men see, speak
about, and understand themselves. Based on the author's experience
of teaching young men at a military academy and drawing on a range
of theory, it identifies a disconnect between academic discourses
on "masculinity," based as these are on theoretical positions that
describe the world from a position of "outsidership," and the
reality of most men's experience-or, the way in which men see
themselves. With an erroneous view of men dominating the airwaves,
most men simply fail to engage, leaving the mistaken conceptions of
masculinity to circulate and allowing policies to develop that
treat men as predators and aggressors. Presenting insights into
masculinity drawn from experience with young men drawn toward
military life, Masculinity from the Inside seeks to address the
gulf between scholarly understandings of men and men's own
understandings of themselves. It will therefore appeal to scholars
and students of sociology, cultural studies, and gender studies, to
anyone with interests in contemporary masculinity and the question
of what it means to be a man.
What does 'Art' Mean Now? asks, and answers, fundamental questions
about the nature of aesthetic experience and role of the arts in
contemporary society. The Modern Age, Romanticism and beyond.
viewed art as something transcending and separated from life, and
usually something encountered in museums or classrooms. Nowadays,
however, art tends to be defined not by a commonly agreed-upon
standard of 'quality' or by its forms, such as painting and
sculpture, but instead by political and ideological criteria. So
how do we connect with the works in museums whose point was
precisely they stood apart from such considerations? Can we and
should we be educated to "appreciate" art-and what does it do for
us anyway? What are we to make of the so-different newer
works-installations, performances, excerpts from the world-held to
be art that increasingly make it into museums? Adopting a
subjectivist approach, this book argues that in the absence of a
universal judgement or standard of taste, the experience of art is
one of freedom. The arts and literature give us the means to
conceptualize our lives, showing us ourselves as we are and as we
might wish-or not wish-to be, as well as where we have been and
where we are going. It will appeal to scholars of sociology,
philosophy, museum studies, and art history, and to anyone
interested in, or puzzled by, museums or college courses and their
presentation of art today.
What does 'Art' Mean Now? asks, and answers, fundamental questions
about the nature of aesthetic experience and role of the arts in
contemporary society. The Modern Age, Romanticism and beyond.
viewed art as something transcending and separated from life, and
usually something encountered in museums or classrooms. Nowadays,
however, art tends to be defined not by a commonly agreed-upon
standard of 'quality' or by its forms, such as painting and
sculpture, but instead by political and ideological criteria. So
how do we connect with the works in museums whose point was
precisely they stood apart from such considerations? Can we and
should we be educated to "appreciate" art-and what does it do for
us anyway? What are we to make of the so-different newer
works-installations, performances, excerpts from the world-held to
be art that increasingly make it into museums? Adopting a
subjectivist approach, this book argues that in the absence of a
universal judgement or standard of taste, the experience of art is
one of freedom. The arts and literature give us the means to
conceptualize our lives, showing us ourselves as we are and as we
might wish-or not wish-to be, as well as where we have been and
where we are going. It will appeal to scholars of sociology,
philosophy, museum studies, and art history, and to anyone
interested in, or puzzled by, museums or college courses and their
presentation of art today.
Rejecting the vocabulary and presuppositions common in Western talk
about men, this book considers the ways in which men see, speak
about, and understand themselves. Based on the author's experience
of teaching young men at a military academy and drawing on a range
of theory, it identifies a disconnect between academic discourses
on "masculinity," based as these are on theoretical positions that
describe the world from a position of "outsidership," and the
reality of most men's experience-or, the way in which men see
themselves. With an erroneous view of men dominating the airwaves,
most men simply fail to engage, leaving the mistaken conceptions of
masculinity to circulate and allowing policies to develop that
treat men as predators and aggressors. Presenting insights into
masculinity drawn from experience with young men drawn toward
military life, Masculinity from the Inside seeks to address the
gulf between scholarly understandings of men and men's own
understandings of themselves. It will therefore appeal to scholars
and students of sociology, cultural studies, and gender studies, to
anyone with interests in contemporary masculinity and the question
of what it means to be a man.
Drawing on the thought of Norbert Elias and using as a thread a
purposely apolitical example of cruelty to animals to focus on
changes in attitudes, this book explores the ways in which we deal
with a past that we now abhor. As we struggle to deal with the fact
that our past shapes us-indeed is us, but is not us-and cannot be
changed, the modern tendency is to demand merely cosmetic rather
than real changes to the world and to judge harshly the individuals
with whom the past is populated, pulling down statues or re-naming
institutions. An examination of our modern colonialism of time
rather than place, which refuses to consider or accept the fact
that without our past, we wouldn't be here at all, let alone in a
position to judge, The Civilizing Process and the Past We Now Abhor
will appeal to scholars and students of sociology, cultural
studies, and literature with interests in contemporary questions of
race, morality, and efforts to correct the wrongs of our past.
This book identifies the-now moribund-Modernist spirit of the
twentieth century, with its "make it new" attitude in the arts, and
its tendency towards abstraction and the scientific process, as the
impetus behind the academic structures of universities and museums,
together with the development of discrete scholarly disciplines
such as literary theory, sociology, and art history based on
quasi-scientific principles. Arguing that the Modernist project is
approaching exhaustion and that the insights that it has left to
yield are approaching triviality, it explores the Modernist links
between the arts and academic pursuits of the West-and their
relationship with street protests-in the long twentieth century,
considering what might follow this Modernist era. An examination of
the broad cultural and intellectual-and now political-trends of our
age, and their decline, The End of the Modernist Era in Arts and
Academia will appeal to scholars and students of social theory,
philosophy, literary studies, and cultural studies.
This book identifies the-now moribund-Modernist spirit of the
twentieth century, with its "make it new" attitude in the arts, and
its tendency towards abstraction and the scientific process, as the
impetus behind the academic structures of universities and museums,
together with the development of discrete scholarly disciplines
such as literary theory, sociology, and art history based on
quasi-scientific principles. Arguing that the Modernist project is
approaching exhaustion and that the insights that it has left to
yield are approaching triviality, it explores the Modernist links
between the arts and academic pursuits of the West-and their
relationship with street protests-in the long twentieth century,
considering what might follow this Modernist era. An examination of
the broad cultural and intellectual-and now political-trends of our
age, and their decline, The End of the Modernist Era in Arts and
Academia will appeal to scholars and students of social theory,
philosophy, literary studies, and cultural studies.
Running feels good. It also centers the runner in the world, solves
the problems implied by the Cartesian split between body and soul,
and establishes an active relationship between the self and others.
Running takes the motion we are all born with (that is the essence
of life) and with the individual providing the impetus, projects us
into the world of others. When we run, we transcend ourselves and
place ourselves in the world. Running is Life is set in many
places-Cairo, the Eastern Sierras, Las Vegas, New York's Adirondack
Mountains, and Barcelona, among others-but always in the moving
body of the runner hurtling both through and into the world.
Running is Life is both a hymn to human motion and an explanation
of its sweetness.
Homage to Eugene O'Neill re-invokes O'Neill's own muses to offer a
re-conception of his artistic world, a re-enactment, and an
entirely new work not so much in the style but in the spirit of the
Nobel-prize winning American dramatist. Most closely allied with
Strange Interlude but with echoes as well of Long Day's Journey
Into Night and Morning Becomes Electra, Homage to Eugene O'Neill
breathes new life into an epic sweep of familial history: the rise,
fall, and perhaps rise again of a family of North Carolina
industrialists-a family which may have bought its success by
sacrificing its son to war, a family of weak men and strong women,
a family that both embraces and tries to understand its tumultuous
fate. Homage to Eugene O'Neill is both new work and an old,
speaking through the masks of the ancestors, causing them to live
anew-the literary criticism of the future.
What if Plato's Symposium took place in present-day America rather
than in ancient Athens? The Thanksgiving Symposium imagines this,
and makes it happen. Like Plato's dialogue, The Thanksgiving
Symposium focuses on the age-old question: what is the nature of
love? In The Thanksgiving Symposium, three men and three women of
varying ages and degrees of closeness meet for Thanksgiving dinner.
Their particular situations give rise to a discussion of love in
the general and the specific, leavened with the normal give and
take of social interaction. During the evening, much is discussed
and some things are decided. Plato's dialogue verges on being a
play about philosophy rather than a philosophy, people discussing
things rather than a philosopher telling us what to conclude. The
Thanksgiving Symposium develops this aspect of Plato while offering
a new philosophy that responds to the old. Is the result a play? A
dialogue? A philosophy? Like Plato's Symposium, it is all of these
at once.
Many otherwise competent adults are wobbly writers, whether they're
college students or already thriving in a job. They probably
exhibit a "go get 'em" attitude for most of their lives, but find
themselves stumped by a blank computer screen or a piece of paper.
What, they wonder, do I do now? What's my next word, next sentence?
But their problems aren't solved by somebody telling them what to
do, only by someone helping them figure things out themselves. As
the adage says: give a person a fish and s/he eats that day; teach
a person to fish and s/he eats for life. They need a little help
from Bill the Goat. Bill is the mascot of the U.S. Naval Academy,
where Bruce Fleming has taught literature and writing for over
twenty years. Bill is the fellow, or at least the old goat, who's
reading what you've written. The secret to answering your question,
"What do I do now?" is seeing writing not from your own
perspective, but from Bill's. Learning to write is difficult, like
learning to act. What you feel doesn't matter, only what it looks
like to the audience. Your audience is Bill. Bill the Goat's Adult
Refresher Guide to Writing isn't a reference book, to be kept
tucked into your office bookshelf for crisis management. Even its
grammar section is different from usual grammar brush-ups. It's a
book to be read and internalized, a book to re-align the way you
conceive. It's a book for the beach, the porch, the subway, or an
armchair. It's fun to read. You're the Bill for this book, after
all. It's for students and executives, leaders and followers,
everybody who has to communicate effectively in writing. You don't
even have to hide this book behind another when you read it.
There's no shame in a refresher course from Bill. He's your buddy,
and he's here to remind you that when you make mistakes, he pays
the price. This is grammar without guilt, syntax without a sense of
sin. It's pure pragmatics. If you want Bill to get your point, you
have to keep him in mind.
The Aesthetic Sense of Life is a fast-moving book about how to see
the world and get value from living every day with the "everyday."
Do the infinite number of sensations we're surrounded with every
day have intrinsic value? If not, what gives them value? Who
appreciates the sunrise if we don't? Is it enough for just us to
appreciate it? Or do we have to share it? The Aesthetic Sense of
Life considers and answers to questions such as these in clear,
readable prose, offering a way of looking at life that makes clear
its value and its meaning. The aesthetic sense of life is neither
the viewpoint of the saints for whom the sensations of the world
are mere murmuring and illusion nor the viewpoint of those
completely fulfilled by their things, their gadgets, the
particulars of their own lives. Most of us fall in the middle
between these two extremes: we appreciate, say, a good cup of
coffee, a power tool, a new set of towels, or a juicy steak, but
don't think the answer to the riddle of existence is to be found in
any of these. We appreciate them without thinking them sufficient.
What's missing from them? What's missing is this: a sense that they
can give meaning to life. The Aesthetic Sense of Life proposes that
meaning is found not in these particulars, but in consciousness of
the patterns they form. The feel of our towels or the taste of our
coffee is just for us. Others have their own sensations, so they
don't need ours. What we can share with other people, and thus use
to re-establish the bonds of human warmth, are the patterns made by
these particulars, something others can appreciate as well.
Awareness of these patterns constitutes the aesthetic sense of
life, which gives richness and meaning to the everyday."
What is the taste of life as we really live it, rather than the way
we imagine it in others? What does it feel like to become aware of
the hand of cards we've been dealt, to play them as well as we can,
to understand what has happened to us, and to try to control the
future? Journey to the Middle of the Forest answers these questions
in a way that celebrity memoirs, where events seem so much more
intense than happenings in our own lives because of our perspective
and the writer's fame, cannot. In Journey to the Middle of the
Forest, Bruce Fleming considers the slippages between
presupposition and reality in a life begun and continued in
Maryland, with intervals in pre-civil war Rwanda, the walled-in
city of West Berlin, and the central European Freiburg im Breisgau,
once Austrian, then part of the Duchy of Baden, now part of
Germany. Like all lives, it has its crises-more, it may be, than an
average life: a childhood marked by an alcoholic and abusive
father, a marriage gone horribly awry, an autistic child and a
bipolar stepchild, a dragged-out divorce, the death of a brother to
AIDS, and the re-tooling of hopes to meet the new givens of the
world. And, then re-marriage, two little boys, and the threat of
childhood leukemia. Fleming's intense and vivid memoir asks us to
consider this fundamental question: Do we gain wisdom as we age? We
may tell ourselves we do, as a way of summarizing what's happened
to us: we figure everything we've been through has to be good for
something. But if we do become wiser, it's not with a wisdom that
can help us with any subsequent challenge-and the challenges never
cease. Life gets no easier as we age, we just get deeper into the
forest.
Ludwig Wittgenstein's Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus was informed
by the belief that it was possible to get clarity once and for all
on fundamental philosophical issues, and so to think our way to a
silence where philosophy was no longer necessary. This is The New
Tractatus: it sympathizes with Wittgenstein's impatience with the
endless cycle of argument, but reacts to this impatience and takes
it in different directions than Wittgenstein did. Wittgenstein was
concerned with questions like these: What is the meaning of
language? What is our relationship to the universe? What is the
nature of philosophy? These questions are covered in The New
Tractatus, along with many other topics, such as: Why is sex a
controversial issue? Why are we so interested in celebrities? What
is the nature of love? Why do liberals and conservatives argue
about so many things? What is magic? Can miracles occur? Is science
objective? Does art lie to us? How do we win arguments? What is the
meaning of life? What The New Tractatus shares with the old is the
fundamental perception that we can never transcend what is. The
world is all that is the case: whatever comes to be is part of the
world.
Why Liberals and Conservatives Clash offers an explanation for the
extreme polarization between liberal and conservative that is the
hallmark of the American political landscape today. It suggests
that liberal thought is intrinsically different from conservative
thought, and that each constitutes a self-subsistent world-view
with its specific qualities and rules. The book offers a set of
guidelines to predict a person's views based on other views s/he
holds, given that each world-view is what it is for structural
reasons, and is more than merely a sum of discrete positions. It
explains, for example, why people who support gay marriage also
typically support the woman's right to an early-term abortion, and
why people who demand that citizens "support the military"
understand this as meaning, support putting members of the military
in harm's way. Because liberal thought and conservative thought
each constitutes a closed world-view, neither side will ever
convince the other in an argument. The most we can hope for is an
acknowledgment by each side of the usefulness of the other, a goal
Fleming proposes as the most reasonable one for our times.
Why Liberals and Conservatives Clash makes logical the most
striking, and hitherto puzzling feature of the contemporary
American political landscape: its acrimony, its air of being an
argument between the deaf: neither side understands the other.
Fleming suggests this is so because neither side accepts the bases
underlying the other's particular positions. We can, however,
understand that they are different, and that trying to force the
other side into submission won't work. We need to go beyond
liberals dismissing conservatives with horror andconservatives
dismissing liberals with disgust. Conservatives aren't merely
imperfect liberals, they're something else entirely. Liberals
aren't merely potential conservatives, they actually think
differently.
Why Liberals and Conservatives Clash offers an explanation for the
extreme polarization between liberal and conservative that is the
hallmark of the American political landscape today. It suggests
that liberal thought is intrinsically different from conservative
thought, and that each constitutes a self-subsistent world-view
with its specific qualities and rules. The book offers a set of
guidelines to predict a person's views based on other views s/he
holds, given that each world-view is what it is for structural
reasons, and is more than merely a sum of discrete positions. It
explains, for example, why people who support gay marriage also
typically support the woman's right to an early-term abortion, and
why people who demand that citizens "support the military"
understand this as meaning, support putting members of the military
in harm's way. Because liberal thought and conservative thought
each constitutes a closed world-view, neither side will ever
convince the other in an argument. The most we can hope for is an
acknowledgment by each side of the usefulness of the other, a goal
Fleming proposes as the most reasonable one for our times.
Why Liberals and Conservatives Clash makes logical the most
striking, and hitherto puzzling feature of the contemporary
American political landscape: its acrimony, its air of being an
argument between the deaf: neither side understands the other.
Fleming suggests this is so because neither side accepts the bases
underlying the other's particular positions. We can, however,
understand that they are different, and that trying to force the
other side into submission won't work. We need to go beyond
liberals dismissing conservatives with horror andconservatives
dismissing liberals with disgust. Conservatives aren't merely
imperfect liberals, they're something else entirely. Liberals
aren't merely potential conservatives, they actually think
differently.
Oftentimes, subjects related to sexuality such as abortion and
homosexuality are flash points for political argument between
liberals and conservatives. In recent years the debate on these
topics has become shrill. Sexual Ethics considers the traditional
Western views, as well as Freudian explanations, of sexuality.
Author Bruce E. Fleming proposes that sex operates in an
intrinsically undefined area, one stranded between the two realms
that otherwise define our public and private lives. The most heated
debate regarding sexual matters is between liberal and
conservatives. Whether or not these two groups can continue to
co-exist under the umbrella of American democracy depends on their
willingness to adhere to the basic principals of democracy.
Drawing on the thought of Norbert Elias and using as a thread a
purposely apolitical example of cruelty to animals to focus on
changes in attitudes, this book explores the ways in which we deal
with a past that we now abhor. As we struggle to deal with the fact
that our past shapes us-indeed is us, but is not us-and cannot be
changed, the modern tendency is to demand merely cosmetic rather
than real changes to the world and to judge harshly the individuals
with whom the past is populated, pulling down statues or re-naming
institutions. An examination of our modern colonialism of time
rather than place, which refuses to consider or accept the fact
that without our past, we wouldn't be here at all, let alone in a
position to judge, The Civilizing Process and the Past We Now Abhor
will appeal to scholars and students of sociology, cultural
studies, and literature with interests in contemporary questions of
race, morality, and efforts to correct the wrongs of our past.
This scarce antiquarian book is a selection from Kessinger
Publishing's Legacy Reprint Series. Due to its age, it may contain
imperfections such as marks, notations, marginalia and flawed
pages. Because we believe this work is culturally important, we
have made it available as part of our commitment to protecting,
preserving, and promoting the world's literature. Kessinger
Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of rare and
hard-to-find books with something of interest for everyone
Civilians and military personnel do not have a clear view of each
other in the United States today. Conspiring against such
understanding are the norms and traditions of the two cultures. On
the one hand, the military is considered to like its secrecy and
think of itself as morally superior to the civilians it is meant to
serve. On the other hand, civilians praise or blame the armed
forces based on political exigencies and generally without true
comprehension of their culture. And their mutual misperceptions
seem greater now than in the late 1960s and early 1970s during the
Vietnam War.Yet, as U.S. Naval Academy professor Bruce Fleming
points out, the military is linked to the civilian world so
fundamentally that all of us pay the price if they do not develop
an appreciation of one another but that is achievable only if each
side also strives to see itself clearly. As the military fulfills
its mission of protecting Americans and their way of life,
civilians must also do their part and support the military through
budget allocations, legislation, and enlistment. Without this
shared commitment, American interests suffer as a whole.Fleming
shows how to close a military-civilian gap that yawns so large in
twenty-first-century America that it potentially threatens national
security and essential freedoms.
This scarce antiquarian book is a selection from Kessinger
Publishing's Legacy Reprint Series. Due to its age, it may contain
imperfections such as marks, notations, marginalia and flawed
pages. Because we believe this work is culturally important, we
have made it available as part of our commitment to protecting,
preserving, and promoting the world's literature. Kessinger
Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of rare and
hard-to-find books with something of interest for everyone!
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
Catan
(16)
R1,150
R887
Discovery Miles 8 870
|