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This book provides an interdisciplinary analysis of film in the
context of the Anthropocene: the new geological era in which human
beings have collectively become a force of nature. Daniel White
draws on perspectives in philosophy, ecology, and cybernetics (the
science of communication and control in animals and machines) to
explore human self-understanding through film in the new era. The
classical figure of Janus, looking both to the future and the past,
serves as a guide throughout the study. Both feature and
documentary films are considered.
Marveling Religion: Critical Discourses, Religion, and the Marvel
Cinematic Universe is an edited volume that explores the
intersection of religion and cinema through the lenses of critical
discourse. The focus of the shared inquiry are various films
comprising the first three phases of the Marvel Cinematic Universe
(MCU) and corresponding Netflix series. The contributors explore
various religious themes and how they intersect with culture
through the canon on the MCU. The first part focuses on responses
to the societal, governmental, and cultural context that solidified
with clarity during the 2016 Presidential Election cycle in the
United States and in the following administration. Additionally, it
provides lenses and resources for engaging in productive public
actions. Part two explores cultural resources of sustaining
activism and resistance as well as some of the key issues at stake
in public action. The third part centers on militarization and
resistance to state violence. Taken in concert, these three
sections work together to provide frames for understanding while
also keeping us engaged in the concrete action to mobilize social
change. The overarching aim of the volume is to promote critical
discourse regarding the dynamics of activism and political
resistance.
How do the worlds that state administrators manage become the
feelings publics embody? In Administering Affect, Daniel White
addresses this question by documenting the rise of a new national
figure he calls "Pop-Culture Japan." Emerging in the wake of
Japan's dramatic economic decline in the early 1990s, Pop-Culture
Japan reflected the hopes of Japanese state bureaucrats and
political elites seeking to recover their country's standing on the
global stage. White argues that due to growing regional
competitiveness and geopolitical tension in East Asia in recent
decades, Japan's state bureaucrats increasingly targeted political
anxiety as a national problem and built a new national image based
on pop-culture branding as a remedy. Based on sixteen months of
ethnographic fieldwork among rarely accessible government
bureaucrats, Administering Affect examines the fascinating
connection between state administration and public sentiment. White
analyzes various creative policy figures of Pop-Culture Japan, such
as anime diplomats, "Cool Japan" branding campaigns, and the
so-called "Ambassadors of Cute," in order to illustrate a powerful
link between practices of managing national culture and the
circulation of anxiety among Japanese publics. Invoking the term
"administering affect" to illustrate how anxiety becomes a
bureaucratic target, technique, and unintended consequence of
promoting Japan's national popular culture, the book presents an
ethnographic portrait of the at-times surprisingly emotional lives
of Japan's state bureaucrats. In examining how anxious feelings
come to drive policymaking, White delivers an intimate
anthropological analysis of the affective forces interconnecting
state governance, popular culture, and national identity.
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Crimson (DVD)
Paul Naschy, Silvia Solar, Evelyne Scott, Olivier Mathot, Claude Boisson, …
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R127
Discovery Miles 1 270
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Out of stock
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Horror directed by Juan Fortuny and starring Paul Naschy, Silvia
Solar and Olivier Mathot. When a gang leader is killed, his cronies
go to extreme lengths in order to bring him back. Strapping a
helpless victim to a railway track and taking his dismembered head
for themselves, they enlist the help of an insane surgeon in
transplanting the mind of their boss into this new head, thinking
that this will return him to them. The gang quickly realise they've
got far more than they bargained for when the monstrous new person
before them immediately sets out on a bloody path of death and
destruction.
How do the worlds that state administrators manage become the
feelings publics embody? In Administering Affect, Daniel White
addresses this question by documenting the rise of a new national
figure he calls "Pop-Culture Japan." Emerging in the wake of
Japan's dramatic economic decline in the early 1990s, Pop-Culture
Japan reflected the hopes of Japanese state bureaucrats and
political elites seeking to recover their country's standing on the
global stage. White argues that due to growing regional
competitiveness and geopolitical tension in East Asia in recent
decades, Japan's state bureaucrats increasingly targeted political
anxiety as a national problem and built a new national image based
on pop-culture branding as a remedy. Based on sixteen months of
ethnographic fieldwork among rarely accessible government
bureaucrats, Administering Affect examines the fascinating
connection between state administration and public sentiment. White
analyzes various creative policy figures of Pop-Culture Japan, such
as anime diplomats, "Cool Japan" branding campaigns, and the
so-called "Ambassadors of Cute," in order to illustrate a powerful
link between practices of managing national culture and the
circulation of anxiety among Japanese publics. Invoking the term
"administering affect" to illustrate how anxiety becomes a
bureaucratic target, technique, and unintended consequence of
promoting Japan's national popular culture, the book presents an
ethnographic portrait of the at-times surprisingly emotional lives
of Japan's state bureaucrats. In examining how anxious feelings
come to drive policymaking, White delivers an intimate
anthropological analysis of the affective forces interconnecting
state governance, popular culture, and national identity.
Hip-Hop and Dismantling the School-to-Prison Pipeline was created
for K-12 students in hopes that they find tangible strategies for
creating affirming communities where students, parents, advocates
and community members collaborate to compose liberating and just
frameworks that effectively define the school-to-prison pipeline
and identify the nefarious ways it adversely affects their lives.
This book is for educators, activists, community organizers,
teachers, scholars, politicians, and administrators who we hope
will join us in challenging the predominant preconceived notion
held by many educators that Hip-Hop has no redeemable value.
Lastly, the authors/editors argue against the understanding of
Hip-Hop studies as primarily an academic endeavor situated solely
in the academy. They understand the fact that people on streets,
blocks, avenues, have been living and theorizing about Hip-Hop
since its inception. This important critical book is an honest,
thorough, powerful, and robust examination of the ingenious and
inventive ways people who have an allegiance to Hip-Hop work
tirelessly, in various capacities, to dismantle the
school-to-prison pipeline.
Hip-Hop and Dismantling the School-to-Prison Pipeline was created
for K-12 students in hopes that they find tangible strategies for
creating affirming communities where students, parents, advocates
and community members collaborate to compose liberating and just
frameworks that effectively define the school-to-prison pipeline
and identify the nefarious ways it adversely affects their lives.
This book is for educators, activists, community organizers,
teachers, scholars, politicians, and administrators who we hope
will join us in challenging the predominant preconceived notion
held by many educators that Hip-Hop has no redeemable value.
Lastly, the authors/editors argue against the understanding of
Hip-Hop studies as primarily an academic endeavor situated solely
in the academy. They understand the fact that people on streets,
blocks, avenues, have been living and theorizing about Hip-Hop
since its inception. This important critical book is an honest,
thorough, powerful, and robust examination of the ingenious and
inventive ways people who have an allegiance to Hip-Hop work
tirelessly, in various capacities, to dismantle the
school-to-prison pipeline.
This book provides an interdisciplinary analysis of film in the
context of the Anthropocene: the new geological era in which human
beings have collectively become a force of nature. Daniel White
draws on perspectives in philosophy, ecology, and cybernetics (the
science of communication and control in animals and machines) to
explore human self-understanding through film in the new era. The
classical figure of Janus, looking both to the future and the past,
serves as a guide throughout the study. Both feature and
documentary films are considered.
Epistemology, like ethics, is normative. Just as ethics addresses
questions about how we ought to act, so epistemology addresses
questions about how we ought to believe and enquire. We can also
ask metanormative questions. What does it mean to claim that
someone ought to do or believe something? Do such claims express
beliefs about independently existing facts, or only attitudes of
approval and disapproval towards certain pieces of conduct? How do
putative facts about what people ought to do or believe fit in to
the natural world? In the case of ethics, such questions have been
subject to extensive and systematic investigation, yielding the
thriving subdiscipline of metaethics. Yet the corresponding
questions have been largely ignored in epistemology; there is no
serious subdiscipline of metaepistemology. This surprising state of
affairs reflects a more general tendency for ethics and
epistemology to be carried out largely in isolation from each
other, despite the important substantive and structural connections
between them. A movement to overturn the general tendency has only
recently gained serious momentum, and has yet to tackle
metanormative questions in a sustained way. This edited collection
aims to stimulate this project and thus advance the new
subdiscipline of metaepistemology. Its original essays draw on the
sophisticated theories and frameworks that have been developed in
metaethics concerning practical normativity, examine whether they
can be applied to epistemic normativity, and consider what this
might tell us about both.
Is there such a thing as a Hip Hop theology? Drawing on interviews
from those in the Hip Hop community, and a critical engagement with
the theological and ecclesiological ruminations of over 8,500
songs, Hodge aims to paint a picture of what a Hip Hop theology of
community might entail, how it may look, and what it could feel
like.
February 3, 1959: At 1 AM, a Cadillac is stolen in Clear Lake,
Iowa. Unknown to the thief, a set of tapes lie hidden in the trunk.
Five days later in Southern California, a drag race will decide the
fate of Buddy Holly's final recording. Will the music live or
die?This story begins the day the music died. It's like riding
shotgun in a 1950's whodunit. You can smell the fuel burning,
quench your thirst with an ice cold Coca-Cola and feel the raw
power of classic Detroit muscle screaming from the pages. The Last
Rock and Roll Show flawlessly blends the details of the fateful
night we lost some of rock's true pioneers with an original tale of
teenage dreams gone wrong. The Last Rock and Roll Show is the kind
of historical fiction music fans live for.
The Range of Reasons contributes to two debates and it does so by
bringing them together. The first is a debate in metaethics
concerning normative reasons, the considerations that serve to
justify a person's actions and attitudes. The second is a debate in
epistemology concerning the norms for belief, the standards that
govern a person's beliefs and by reference to which they are
assessed. The book starts by developing and defending a new theory
of reasons for action, that is, of practical reasons. The theory
belongs to a family that analyses reasons by appeal to the
normative notion of rightness (fittingness, correctness); it is
distinctive in making central appeal to modal notions,
specifically, that of a nearby possible world. The result is a
comprehensive framework that captures what is common to and
distinctive of reasons of various kinds: justifying and demanding;
for and against; possessed and unpossessed; objective and
subjective. The framework is then generalized to reasons for
belief, that is, to epistemic reasons, and combined with a
substantive, first-order commitment, namely that truth is the sole
right-maker for belief. The upshot is an account of the various
norms governing belief, including knowledge and rationality, and
the relations among them. According to it, the standards to which
belief is subject are various, but they are unified by an
underlying principle.
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