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This book investigates how identities for West African women are
created and recreated through the broad interplay of Nollywood film
viewing on social and individual levels. Since many Nollywood films
are freely accessible online, the role of online communities
repurposes Nollywood films. Female Narratives in Nollywood
Melodramas addresses if this is a good or bad promoter of critical
consciousness, as many of the films depict the stifling of women.
The authors examine nine Nollywood melodramas through Black
feminist, cultivation, audience reception, and social identity
theories. Readers will gain an understanding of how Nollywood is a
product and contributor to evolving processes of globalization.
Recommended for scholars of film studies, communication, African
studies, and women studies.
Elizabeth Johnson's Resistance and Empowerment in Black Women's
Hair Styling develops the argument that one way Black women define
themselves and each other, is by the way they style/groom their
hair via endorsement by the media through advertisement, idealized
identification of Black female celebrities, and encouragement by
professional celebrity hair stylists who serve as change agents. As
a result, hair becomes a physical manifestation of their
self-identity, revealing a private and personal mindset. Her
research answers the following questions: What is the relationship
between Black females' choice of hairstyles/grooming and
transmitted messages of aesthetics by the dominant culture through
culturally specific magazines?; What role do the natural hair
blogs/vlogs play as a change agent in encouraging or discouraging
consumers grooming their hair in its natural state?; What impact
does a globalized consumer market of Black hair care products have
on Hispanic/Latinas and Bi-Racial women?; Are Black female
Generation Y members more likely to receive backlash for failure to
conform their hair to dominant standards in their hair adornment in
the workplace? Johnson thus demonstrates that the major concern
from messages sent to Black women about their hair is its impact on
Black identity. Thus, the goal of Black women should be to break
with hegemonic modes of seeing, thinking, and being for full
liberation. This critical and deep consciousness will debunk the
messages told to Black women that their kinky, frizzy, thick hair
is undesirable, bad, unmanageable, and shackling.
In Linguistic Landscaping and the Pacific Region: Colonization,
Indigenous Identities, and Critical Discourse Theory, Diane
Elizabeth Johnson provides four case studies, each exploring the
use of language in public spaces in an area of the Pacific in which
colonization has played a major role: Hawai'i, Aotearoa/ New
Zealand, New Caledonia, and Tahiti. Each of these studies is
informed by critical discourse theory, a theory which highlights
the ways in which hegemonic structures may be established,
reinforced, and- particularly in times of crisis-contested and
overturned. The book introduces the case studies in the context of
a parallel introduction to the Pacific region, critical discourse
theory, and research on linguistic landscapes. The critical
discussion is accessible to students and others who are approaching
these contexts and theories for the first time, while also
providing locating the author's work in relation to existing
scholarship. Johnson urges readers to listen carefully to the
voices of indigenous peoples at a time when the danger of Western
certainties has been fully exposed.
Elizabeth Johnson's Resistance and Empowerment in Black Women's
Hair Styling develops the argument that one way Black women define
themselves and each other, is by the way they style/groom their
hair via endorsement by the media through advertisement, idealized
identification of Black female celebrities, and encouragement by
professional celebrity hair stylists who serve as change agents. As
a result, hair becomes a physical manifestation of their
self-identity, revealing a private and personal mindset. Her
research answers the following questions: What is the relationship
between Black females' choice of hairstyles/grooming and
transmitted messages of aesthetics by the dominant culture through
culturally specific magazines?; What role do the natural hair
blogs/vlogs play as a change agent in encouraging or discouraging
consumers grooming their hair in its natural state?; What impact
does a globalized consumer market of Black hair care products have
on Hispanic/Latinas and Bi-Racial women?; Are Black female
Generation Y members more likely to receive backlash for failure to
conform their hair to dominant standards in their hair adornment in
the workplace? Johnson thus demonstrates that the major concern
from messages sent to Black women about their hair is its impact on
Black identity. Thus, the goal of Black women should be to break
with hegemonic modes of seeing, thinking, and being for full
liberation. This critical and deep consciousness will debunk the
messages told to Black women that their kinky, frizzy, thick hair
is undesirable, bad, unmanageable, and shackling.
This collection, marking the centenary of Avery Dulles's birth,
makes an entirely distinctive contribution to contemporary
theological discourse as we approach the second century of the
cardinal's influence, and the twenty-first of Christian witness in
the world. Moving beyond a festschrift, the volume offers both
historical analyses of Dulles's contributions and applications of
his insights and methodologies to current issues like immigration,
exclusion, and digital culture. It includes essays by Dulles's
students, colleagues, and peers, as well as by emerging scholars
who have been and continue to be indebted to his theological vision
and encyclopedic fluency in the ecclesiological developments of the
post-conciliar Church. Though focused more on Catholic and
ecumenical affairs than interreligious ones, the volume is
intentionally outward-facing and strives to make clear the diverse
and pluralistic contours of the cardinal's nearly unrivaled impact
on the North American Church, which truly crossed ideological,
denominational, and generational boundaries. While critically
recognizing the limits and lacunae of his historical moment, it
serves as one among a multitude of testaments to the notion that
the ripples of Avery Dulles's influence continue to widen toward
intellectually distant shores.
A collection of the best science and nature articles written in
2021, selected by guest editor renowned marine biologist Dr. Ayana
Elizabeth Johnson and series editor Jaime Green. Dr. Ayana
Elizabeth Johnson, renowned marine biologist and co-founder of the
All We Can Save climate initiative, compiles the best science and
nature writing of the year.
Feasting on the Gospels is a new seven-volume series that
follows up on the success of the Feasting on the Word series to
provide another unique preaching resource, this time on the most
prominent and preached upon New Testament books, the four Gospels.
With contributions from a diverse and respected group of scholars
and pastors, Feasting on the Gospels will include completely new
material that covers every single passage in the New Testament
Gospels, making it suitable for both lectionary and non-lectionary
use. Moreover, these volumes will incorporate the unique format of
Feasting on the Word, with four perspectives for preachers to
choose from for each Gospel passage: theological, pastoral,
exegetical, and homiletical. Feasting on the Gospels will provide a
special resource for all who preach, either continuously or
occasionally, on the Gospels.
The essays, research studies, and pedagogical examples in this book
provide a window into the embodied dimensions of literacy and a
toolbox for interpreting, building on, and inquiring into the range
of ways people communicate and express themselves as literate
beings. The contributors investigate and reflect on the
complexities of embodied literacies, honoring literacy learners and
teachers as they holistically engage with texts in complex
sociopolitical, historical, and cultural contexts. Considering
these issues within a multiplicity of education spaces and literacy
events inside and outside of institutional contexts, the book
offers a fresh lens and rhetoric with which to address literacy
education policies, giving readers a discursive repertoire
necessary to develop and defend responsive curricula within an
increasingly high-stakes, standardized schooling climate.
The essays, research studies, and pedagogical examples in this book
provide a window into the embodied dimensions of literacy and a
toolbox for interpreting, building on, and inquiring into the range
of ways people communicate and express themselves as literate
beings. The contributors investigate and reflect on the
complexities of embodied literacies, honoring literacy learners and
teachers as they holistically engage with texts in complex
sociopolitical, historical, and cultural contexts. Considering
these issues within a multiplicity of education spaces and literacy
events inside and outside of institutional contexts, the book
offers a fresh lens and rhetoric with which to address literacy
education policies, giving readers a discursive repertoire
necessary to develop and defend responsive curricula within an
increasingly high-stakes, standardized schooling climate.
In 1936 Keynes published the most provocative book written by any
economist of his generation. The General Theory, as it is known to
all economists, cut through all the Gordian Knots of pre-Keynesian
discussion of the trade cycle and propounded a new approach to the
determination of the level of economic activity, the problems of
employment and unemployment and the causes of inflation. Arguments
about the book continued until his death in 1946 and still continue
today. Despite all that has been written in the subsequent years,
Keynes and his book still represent the turning point between the
old economics and the new from which each generation of economists
needs to take its inspiration.
This volume, the second of six concerned with the Second World War,
provides an account of Keynes's contributions to the solution of
Britain's wartime external financial problems between 1940 and
1943. It focuses particularly on his involvement in discussions,
both in Whitehall and in Washington, concerning the operation of
the Lend Lease Agreement and the terms of post-war economic
co-operation under Article VII of that agreement. However, it also
includes records of his discussions with American economists on the
finance of the American defence effort in 1941 and his growing
concern with Britain's increasing problem of overseas indebtedness
in the sterling area.
Most of the essays in this book were first collected and published
in 1933, when Keynes had reached a turning point in a highly
successful career as an academic economist, as an official economic
advisor, opponent of the reparation imposed on Germany and critic
of the orthodox economic policies of British governments. Before
devoting himself fully to the final stages of his journey towards
The General Theory, Keynes put together these examples of one of
his favourite literary genres, the psychological portrait and
biographical sketch. With the additions made in 1951 and 1972, the
book contains almost all of Keynes's biographical writings: his
savage portraits of the architects of the Treaty of Versailles and
sketches of other politicians, including Asquith and Churchill;
some classic accounts of the lives of economists; a pair of
autobiographical memoirs; a short study of Newton; and many acute
and affectionate character sketches of friends.
This volume draws together Keynes's published and unpublished
writings on non-economic subjects. Included in full are both sides
of his correspondence as chairman of The New Statesman with
Kingsley Martin, the paper's editor, covering politics and foreign
affairs during the years 1931 to 1946. The reader will also find
manuscripts on ancient currencies, a subject that occupied much of
his time during the 1920s, his articles and reviews on the arts and
literature, and the preface written jointly with Piero Sraffia to
the 1938 facsimile edition of the Abstract of Hume's Treatise on
Human Nature.
This volume, containing papers written by Keynes, in the course of
his various activities, is chiefly concerned with his work down to
the outbreak of war in 1914 on problems of Indian currency and
especially with the part that he played in influencing and shaping
the report of the (Austen Chamberlain) Royal Commission on Indian
Finance and Currency. The papers show the young Keynes (he was
under 30 when appointed) with a complete mastery not only of the
broad and academic principles but also, as throughout his life, of
the details, holding his own in debate with the acknowledged
authorities and securing his main objectives, thanks largely to his
indefatigable capacity for quick yet elegant and lucid
draftsmanship. This volume is a necessary companion to his own
Indian Currency and Finance (Volume 1 in this series).
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