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The bestselling memoir by France's president, Emmanuel Macron. Some
believe that our country is in decline, that the worst is yet to
come, that our civilisation is withering away. That only isolation
or civil strife are on our horizon. That to protect ourselves from
the great transformations taking place around the globe, we should
go back in time and apply the recipes of the last century. Others
imagine that France can continue on a slow downward slide. That the
game of political juggling - first the Left, then the Right - will
allow us breathing space. The same faces and the same people who
have been around for so long. I am convinced that they are all
wrong. It is their models, their recipes, that have simply failed.
France as a whole has not failed. In Revolution, Emmanuel Macron,
the youngest president in the history of France, reveals his
personal history and his inspirations, and discusses his vision of
France and its future in a new world that is undergoing a 'great
transformation' that has not been experienced since the invention
of the printing press and the Renaissance. This is a remarkable
book that seeks to lay the foundations for a new society - a
compelling testimony and statement of values by an important
political leader who has become the flag-bearer for a new kind of
politics.
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Law by Night
Jonathan Goldberg-Hiller
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R3,104
Discovery Miles 31 040
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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In Law by Night Jonathan Goldberg-Hiller asks what we can learn
about modern law and its authority by understanding how it operates
in the dark of night. He outlines how the social experience and
cultural meanings of night promote racialized and gender violence,
but also make possible freedom of movement for marginalized groups
that might be otherwise unavailable during the day. Examining
nighttime racial violence, curfews, gun ownership, the right to
sleep, and “take back the night” rallies, Goldberg-Hiller
demonstrates that liberal legal doctrine lacks a theory of the
night that accounts for a nocturnal politics that has historically
allowed violence to persist. By locating the law’s nocturnal
limits, Goldberg-Hiller enriches understandings of how the law
reinforces hierarchies of race and gender and foregrounds the
night’s potential to enliven a more egalitarian social life.
First published in 1986, this title examines a set of English
Renaissance texts by Shakespeare, Spenser, Herbert, Marvell and
Milton, within the theoretic framework of postmodern thought.
Following an opening chapter that argues for the value of this
conjunction as a way of understanding literary history, subsequent
chapters draw upon Jacques Derrida s deconstruction of
photocentrism and Jacques Lacan s analysis of the agency of the
letter to offer fully theorized readings. Throughout, there is a
sustained concern with the transformations of such Ovidian figures
as Narcissus and Echo, Perseus and Medusa, Orpheus and Eurydice,
and with the echo effects of Virgilian pastoral, as paradigms for
the interplay of voice and writing. "
The relationship between politics and storytelling is one with a
well-established lineage, but public policy analysis has only
recently begun to develop its own appreciation of the power of
narrative to explain everything from political traditions to
cyberspace. This unique collection of original essays helps further
that project by surveying stories of and about all kinds of
American politics--from welfare, race, and immigration; to
workfare, jobs, and education; to gay rights, national security,
and the American Dream in an age of economic globalization.
"Reclaiming Sodom" surveys how the view of homosexual activities as
socially dangerous has been perpetuated by the state, the church,
the law and other institutions. The collection covers a wide range,
from biblical scholarship, to the legal mobilization towards the
catagory of sodomy in 18th- and 19th-century England, to an
analysis of the ways in which the Judeo-Christian tradition has
shaped anthropological accounts of same-sex practices of
non-western people. This text explores alternatives to the force of
the Sodomitic biblical narrative in Islamic, western and
non-western traditions, and discusses ways in which sodomy calls
into question definitions of gender and sexuality. The collection
examines the relations between sex/gender identities and sexual
acts, and argues for the political usefulness of both Sodom and
sodomy. It makes a contribution to literature on sexuality and
gender, as well as the nature of sex in our culture.
Being of Two Minds examines the place that early modern literature
held in Modernist literary criticism. For T. S. Eliot, Virginia
Woolf, and William Empson, the early modern period helps model a
literary future. At stake in their engagements across time were
ontological questions about literature and its ability to mediate
between the one and the many, the particular and the general, life
and death, the past and the present. If reading and writing
literature enables the mind to be in two places at once, creative
experience serves as a way to participate in an expanded field of
consciousness alongside mortality. Goldberg reads the readings that
these modernists performed on texts that Eliot claimed for the
canon like the metaphysical poets and Jacobean dramatists, but also
Shakespeare, Milton, Montaigne, and Margaret Cavendish. Ontological
concerns are reflected in Eliot's engagement with Aristotle's
theory of the soul and Empson's Buddhism. These arguments about
being affect minds and bodies and call into question sexual
normativity: Eliot glances at a sodomitical male-male mode of
literary transmission; Woolf produces a Judith Shakespeare to model
androgynous being; Empson refuses to distinguish activity from
passivity to rewrite gender difference. The work of one of our
leading literary and cultural critics, Being of Two Minds spans
centuries to show how the most compelling and surprising ideas
about mind, experience, and existence not only move between early
modernity, high modernism, and our own moment, but are also
constituted through that very movement between times and minds.
The title of this book translates one of the many ways in which
Lucretius names the basic matter from which the world is made in De
rerum natura. In Lucretius, and in the strain of thought followed
in this study, matter is always in motion, always differing from
itself and yet always also made of the same stuff. From the pious
Lucy Hutchinson's all but complete translation of the Roman epic
poem to Margaret Cavendish's repudiation of atomism (but not of its
fundamental problematic of sameness and difference), a central
concern of this book is how a thoroughgoing materialism can be read
alongside other strains in the thought of the early modern period,
particularly Christianity. A chapter moves from Milton's monism to
his angels and their insistent corporeality. Milton's angels have
sex, and, throughout, this study emphasizes the consequences for
thinking about sexuality offered by Lucretian materialism. Sameness
of matter is not simply a question of same-sex sex, and the
relations of atoms in Cavendish and Hutchinson are replicated in
the terms in which they imagine marriages of partners who are also
their doubles. Likewise, Spenser's knights in the 1590 Faerie
Queene pursue the virtues of Holiness, Temperance, and Chastity in
quests that take the reader on a path of askesis of the kind that
Lucretius recommends and that Foucault studied in the final volumes
of his history of sexuality. Although English literature is the
book's main concern, it first contemplates relations between
Lucretian matter and Pauline flesh by way of Tintoretto's painting
The Conversion of St. Paul. Theoretical issues raised in the work
of Agamben and Badiou, among others, lead to a chapter that takes
up the role that Lucretius has played in theory, from Bergson and
Marx to Foucault and Deleuze. This study should be of concern to
students of religion, philosophy, gender, and sexuality, especially
as they impinge on questions of representation.
In a set of readings ranging from early-sixteenth- through
late-seventeenth-century texts, this book aims to resituate women's
writing in the English Renaissance by studying the possibilities
available to these writers by virtue of their positions in their
culture and by their articulation of a variety of desires
(including the desire to write) not bound by the usual
prescriptions that limited women.
The book is in three parts. The first part begins by pursuing
linkages between feminine virtue and the canonical status of texts
written by women of the period. It then confronts some received
opinions and opens up new possibilities of evaluation through
readings of Aemelia Lanyer's "Salve Deus Rex Judaeorum" and poems,
plays, and fiction by Aphra Behn. The second part studies
translation as an allowed (and therefore potentially devalued)
sphere for women's writing, and offers accounts of Margaret Roper's
translation of Erasmus and Mary Sidney's of Petrarch to show ways
in which such work makes a central claim in Renaissance culture. In
the third part, the author explores the thematics and practices of
writing as exemplified in the women's hands in an early Tudor
manuscript and through the character of Graphina in Elizabeth
Cary's "Mariam."
Throughout, possibilities for these writers are seen to arise from
the conjunction of their gender with their status as aristocrats or
from their proximity to centers of power, even if this involves the
"debasement" of prostitution for Lanyer or the perils of the
marketplace for Behn. The author argues that moves outside the
restriction of domesticity opened up opportunities for affirming
female sexuality and for a range of desires not confined to
marriage and procreation--desires that move across race in
"Oroonoko"; that imagine female same-gender relations, often in
proximity to male desires directed at other men; that implicate
incestuous desires, even inflecting them anally, as in Roper's
"Devout Treatise."
In a set of readings ranging from early-sixteenth- through
late-seventeenth-century texts, this book aims to resituate women's
writing in the English Renaissance by studying the possibilities
available to these writers by virtue of their positions in their
culture and by their articulation of a variety of desires
(including the desire to write) not bound by the usual
prescriptions that limited women.
The book is in three parts. The first part begins by pursuing
linkages between feminine virtue and the canonical status of texts
written by women of the period. It then confronts some received
opinions and opens up new possibilities of evaluation through
readings of Aemelia Lanyer's "Salve Deus Rex Judaeorum" and poems,
plays, and fiction by Aphra Behn. The second part studies
translation as an allowed (and therefore potentially devalued)
sphere for women's writing, and offers accounts of Margaret Roper's
translation of Erasmus and Mary Sidney's of Petrarch to show ways
in which such work makes a central claim in Renaissance culture. In
the third part, the author explores the thematics and practices of
writing as exemplified in the women's hands in an early Tudor
manuscript and through the character of Graphina in Elizabeth
Cary's "Mariam."
Throughout, possibilities for these writers are seen to arise from
the conjunction of their gender with their status as aristocrats or
from their proximity to centers of power, even if this involves the
"debasement" of prostitution for Lanyer or the perils of the
marketplace for Behn. The author argues that moves outside the
restriction of domesticity opened up opportunities for affirming
female sexuality and for a range of desires not confined to
marriage and procreation--desires that move across race in
"Oroonoko"; that imagine female same-gender relations, often in
proximity to male desires directed at other men; that implicate
incestuous desires, even inflecting them anally, as in Roper's
"Devout Treatise."
Worldmaking takes many forms in early modern literature and thus
challenges any single interpretive approach. The essays in this
collection investigate the material stuff of the world in Spenser,
Cary, and Marlowe; the sociable bonds of authorship, sexuality, and
sovereignty in Shakespeare and others; and the universal status of
spirit, gender, and empire in the worlds of Vaughan, Donne, and the
dastan (tale) of Chouboli, a Rajasthani princess. Together, these
essays make the case that to address what it takes to make a world
in the early modern period requires the kinds of thinking
exemplified by theory.
Based on a novel by Patricia Highsmith, Alfred Hitchcock's 1951
thriller 'Strangers on a Train' is about two men who meet on a
train: one is a man of high social standing who wishes to divorce
his unfaithful wife; the other is an enigmatic bachelor with an
overbearing father. Together they enter into a murder plot that
binds them to one another, with fatal consequences.
Being of Two Minds examines the place that early modern literature
held in Modernist literary criticism. For T. S. Eliot, Virginia
Woolf, and William Empson, the early modern period helps model a
literary future. At stake in their engagements across time were
ontological questions about literature and its ability to mediate
between the one and the many, the particular and the general, life
and death, the past and the present. If reading and writing
literature enables the mind to be in two places at once, creative
experience serves as a way to participate in an expanded field of
consciousness alongside mortality. Goldberg reads the readings that
these modernists performed on texts that Eliot claimed for the
canon like the metaphysical poets and Jacobean dramatists, but also
Shakespeare, Milton, Montaigne, and Margaret Cavendish. Ontological
concerns are reflected in Eliot's engagement with Aristotle's
theory of the soul and Empson's Buddhism. These arguments about
being affect minds and bodies and call into question sexual
normativity: Eliot glances at a sodomitical male-male mode of
literary transmission; Woolf produces a Judith Shakespeare to model
androgynous being; Empson refuses to distinguish activity from
passivity to rewrite gender difference. The work of one of our
leading literary and cultural critics, Being of Two Minds spans
centuries to show how the most compelling and surprising ideas
about mind, experience, and existence not only move between early
modernity, high modernism, and our own moment, but are also
constituted through that very movement between times and minds.
|
Paradise Lost (Paperback)
John Milton; Edited by Stephen Orgel, Jonathan Goldberg
|
R268
R222
Discovery Miles 2 220
Save R46 (17%)
|
Ships in 9 - 15 working days
|
'Of man's first disobedience, and the fruit Of that forbidden tree,
whose mortal taste Brought death into the world... Sing heavenly
muse' From almost the moment of its first publication in 1667,
Paradise Lost was considered a classic. It is difficult now to
appreciate both how audacious an undertaking it represents, and how
astonishing its immediate and continued success was. Over the
course of twelve books Milton wrote an epic poem that would
'justify the ways of God to men', a mission that required a complex
drama whose source is both historical and deeply personal. The
struggle for ascendancy between God and Satan is played out across
hell, heaven, and earth but the consequences of the Fall are all
too humanly tragic - pride, ambition, and aspiration the motivating
forces. In this new edition derived from their acclaimed Oxford
Authors text, Stephen Orgel and Jonathan Goldberg discuss the
complexity of Milton's poem in a new introduction, and on-page
notes explain its language and allusions. ABOUT THE SERIES: For
over 100 years Oxford World's Classics has made available the
widest range of literature from around the globe. Each affordable
volume reflects Oxford's commitment to scholarship, providing the
most accurate text plus a wealth of other valuable features,
including expert introductions by leading authorities, helpful
notes to clarify the text, up-to-date bibliographies for further
study, and much more.
Worldmaking takes many forms in early modern literature and thus
challenges any single interpretive approach. The essays in this
collection investigate the material stuff of the world in Spenser,
Cary, and Marlowe; the sociable bonds of authorship, sexuality, and
sovereignty in Shakespeare and others; and the universal status of
spirit, gender, and empire in the worlds of Vaughan, Donne, and the
dastan (tale) of Chouboli, a Rajasthani princess. Together, these
essays make the case that to address what it takes to make a world
in the early modern period requires the kinds of thinking
exemplified by theory.
Saint Marks invokes and pluralizes the figure of Mark in order to
explore relations between painting and writing. Emphasizing that
the saint is not a singular biographical individual in the various
biblical and hagiographic texts that involve someone so named, the
book takes as its ultimate concern the kinds of material life that
outlive the human subject. From the incommensurate, anachronic
instances in which Saint Mark can be located-among them, as
Evangelist or as patron saint of Venice-the book traces Mark's
afterlives within art, sacred texts, and literature in conversation
with such art historians and philosophers as Aby Warburg, Giorgio
Agamben, Georges Didi-Huberman, T. J. Clark, Adrian Stokes, and
Jean-Luc Nancy. Goldberg begins in sixteenth-century Venice, with a
series of paintings by Gentile and Giovanni Bellini, Tintoretto,
and others, that have virtually nothing to do with biblical texts.
He turns then to the legacy of John Ruskin's Stones of Venice and
through it to questions about what painting does as painting. A
final chapter turns to ancient texts, considering the Gospel of St.
Mark together with its double, the so-called Secret Gospel that has
occasioned controversy for its homoerotic implications. The
posthumous persistence of a life is what the gospel named Mark
calls the Kingdom of God. Saints have posthumous lives; but so too
do paintings and texts. This major interdisciplinary study by one
of our most astute cultural critics extends what might have been a
purely theological subject to embrace questions central to cultural
practice from the ancient world to the present.
The title of this book translates one of the many ways in which
Lucretius names the basic matter from which the world is made in De
rerum natura. In Lucretius, and in the strain of thought followed
in this study, matter is always in motion, always differing from
itself and yet always also made of the same stuff. From the pious
Lucy Hutchinson's all but complete translation of the Roman epic
poem to Margaret Cavendish's repudiation of atomism (but not of its
fundamental problematic of sameness and difference), a central
concern of this book is how a thoroughgoing materialism can be read
alongside other strains in the thought of the early modern period,
particularly Christianity. A chapter moves from Milton's monism to
his angels and their insistent corporeality. Milton's angels have
sex, and, throughout, this study emphasizes the consequences for
thinking about sexuality offered by Lucretian materialism. Sameness
of matter is not simply a question of same-sex sex, and the
relations of atoms in Cavendish and Hutchinson are replicated in
the terms in which they imagine marriages of partners who are also
their doubles. Likewise, Spenser's knights in the 1590 Faerie
Queene pursue the virtues of Holiness, Temperance, and Chastity in
quests that take the reader on a path of askesis of the kind that
Lucretius recommends and that Foucault studied in the final volumes
of his history of sexuality. Although English literature is the
book's main concern, it first contemplates relations between
Lucretian matter and Pauline flesh by way of Tintoretto's painting
The Conversion of St. Paul. Theoretical issues raised in the work
of Agamben and Badiou, among others, lead to a chapter that takes
up the role that Lucretius has played in theory, from Bergson and
Marx to Foucault and Deleuze. This study should be of concern to
students of religion, philosophy, gender, and sexuality, especially
as they impinge on questions of representation.
|
The Major Works (Paperback)
John Milton; Edited by Stephen Orgel, Jonathan Goldberg
|
R475
R403
Discovery Miles 4 030
Save R72 (15%)
|
Ships in 9 - 15 working days
|
This authoritative edition was originally published in the
acclaimed Oxford Authors series under the general editorship of
Frank Kermode. It brings together a unique combination of Milton's
poetry and prose - all the English verse together with a generous
selection from the major prose writings - to give the essence of
his work and thinking. Milton's influence on English poetry and
criticism has been incalculable, and this edition covers the full
range of his poetic and political output. It includes Paradise
Lost, Paradise Regained, and Samson Agonistes as well as major
prose works such as Areopagitica and The Tenure of Kings and
Magistrates. As well as all the English and Italian verse, the
volume includes most of the Latin and Greek verse in parallel
translation. Spelling has been modernized, and the poems are
arranged in order of publication, essential to an understanding of
the progress of Milton's career in relation to the political and
religious upheavals of his time. The extensive notes cover syntax,
vocabulary, historical context, and biblical and classical
allusions. The introduction traces both Milton's changing
conception of his own vocation, and the critical reception his work
has received over the past four centuries. ABOUT THE SERIES: For
over 100 years Oxford World's Classics has made available the
widest range of literature from around the globe. Each affordable
volume reflects Oxford's commitment to scholarship, providing the
most accurate text plus a wealth of other valuable features,
including expert introductions by leading authorities, helpful
notes to clarify the text, up-to-date bibliographies for further
study, and much more.
Catherine Malabou's concept of plasticity has influenced and
inspired scholars from across disciplines. The contributors to
Plastic Materialities-whose fields include political philosophy,
critical legal studies, social theory, literature, and
philosophy-use Malabou's innovative combination of
post-structuralism and neuroscience to evaluate the political
implications of her work. They address, among other things,
subjectivity, science, war, the malleability of sexuality,
neoliberalism and economic theory, indigenous and racial politics,
and the relationship between the human and non-human. Plastic
Materialities also includes three essays by Malabou and an
interview with her, all of which bring her work into conversation
with issues of sovereignty, justice, and social order for the first
time. Contributors. Brenna Bhandar, Silvana Carotenuto, Jonathan
Goldberg-Hiller, Jairus Victor Grove, Catherine Kellogg, Catherine
Malabou, Renisa Mawani, Fred Moten, Alain Pottage, Michael J.
Shapiro, Alberto Toscano
Saint Marks invokes and pluralizes the figure of Mark in order to
explore relations between painting and writing. Emphasizing that
the saint is not a singular biographical individual in the various
biblical and hagiographic texts that involve someone so named, the
book takes as its ultimate concern the kinds of material life that
outlive the human subject. From the incommensurate, anachronic
instances in which Saint Mark can be located-among them, as
Evangelist or as patron saint of Venice-the book traces Mark's
afterlives within art, sacred texts, and literature in conversation
with such art historians and philosophers as Aby Warburg, Giorgio
Agamben, Georges Didi-Huberman, T. J. Clark, Adrian Stokes, and
Jean-Luc Nancy. Goldberg begins in sixteenth-century Venice, with a
series of paintings by Gentile and Giovanni Bellini, Tintoretto,
and others, that have virtually nothing to do with biblical texts.
He turns then to the legacy of John Ruskin's Stones of Venice and
through it to questions about what painting does as painting. A
final chapter turns to ancient texts, considering the Gospel of St.
Mark together with its double, the so-called Secret Gospel that has
occasioned controversy for its homoerotic implications. The
posthumous persistence of a life is what the gospel named Mark
calls the Kingdom of God. Saints have posthumous lives; but so too
do paintings and texts. This major interdisciplinary study by one
of our most astute cultural critics extends what might have been a
purely theological subject to embrace questions central to cultural
practice from the ancient world to the present.
Catherine Malabou's concept of plasticity has influenced and
inspired scholars from across disciplines. The contributors to
Plastic Materialities-whose fields include political philosophy,
critical legal studies, social theory, literature, and
philosophy-use Malabou's innovative combination of
post-structuralism and neuroscience to evaluate the political
implications of her work. They address, among other things,
subjectivity, science, war, the malleability of sexuality,
neoliberalism and economic theory, indigenous and racial politics,
and the relationship between the human and non-human. Plastic
Materialities also includes three essays by Malabou and an
interview with her, all of which bring her work into conversation
with issues of sovereignty, justice, and social order for the first
time. Contributors. Brenna Bhandar, Silvana Carotenuto, Jonathan
Goldberg-Hiller, Jairus Victor Grove, Catherine Kellogg, Catherine
Malabou, Renisa Mawani, Fred Moten, Alain Pottage, Michael J.
Shapiro, Alberto Toscano
|
Law by Night
Jonathan Goldberg-Hiller
|
R750
Discovery Miles 7 500
|
Ships in 9 - 15 working days
|
In Law by Night Jonathan Goldberg-Hiller asks what we can learn
about modern law and its authority by understanding how it operates
in the dark of night. He outlines how the social experience and
cultural meanings of night promote racialized and gender violence,
but also make possible freedom of movement for marginalized groups
that might be otherwise unavailable during the day. Examining
nighttime racial violence, curfews, gun ownership, the right to
sleep, and “take back the night” rallies, Goldberg-Hiller
demonstrates that liberal legal doctrine lacks a theory of the
night that accounts for a nocturnal politics that has historically
allowed violence to persist. By locating the law’s nocturnal
limits, Goldberg-Hiller enriches understandings of how the law
reinforces hierarchies of race and gender and foregrounds the
night’s potential to enliven a more egalitarian social life.
Offering a new queer theorization of melodrama, Jonathan Goldberg
explores the ways melodramatic film and literature provide an
aesthetics of impossibility. Focused on the notion of what Douglas
Sirk termed the "impossible situation" in melodrama, such as
impasses in sexual relations that are not simply reflections of
social taboo and prohibitions, Goldberg pursues films by Rainer
Werner Fassbinder and Todd Haynes that respond to Sirk's prompt.
His analysis hones in on melodrama's original definition--a form
combining music and drama--as he explores the use of melodrama in
Beethoven's opera Fidelio, films by Alfred Hitchcock, and fiction
by Willa Cather and Patricia Highsmith, including her Ripley
novels. Goldberg illuminates how music and sound provide queer ways
to promote identifications that exceed the bounds of the identity
categories meant to regulate social life. The interaction of
musical, dramatic, and visual elements gives melodrama its
indeterminacy, making it resistant to normative forms of value and
a powerful tool for creating new potentials.
|
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