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Despite Asia's protracted economic troubles, the region is poised
to recover and perhaps become stronger than ever. This timely work
identifies the major challenges facing Asia's Four Tigers
(Singapore, Taiwan, South Korea, and Hong Kong), Japan, China, and
their Southeast Asian neighbors (Thailand, Indonesia, Malaysia, and
the Philippines) as the region increases it role and stature on the
world stage. Highly regarded Asia policy makers and opinion shapers
consider such key questions as: What is the appropriate response to
China's ascent? Are there prospects for U.S.-Asian partnerships (in
such areas as the environment)? Is economic cooperation between
both sides of the Pacific realistic? How can Americans gain from
Asia's attempts to rebuild her institutions? And will East Asia and
the United States adjust to a multi-polar security and economic
milieu?
Despite Asia's protracted economic troubles, the region is poised
to recover and perhaps become stronger than ever. This timely work
identifies the major challenges facing Asia's Four Tigers
(Singapore, Taiwan, South Korea, and Hong Kong), Japan, China, and
their Southeast Asian neighbors (Thailand, Indonesia, Malaysia, and
the Philippines) as the region increases it role and stature on the
world stage. Highly regarded Asia policy makers and opinion shapers
consider such key questions as: What is the appropriate response to
China's ascent? Are there prospects for U.S.-Asian partnerships (in
such areas as the environment)? Is economic cooperation between
both sides of the Pacific realistic? How can Americans gain from
Asia's attempts to rebuild her institutions? And will East Asia and
the United States adjust to a multi-polar security and economic
milieu?
The essays in this volume cover lyric, hagiography, clerical verse
narrative, frontier balladry, historical and codicological studies,
and include the draft of an unpublished essay found amongst
Professor Deyermond's papers. Professor Alan Deyermond was one of
the leading British Hispanists of the last fifty years, whose work
had a formative influence on medieval Hispanic studies around the
world. There were several tributes to his work published during his
lifetime, and it is fitting that this one, in his memory, should be
produced by Tamesis, the publishing house that he helped establish
and to which he contributed so much as author and editor right up
to his death. The contributors to this volume are some of Professor
Deyermond's former colleagues, doctoral students, and members of
the Medieval Hispanic Research Seminar. Given Professor Deyermond's
breadth of expertise, the span of the essays is appropriately wide,
ranging chronologically from the thirteenth to the sixteenth
century, and covering lyric, hagiography, clerical verse narrative,
frontier balladry, historical and codicological studies. The volume
opens with a personal memoir of her father by Ruth Deyermond, and
closes with the draft of an unpublished essay found amongst
Professor Deyermond's papers, and edited by his literary executor,
Professor David Hook. Andrew M. Beresfordis Reader and Head of
Hispanic Studies at the University of Durham. Louise M. Haywood is
Reader in Medieval Iberian Literary and Cultural Studies, and Head
of the Department of Spanish and Portuguese at the University of
Cambridge. Julian Weiss is Professor of Medieval & Early Modern
Hispanic Studies at King's College London.
An examination of the ideas of space and place as manifested in
medieval texts, art, and architecture. This interdisciplinary
collection of sixteen essays explores the significance of space and
place in Late Antique and medieval culture, as well as modern
reimaginings of medieval topographies. Its case studies draw on a
wide variety of critical approaches and cover architecture, the
visual arts (painting and manuscript illumination), epic, romance,
historiography, hagiography, cartography, travel writing, as well
as modern English poetry. Challenging simplistic binaries of East
and West, self and other, Muslim and Christian, the volume
addresses the often unexpected roles played by space and place in
the construction of individual and collective identities in
religious and secular domains. The essays move through world spaces
(mappaemundi, the exotic and the mundane East, the Mediterranean);
empires, nations, and frontier zones; cities (Avignon, Jerusalem,
and Reval); and courts, castles and the architectureof
subjectivity, closing with modern visions of the medieval world.
They explore human movement in space and the construction of time
and place in memory. Taking up pressing contemporary issues such as
nationalism, multilingualism, multiculturalism and confessional
relations, they find that medieval material provides narratives
that we can use today in our negotiations with the past. Julian
Weiss is Professor of Medieval and Early Modern Hispanic Studies,
Sarah Salih Senior Lecturer in English, at King's College London.
Contributors: Richard Talbert, Paul Freedman, Sharon Kinoshita,
Luke Sunderland, Julian Weiss, Sarah Salih, Konstantin Klein, Katie
Clark, Elizabeth Monti, Elina Gertsman, Elina Rasanen, Geoff
Rector, Nicolay Ostrau, Andrew Cowell, Joshua Davies, Chris Jones,
Matthew Francis
Unter dem Schlagwort "Medienkonvergenz" wird eine medienpolitische
Diskussion auf nationaler und europaischer Ebene um die Zukunft der
Medien- und Telekommunikationsregulierung gefuhrt. Im Rahmen einer
Gesamtbetrachtung ist es Ziel dieser Dissertation, einen Beitrag
zur Diskussion der rechtlichen Einordnung elektronischer Dienste in
bestehende Regulierungsstrukturen zu leisten. Die Arbeit analysiert
die bislang tatsachlich eingetretene Konvergenzentwicklung und
untersucht ihre Auswirkungen auf Medienpolitik und Medienrecht.
Ausgehend von der systematischen Untersuchung des
Konvergenzphanomens werden die medienpolitischen Konfliktfelder
identifiziert sowie ordnungspolitische Loesungsvorschlage
unterschiedlicher Handlungstrager dargestellt. Den Schwerpunkt der
Arbeit bildet die Untersuchung der medienrechtlichen
Abgrenzungsproblematik zwischen Internet und klassischen Medien.
Hierzu werden sowohl die verfassungsrechtlichen Vorgaben als auch
die relevanten einfachgesetzlichen Regelungswerke des deutschen
Rundfunk- und Presserechts sowie des europaischen
Gemeinschaftsrechts umfassend gepruft und diskutiert.
At a time when the discourse of a clash of civilisations has been
re-grounded anew in scaremongering and dog-whistle politics over a
Hispanic "challenge" to America and a Muslim "challenge" to
European societies, and in the context of the War on Terror and
migration panics, evocations of al-Andalus - medieval Iberia under
Islamic rule - have gained new and hotly polemic topicality,
championed and contested as either exemplary models or hoodwinking
myths. The essays in this volume explore how al-Andalus has been
transformed into a "travelling concept": that is, a place in time
that has transcended its original geographic and historical
location to become a figure of thought with global reach. They show
how Iberia's medieval past, where Islam, Judaism and Christianity
co-existed in complex, paradoxical and productive ways, has offered
individuals and communities in multiple periods and places a means
of engaging critically and imaginatively with questions of
religious pluralism, orientalism and colonialism, exile and
migration, intercultural contact and national identity. Travelling
in their turn from the medieval to the contemporary world, across
Asia, Africa, Europe and the Americas, and covering literary,
cultural and political studies, critical Muslim and Jewish studies,
they illustrate the contemporary significance of the Middle Ages as
a site for collaborative interdisciplinary thinking.
A fresh approach to the mester de clerecia, a group of narrative
poems (epics, hagiography, romances) composed in thirteenth-century
Spain by university-trained clerics for the edification and
entertainment of the predominantly illiterate laity. In the
thirteenth century, profound changes in Spanish society drove the
invention of fresh poetic forms by the new clerical class. The term
mester de clerecia (clerical ministry or service) applies to a
group of narrativepoems (epics, hagiography, romances) composed by
university-trained clerics for the edification and entertainment of
the predominantly illiterate laity. These clerics, like Gonzalo de
Berceo, understood themselves as cultural intermediaries,
transmitting wisdom and values from the past; at the same time,
they were deeply involved in some of the most contentious and
far-reaching changes in lay piety, and in economic and social
structures. The author challenges the predominantly didactic
approach to the verse, in an attempt to historicize the category of
the intellectual, as someone caught in the duality of the worlds of
contingency and absolute values. The book will have a broad appeal
to medievalists, in part because of the topics covered (feudalism,
gender, nationhood, and religion), in part because many poems are
either adaptations from French and Latin or have counterparts in
other literatures (e.g., the romances or Alexander and Apollonius,
the miracles of the Virgin Mary). JULIAN WEISS is Professor of
Medieval and Early Modern Spanish at King's College London.
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