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Globalization has pushed China and India to the centre of the stage
but what has been the impact on workers in these countries? This
book demonstrates the complexity of the processes and responses at
play. There are signs that both states are shifting their role in a
'counter movement from above'. But will this be enough to quell the
social unrest?
In this book, twelve regional chapters, encompassing all of the
major regions of the world, provide a global dialogue on
globalization. The authors provide much-needed new perspectives on
how we should think about globalization, its impacts and forms of
resistance and response. By grounding their analyses in the
experience of particular regions, the chapters reveal the varied
meanings and effects of globalization.
This book brings together authors from eleven countries to analyze
and reflect on what globalization means to them. Does it mean the
same in Russia as it does in the U.S.? The same in China as in
South Africa? This book provides a global dialogue on globalization
and brings much-needed new perspectives on how to think about one
of the most important processes of our time.
As Japan comes to grips with a decade of economic malaise after its
spectacular post-war growth record, how will Japanese society
react? Contributors to this volume examine the challenges ahead for
Japan in the fields of politics, economics, sociology, environment
and business. This multidisciplinary inquiry looks for areas of
continuity and for new directions in government, business and
social policy and practice. Also examined is how Western students
should approach the study of Japan; what new directions should
institutions take to ensure that students learn about the real'
Japan? Written by Canadian academics, the articles in this volume
will be of interest to academics and policy-makers studying or
teaching about contemporary Japan.
As Japan comes to grips with a decade of economic malaise after its
spectacular post-war growth record, how will Japanese society
react? Contributors to this volume examine the challenges ahead for
Japan in the fields of politics, economics, sociology, environment
and business. This multidisciplinary inquiry looks for areas of
continuity and for new directions in government, business and
social policy and practice. Also examined is how Western students
should approach the study of Japan; what new directions should
institutions take to ensure that students learn about the real'
Japan? Written by Canadian academics, the articles in this volume
will be of interest to academics and policy-makers studying or
teaching about contemporary Japan.
Globalization has pushed China and India to the centre of the stage
but what has been the impact on workers in these countries? This
book demonstrates the complexity of the processes and responses at
play. There are signs that both states are shifting their role in a
'counter movement from above'. But will this be enough to quell the
social unrest?
In 1972 the artist Adrian Piper began periodically dressing as a
persona called the Mythic Being, striding the streets of New York
in a mustache, Afro wig, and mirrored sunglasses with a cigar in
the corner of her mouth. Her Mythic Being performances critically
engaged with popular representations of race, gender, sexuality,
and class; they challenged viewers to accept personal
responsibility for xenophobia and discrimination and the conditions
that allowed them to persist. Piper's work confronts viewers and
forces them to reconsider assumptions about the social construction
of identity. "Adrian Piper: Race, Gender, and Embodiment" is an
in-depth analysis of this pioneering artist's work, illustrated
with more than ninety images, including twenty-one in color.
Over the course of a decade, John P. Bowles and Piper conversed
about her art and its meaning, reception, and relation to her
scholarship on Kant's philosophy. Drawing on those conversations,
Bowles locates Piper's work at the nexus of Conceptual and feminist
art of the late 1960s and 1970s. Piper was the only African
American woman associated with the Conceptual artists of the 1960s
and one of only a few African Americans to participate in
exhibitions of the nascent feminist art movement in the early
1970s. Bowles contends that Piper's work is ultimately about our
responsibility for the world in which we live.
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