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Showing 1 - 4 of 4 matches in All Departments
This book writes itself off the guide map of familiar literary
forms and melts down conceptual barriers, offering a new kind of
reading and thinking experience as it tells the life and travel
stories of fascinating women and examines women's physical mobility
in a culture of gendered, postcolonial space that restricts their
movement. Straddling the divide between fiction and scholarship, it
combines fictional narrative, contemplation, theoretical thinking,
scholarly discussion, and interviews. The book examines and crosses
boundaries on various ontological levels--between genders,
languages, historical epochs, and literary genres--as it questions
reality, identity, knowledge, culture, truth, and mind.
This book writes itself off the guide map of familiar literary
forms and melts down conceptual barriers, offering a new kind of
reading and thinking experience as it tells the life and travel
stories of fascinating women and examines women's physical mobility
in a culture of gendered, postcolonial space that restricts their
movement. Straddling the divide between fiction and scholarship, it
combines fictional narrative, contemplation, theoretical thinking,
scholarly discussion, and interviews. The book examines and crosses
boundaries on various ontological levels--between genders,
languages, historical epochs, and literary genres--as it questions
reality, identity, knowledge, culture, truth, and mind.
A new moral theory from an Israeli philosopher and activist emphasizing the existential and political nature of evil. What remains of moral judgment when truth itself is mistrusted, when the validity of every belief system depends on its context, when power and knowledge are inextricably entangled? Is a viable moral theory still possible in the wake of the postmodern criticism of modern philosophyThe Order of Evils responds directly to these questions and dilemmas with one simple and brilliant change of focus. Rather than concentrating on the age-old themes of justice and freedom, Adi Ophir offers a moral theory that emphasizes the existential and political nature of evil. Ophir's main contention is that evil is neither a diabolical element residing in the hearts of men nor a meaningless absence of the good. Rather, it is the socially structured order of "superfluous evils." Evils, like pain, suffering, loss, and humiliation, are superfluous when they could have been-but were not-prevented. Through close analysis of seminal works by modern and postmodern philosophers-from Rousseau, Kant, Marx, Sartre, and Arendt to Foucault, Levinas, Derrida, and Lyotard-Ophir forges a new perspective for thinking about what it means to be a moral being: to be moral, he argues, is to care for others, and to be committed to preventing, at all costs, their suffering and distress. A theoretically sophisticated work, The Order of Evils also bears the traces of Ophir's own political and personal experiences as an Israeli philosopher and activist. Two major events in recent Jewish history have profoundly influenced his thinking: the Holocaust and the prolonged Israeli domination of Palestinians in the Occupied Territories. Ophir does not compare the two events. Instead, he introduces a typology of disasters that allows them to be located within the wide spectrum of humanly generated calamities whose specificity and general patterns emerge clearly and distinctly as what they are and are not.
"Of all the crimes to which Palestinians have been subjected through a century of bitter tragedy, perhaps none are more cruel than the silencing of their voices. The suffering has been most extreme, criminal, and grotesque in Gaza, where Ghada Ageel was one of the victims from childhood. This collection of essays is a poignant cry for justice, far too long delayed." -Noam Chomsky There are more than two sides to the conflict between Palestine and Israel. There are millions. Millions of lives, voices, and stories behind the enduring struggle in Israel and Palestine. Yet, the easy binary of Palestine vs. Israel on which the media so often relies for context effectively silences the lived experiences of people affected by the strife. Ghada Ageel sought leading experts-Palestinian and Israeli, academic and activist-to gather stories that humanize the historic processes of occupation, displacement, colonization, and, most controversially, apartheid. Historians, scholars and students of colonialism and Israel-Palestine studies, and anyone interested in more nuanced debate, will want to read this book. Contributors: Yasmeen Abu-Laban, Ghada Ageel, Huwaida Arraf, Abigail B. Bakan, Ramzy Baroud, Samar El-Bekai, James Cairns, Edward C. Corrigan, Susan Ferguson, Keith Hammond, Rela Mazali, Sherene Razack, Tali Shapiro, Reem Skeik, Rafeef Ziadah.
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