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Teaching Double Negatives: Disadvantage and Dissent at Community
College asks whether exploring narratives that subvert dominant
Western paradigms of progress in classrooms enables students to
re-narrate and represent their lives. In seven years of teaching
literature and philosophy at Brooklyn's only community college,
Robert Cowan worked with many kinds of disadvantaged students-those
on welfare or homeless, single moms and the formerly incarcerated,
traumatized war veterans, and immigrants from over 140 countries.
These students had many reasons for wanting to dissent from the
social norms that sought to define and marginalize them. One might
imagine that disadvantaged students would identify with texts that
are subversive, challenge dominant race/class/gender paradigms, and
try to interrogate the globalized systems in which we live. But do
they? Do the philosophies of Debord and Heidegger, the novels of
Christa Wolf and Jean Genet, contemporary slave narratives and Dead
Kennedys lyrics, poetry by Aime Cesiare and Taliban fighters,
actually speak to them? Can you teach dissent to the disadvantaged
and produce a positive result? Teaching Double Negatives explores
the responses of students to texts from a variety of traditions and
time-periods within the context of overarching theoretical debates
about counter-enlightenment, globalization, multiculturalism,
identification, recognition, and critical pedagogy. Teaching Double
Negatives is an insightful collection that problematizes the
assumptions of instructors and powerfully engages the
intersectionality of students, appealing to readers across the
educational spectrum.
Teaching Double Negatives: Disadvantage and Dissent at Community
College asks whether exploring narratives that subvert dominant
Western paradigms of progress in classrooms enables students to
re-narrate and represent their lives. In seven years of teaching
literature and philosophy at Brooklyn's only community college,
Robert Cowan worked with many kinds of disadvantaged students-those
on welfare or homeless, single moms and the formerly incarcerated,
traumatized war veterans, and immigrants from over 140 countries.
These students had many reasons for wanting to dissent from the
social norms that sought to define and marginalize them. One might
imagine that disadvantaged students would identify with texts that
are subversive, challenge dominant race/class/gender paradigms, and
try to interrogate the globalized systems in which we live. But do
they? Do the philosophies of Debord and Heidegger, the novels of
Christa Wolf and Jean Genet, contemporary slave narratives and Dead
Kennedys lyrics, poetry by Aime Cesiare and Taliban fighters,
actually speak to them? Can you teach dissent to the disadvantaged
and produce a positive result? Teaching Double Negatives explores
the responses of students to texts from a variety of traditions and
time-periods within the context of overarching theoretical debates
about counter-enlightenment, globalization, multiculturalism,
identification, recognition, and critical pedagogy. Teaching Double
Negatives is an insightful collection that problematizes the
assumptions of instructors and powerfully engages the
intersectionality of students, appealing to readers across the
educational spectrum.
We are frequently confronted with arguments. Arguments are attempts
to persuade us - to influence our beliefs and actions - by giving
us reasons to believe this or that. Critical Thinking: A Concise
Guide will equip students with the concepts and techniques used in
the identification, analysis and assessment of arguments whatever
the subject matter or context. Through precise and accessible
discussion, this book provides the tools to become a successful
critical thinker, one who can act and believe in accordance with
good reasons, and who can articulate and make explicit those
reasons. Key topics discussed include: Core concepts in
argumentation How language can serve to obscure or conceal the real
content of arguments How to distinguish argumentation from rhetoric
How to avoid common confusions surrounding words such as 'truth',
'knowledge' and 'opinion' How to identify and evaluate the most
common types of argument How to distinguish good reasoning from bad
in terms of deductive validity and induction. This fifth edition
has been revised and extensively updated throughout, including a
significantly expanded range of 'complete examples', the
introduction of Venn diagrams and the discussion of fake news and
related phenomena arising in the contemporary scene. The dynamic
Routledge Critical Thinking companion website provides thoroughly
updated resources for both instructors and students, including new
examples and case studies, flashcards, sample questions, practice
questions and answers, student activities and a testbank of
questions for use in the classroom. Visit
www.routledge.com/cw/bowell.
We are frequently confronted with arguments. Arguments are attempts
to persuade us - to influence our beliefs and actions - by giving
us reasons to believe this or that. Critical Thinking: A Concise
Guide will equip students with the concepts and techniques used in
the identification, analysis and assessment of arguments whatever
the subject matter or context. Through precise and accessible
discussion, this book provides the tools to become a successful
critical thinker, one who can act and believe in accordance with
good reasons, and who can articulate and make explicit those
reasons. Key topics discussed include: Core concepts in
argumentation How language can serve to obscure or conceal the real
content of arguments How to distinguish argumentation from rhetoric
How to avoid common confusions surrounding words such as 'truth',
'knowledge' and 'opinion' How to identify and evaluate the most
common types of argument How to distinguish good reasoning from bad
in terms of deductive validity and induction. This fifth edition
has been revised and extensively updated throughout, including a
significantly expanded range of 'complete examples', the
introduction of Venn diagrams and the discussion of fake news and
related phenomena arising in the contemporary scene. The dynamic
Routledge Critical Thinking companion website provides thoroughly
updated resources for both instructors and students, including new
examples and case studies, flashcards, sample questions, practice
questions and answers, student activities and a testbank of
questions for use in the classroom. Visit
www.routledge.com/cw/bowell.
Statius' Achilleid is perhaps the most remarkable of all Latin epic
poems. Its project - to tell the whole life of Achilles - was cut
short by the poet's untimely death. Yet the completed first book
and the earliest part of the second have a charm and freshness
matched only in some of Ovid's most lively and engaging work. The
poem tells how the sea-nymph Thetis, in a vain attempt to save her
son from his destined end in the Trojan war, hid him on the island
of Scyros, disguised as a girl. There he fell in love with the
beautiful Deidamia, but at the same time, with the idea of glory in
war. His feminine disguise was eventually penetrated by Ulysses and
Diomedes, who tricked him into exposure of his truly warlike
aspirations. In relating this story Statius explores the nature of
gender and the limits of the epic genre, while playfully and
wittily positioning himself in the epic - and wider - poetic
tradition. These themes are explored in a new introduction by
Robert Cowan, which surveys the latest research on the poem. Its
assessment, very much in the modern critical manner, contrasts with
and complements the traditional textual and philological commentary
by O.A.W. Dilke. The combination of these two distinct approaches
will assist undergraduates and postgraduates in reading the text,
and, at the same time, it will provide a valuable resource for the
more advanced scholar.
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Satires and Epistles (Paperback)
Horace; Translated by John Davie; Introduction by Robert Cowan; Notes by Robert Cowan
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R296
R236
Discovery Miles 2 360
Save R60 (20%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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'What's the harm in using humour to put across what is true?'
Gluttony, lust, and hypocrisy are just a few of the targets of
Horace's Satires. Writing in the 30s BC, Horace exposes the vices
and follies of his Roman contemporaries, while still finding time
to reflect on how to write good satire and along the way revealing
his own persona to be as flawed and bigoted as the people he
attacks. Alongside famous episodes such as the fable of the town
mouse and the country mouse, the explosive fart of Priapus, and the
grotesque dinner party given by the nouveau-riche Nasidienus, these
poems are stuffed full of comic vignettes, moral insights, and
Horace's pervasive humanity. They influenced not only Persius and
Juvenal but the long tradition of English satire, from Ben Jonson
to W. H. Auden. These new prose translations by John Davie
perfectly capture the ribald style of the original. In the
Epistles, Horace uses the form of letters to his friends,
acquaintances, foremen, and even the emperor to explore questions
of philosophy and how to live a good life; and in 'The Art of
Poetry' (the Ars poetica), he gives advice on poetic style that
informed the work of writers and dramatists for 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.
Evaluation is ubiquitous. Indeed, it isn't an exaggeration to say
that we assess actions, character, events, and objects as good,
cruel, beautiful, etc., almost every day of our lives. Although
evaluative judgement - for instance, judging that an institution is
unjust - is usually regarded as the paradigm of evaluation, it has
been thought by some philosophers that a distinctive and
significant kind of evaluation is perceptual. For example, in
aesthetics, some have claimed that adequate aesthetic judgement
must be grounded in the appreciator's first hand-hand perceptual
experience of the item judged. In ethics, reference to the
existence and importance of something like ethical perception is
found in a number of traditions, for example, in virtue ethics and
sentimentalism. This volume brings together philosophers working in
aesthetics, epistemology, ethics, philosophy of mind, and value
theory to investigate what we call 'evaluative perception'.
Specifically, they engage with (1) Questions regarding the
existence and nature of evaluative perception: Are there perceptual
experiences of values? If so, what is their nature? Are perceptual
experiences of values sui generis? Are values necessary for certain
kinds of perceptual experience? (2) Questions about epistemology:
Can evaluative perceptual experiences ever justify evaluative
judgements? Are perceptual experiences of values necessary for
certain kinds of justified evaluative judgements? (3) Questions
about value theory: Is the existence of evaluative perceptual
experience supported or undermined by particular views in value
theory? Are particular views in value theory supported or
undermined by the existence of evaluative perceptual experience?
The Making of the Modern Law: Legal Treatises, 1800-1926 includes
over 20,000 analytical, theoretical and practical works on American
and British Law. It includes the writings of major legal theorists,
including Sir Edward Coke, Sir William Blackstone, James Fitzjames
Stephen, Frederic William Maitland, John Marshall, Joseph Story,
Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. and Roscoe Pound, among others. Legal
Treatises includes casebooks, local practice manuals, form books,
works for lay readers, pamphlets, letters, speeches and other works
of the most influential writers of their time. It is of great value
to researchers of domestic and international law, government and
politics, legal history, business and economics, criminology and
much more.++++The below data was compiled from various
identification fields in the bibliographic record of this title.
This data is provided as an additional tool in helping to insure
edition identification: ++++Harvard Law School
LibraryCTRG95-B2199Includes index.Raleigh, N.C.: Presses of Edwards
& Broughton Print. Co., c1907. 355 p.; 20 cm
This scarce antiquarian book is a selection from Kessinger
Publishing's Legacy Reprint Series. Due to its age, it may contain
imperfections such as marks, notations, marginalia and flawed
pages. Because we believe this work is culturally important, we
have made it available as part of our commitment to protecting,
preserving, and promoting the world's literature. Kessinger
Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of rare and
hard-to-find books with something of interest for everyone!
A revolutionary and scientifically backed prevention and rescue
treatment plan for migraine attacks. More than 30 million people
suffer from debilitating headaches. Yet our understanding of the
science behind migraines is still in its in-fancy. At the Keeler
Center for the Study of Headache, Dr. Robert Cowan and his team of
specialists conduct some of the most cutting-edge research in the
field. Their treatment program, which combines the latest
alternative and conventional therapy strategies, has helped
thousands of sufferers manage their symptoms effectively and regain
control of their lives. As Dr. Cowan explains, each patient
presents unique sets of triggers and pain patterns and requires a
customized treatment approach. The Keeler method helps migraine
sufferers identify their own headache triggers and then create an
individualized formula for dramatically decreasing the frequency
and severity of these attacks. It also illustrates how to design a
foolproof, reliable arescuea plan when necessary, and offers
surprising information, such as: A- Why elimination diets and
afoods to avoida lists may not work A- Why frequently prescribed
medications can actually make a headache worse A- Why many headache
treatments stop working over Time With a step-by-step program and
expert advice throughout, The Keeler Migraine Method will be the
most comprehensive guide to migraine management in the bookstore.
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