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The Volta River Basin (VRB) is an important transboundary basin in
West Africa that covers approximately 410,000 square kilometres
across six countries: Benin, Burkina Faso, Cote d'Ivoire, Ghana,
Mali and Togo. Its natural resources sustain the livelihoods of its
population and contribute to economic development. This book
provides a comprehensive, interdisciplinary review and assessment
of the issues and challenges faced. The authors provide a
science-based assessment of current and future scenarios of water
availability, the demands of key sectors, including agriculture and
hydropower, and the environment under changing demographic,
economic, social and climatic conditions. They also identify
solutions and strategies that will allow available water resources
to be sustainably used to improve agricultural productivity, food
security and economic growth in the VRB. Overall, the work examines
from a multidisciplinary and multi-stakeholder perspective the
solutions and strategies to improve the use of water and other
natural resources in the VRB to achieve enhanced food security,
livelihoods and economic growth.
The romantic idea of the writer as an isolated genius has been
discredited, but there are few empirical studies documenting the
role of "gatekeeping" in the literary process. How do friends,
agents, editors, translators, small publishers, and reviewers-not
to mention the changes in technology and the publishing
industry-shape the literary process? This matrix is further
complicated when books cross cultural and language barriers, that
is, when they become part of World Literature. This study builds on
the work of Pierre Bourdieu, Randall Collins, James English and
Mark McGurl, describing the multi-layered gatekeeping process in
the context of World Literature after the 1960s. It focuses on four
case studies: Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Charles Bukowski, Paul Auster
and Haruki Murakami. The two American authors achieved remarkable
success overseas owing to perspicacious gatekeepers; the two
international authors benefited tremendously from well-curated
translation into English. Rich in archival materials
(correspondence between authors, editors, and translators, and
publishing industry analyses), interviews with publishers and
translators, and close readings of translations, this study shows
how the process and production of literature depends on the larger
social forces of a given historical moment. The book also documents
the ever-increasing Anglo-centric dictate on the gatekeeping
process of World Literature. World Literature, the study argues, is
not so much a "republic of letters" as a field of opportunities on
which the conversation is partly bracketed by historic events and
technological opportunities.
The Volta River Basin (VRB) is an important transboundary basin in
West Africa that covers approximately 410,000 square kilometres
across six countries: Benin, Burkina Faso, Cote d'Ivoire, Ghana,
Mali and Togo. Its natural resources sustain the livelihoods of its
population and contribute to economic development. This book
provides a comprehensive, interdisciplinary review and assessment
of the issues and challenges faced. The authors provide a
science-based assessment of current and future scenarios of water
availability, the demands of key sectors, including agriculture and
hydropower, and the environment under changing demographic,
economic, social and climatic conditions. They also identify
solutions and strategies that will allow available water resources
to be sustainably used to improve agricultural productivity, food
security and economic growth in the VRB. Overall, the work examines
from a multidisciplinary and multi-stakeholder perspective the
solutions and strategies to improve the use of water and other
natural resources in the VRB to achieve enhanced food security,
livelihoods and economic growth.
A biography of a remarkable figure, whose politics prefigured
today's social justice, ecology, and gender equality movements
Ammon Hennacy was arrested over thirty times for opposing US entry
in World War 1. Later, when he refused to pay taxes that support
war, he lost his wife and daughters, and then his job. For
protesting the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, he was hounded by
the IRS and driven to migrant labor in the fields of the West. He
had a romance with Dorothy Day, founder of the Catholic Worker, who
called him a "prophet and a peasant." He helped the homeless on the
Bowery, founded the Joe Hill House of Hospitality in Salt Lake
City, and protested the US development of nuclear missiles,
becoming in the process one of the most celebrated anarchists of
the twentieth century. To our era, when so much "protest" happens
on social media, his actual sacrifices seem unworldly. Ammon
Hennacy was a forerunner of contemporary progressive thought, and
he remains a beacon for challenges that confront the world and
especially the US today. In this exceptional biography, William
Marling tells the story of this fascinating figure, who remains
particularly important for the Catholic Left. In addition to
establishing Hennacy as an exemplar of vegetarianism, ecology, and
pacificism, Marling illuminates a broader history of political
ideas now largely lost: the late nineteenth-century utopian
movements, the grassroots socialist movements before World War I,
and the antinuclear protests of the 1960s. A nuanced study of when
religion and anarchist theory overlap, Christian Anarchist shows
how Hennacy's life at the heart of radical libertarian and
anarchist interventions in American politics not only galvanized
the public then, but offers us new insight for today.
In the American Roman Noir, William Marling reads classic
hard-boiled fiction and film in the contexts of narrative theories
and American social and cultural history. His search for the
origins of the dark narratives that emerged during the 1920s and
1930s leads to a sweeping critique of Jazz-Age and Depression-era
culture, integrating economic history, biography, consumer product
design, narrative analysis, and film scholarship. Taking a closer
look at noir classics by Dashiell Hammett, James M. Cain, and
Raymond Chandler, Marling reads these narratives first as novels,
then as films, showing how they helped Americans adapt for better
or worse -- to a society driven by economic and technological
forces beyond their control.
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Polsslag
Marie Lotz
Paperback
(1)
R360
R337
Discovery Miles 3 370
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