Great Western Railway Architecture
Author: Amyas Crump
Publisher:
Published: 2018-02-05
Total Pages: 128
ISBN-13: 9781909328662
DOWNLOAD EBOOK →Author: Amyas Crump
Publisher:
Published: 2018-02-05
Total Pages: 128
ISBN-13: 9781909328662
DOWNLOAD EBOOK →Author: Linda Tuhiwai Smith
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Published: 2016-03-15
Total Pages: 256
ISBN-13: 1848139527
DOWNLOAD EBOOK →'A landmark in the process of decolonizing imperial Western knowledge.' Walter Mignolo, Duke University To the colonized, the term 'research' is conflated with European colonialism; the ways in which academic research has been implicated in the throes of imperialism remains a painful memory. This essential volume explores intersections of imperialism and research - specifically, the ways in which imperialism is embedded in disciplines of knowledge and tradition as 'regimes of truth.' Concepts such as 'discovery' and 'claiming' are discussed and an argument presented that the decolonization of research methods will help to reclaim control over indigenous ways of knowing and being. Now in its eagerly awaited second edition, this bestselling book has been substantially revised, with new case-studies and examples and important additions on new indigenous literature, the role of research in indigenous struggles for social justice, which brings this essential volume urgently up-to-date.
Author: B. Kinzer
Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan
Published: 2015-12-19
Total Pages: 248
ISBN-13: 9781349538744
DOWNLOAD EBOOK →Bruce Kinzer offers a rich examination of personal and political themes in the life of the most influential liberal thinker of the Nineteenth century. He investigates young Mill's formative period and his relations with his father, Harriet Taylor, and Thomas Carlyle. Kinzer explores issues that bear upon our understanding of Mill as an engaged political thinker and actor and offers a complex portrait of Mill's life and politics.
Author: Judith Butler
Publisher: Duke University Press
Published: 2016-10-07
Total Pages: 360
ISBN-13: 0822373491
DOWNLOAD EBOOK →Vulnerability and resistance have often been seen as opposites, with the assumption that vulnerability requires protection and the strengthening of paternalistic power at the expense of collective resistance. Focusing on political movements and cultural practices in different global locations, including Turkey, Palestine, France, and the former Yugoslavia, the contributors to Vulnerability in Resistance articulate an understanding of the role of vulnerability in practices of resistance. They consider how vulnerability is constructed, invoked, and mobilized within neoliberal discourse, the politics of war, resistance to authoritarian and securitarian power, in LGBTQI struggles, and in the resistance to occupation and colonial violence. The essays offer a feminist account of political agency by exploring occupy movements and street politics, informal groups at checkpoints and barricades, practices of self-defense, hunger strikes, transgressive enactments of solidarity and mourning, infrastructural mobilizations, and aesthetic and erotic interventions into public space that mobilize memory and expose forms of power. Pointing to possible strategies for a feminist politics of transversal engagements and suggesting a politics of bodily resistance that does not disavow forms of vulnerability, the contributors develop a new conception of embodiment and sociality within fields of contemporary power. Contributors. Meltem Ahiska, Athena Athanasiou, Sarah Bracke, Judith Butler, Elsa Dorlin, Başak Ertür, Zeynep Gambetti, Rema Hammami, Marianne Hirsch, Elena Loizidou, Leticia Sabsay, Nükhet Sirman, Elena Tzelepis
Author: Anonymous
Publisher: BoD – Books on Demand
Published: 2022-07-30
Total Pages: 534
ISBN-13: 3368120883
DOWNLOAD EBOOK →Reprint of the original, first published in 1871.
Author: Zygmunt Bauman
Publisher: John Wiley & Sons
Published: 2013-07-10
Total Pages: 291
ISBN-13: 074565701X
DOWNLOAD EBOOK →In this new book, Bauman examines how we have moved away from a 'heavy' and 'solid', hardware-focused modernity to a 'light' and 'liquid', software-based modernity. This passage, he argues, has brought profound change to all aspects of the human condition. The new remoteness and un-reachability of global systemic structure coupled with the unstructured and under-defined, fluid state of the immediate setting of life-politics and human togetherness, call for the rethinking of the concepts and cognitive frames used to narrate human individual experience and their joint history. This book is dedicated to this task. Bauman selects five of the basic concepts which have served to make sense of shared human life - emancipation, individuality, time/space, work and community - and traces their successive incarnations and changes of meaning. Liquid Modernity concludes the analysis undertaken in Bauman's two previous books Globalization: The Human Consequences and In Search of Politics. Together these volumes form a brilliant analysis of the changing conditions of social and political life by one of the most original thinkers writing today.
Author: Samuel Mossman
Publisher: London : Addey
Published: 1853
Total Pages: 346
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOK →Author: Charles Edward Cutts Birch Appleton
Publisher:
Published: 1879
Total Pages: 590
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOK →