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  • BVB  (42)
  • Online Resource  (42)
  • 1995-1999  (42)
  • Durham : Duke University Press  (42)
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  • Online Resource  (42)
  • Book  (3)
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  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Durham : Duke University Press | Berlin : Walter de Gruyter GmbH
    ISBN: 9780822379522
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (272 p.) , 9 b&w photographs
    DDC: 306
    Abstract: In Queer in Russia Laurie Essig examines the formation of gay identity and community in the former Soviet Union. As a sociological fieldworker, she began her research during the late 1980s, before any kind of a public queer identity existed in that country. After a decade of conducting interviews, as well as observing and analyzing plays, books, pop music, and graffiti, Essig presents the first sustained study of how and why there was no Soviet gay community or even gay identity before perestroika and the degree to which this situation has-or has not-changed.While male homosexual acts were criminalized in Russia before 1993, women attracted to women were policed by the medical community, who saw them less as criminals than as diseased persons potentially cured by drug therapy or transsexual surgery. After describing accounts of pre-perestroika persecution, Essig examines the more recent state of sexual identities in Russia. Although the fall of communism brought new freedom to Russian queers, there are still no signs of a mass movement forming around the issue, and few identify themselves as lesbians or gay men, even when they are involved in same-sex relations. Essig does reveal, however, vibrant manifestations of gay life found at the local level-in restaurants, discos, clubs, and cruising strips, in newspapers, journals, literature, and the theater. Concluding with a powerful exploration of the surprising affinities between some of Russia's most prominent nationalists and its queers, Queer in Russia fills a gap in both Russian and cultural studies.
    URL: Cover
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  • 2
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Durham : Duke University Press | Berlin : Walter de Gruyter GmbH
    ISBN: 9780822397038
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (312 p.) , 51 illustrations, 8 in color
    DDC: 394.266
    Abstract: In Inka Bodies and the Body of Christ Carolyn Dean investigates the multiple meanings of the Roman Catholic feast of Corpus Christi as it was performed in the Andean city of Cuzco after the Spanish conquest. By concentrating on the era's paintings and its historical archives, Dean explores how the festival celebrated the victory of the Christian God over sin and death, the triumph of Christian orthodoxy over the imperial Inka patron (the Sun), and Spain's conquest of Peruvian society.As Dean clearly illustrates, the central rite of the festival-the taking of the Eucharist-symbolized both the acceptance of Christ and the power of the colonizers over the colonized. The most remarkable of Andean celebrants were those who appeared costumed as the vanquished Inka kings of Peru's pagan past. Despite the subjugation of the indigenous population, Dean shows how these and other Andean nobles used the occasion of Corpus Christi as an opportunity to construct new identities through tinkuy, a native term used to describe the conjoining of opposites. By mediating the chasms between the Andean region and Europe, pagans and Christians, and the past and the present, these Andean elites negotiated a new sense of themselves. Dean moves beyond the colonial period to examine how these hybrid forms of Inka identity are still evident in the festive life of modern Cuzco.Inka Bodies and the Body of Christ offers the first in-depth analysis of the culture and paintings of colonial Cuzco. This volume will be welcomed by historians of Peruvian culture, art, and politics. It will also interest those engaged in performance studies, religion, and postcolonial and Latin American studies.
    URL: Cover
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    URL: Cover  (lizenzpflichtig)
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  • 3
    ISBN: 9780822378471 , 0822378477
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (xi, 314 Seiten) , Illustrationen
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    Keywords: Sun Ra Criticism and interpretation ; Ellington, Duke 1899-1974 ; Criticism and interpretation ; Braxton, Anthony Criticism and interpretation ; Braxton, Anthony ; Sun Ra ; Ellington, Duke ; Jazz History and criticism ; Electronic books ; Hochschulschrift ; Hochschulschrift ; Sun Ra Jazzmusiker 1914-1993 ; Braxton, Anthony 1945- ; Ellington, Duke 1899-1974
    Note: Includes bibliographical references (pages [285]-303) and index , Introduction: Blutopia -- Pt. I. Sun Ra: A Starward Eye. 1. Astro Black: Mythic Future, Mythic Past. 2. Of Aliens and Angels: Mythic Identity -- Pt. II. Duke Ellington: Tone Parallels. 3. In the Jungles of America: History Without Saying It. 4. Zajj: Renegotiating Her Story -- Pt. III. Anthony Braxton: Crossroad Axiums. 5. All the Things You Are: Legba's Legacy. 6. Going to the Territory: Sound Maps of the Meta-Real -- Coda: House of Voices, Sea of Music
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  • 4
    ISBN: 9780822382539
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 online resource (232 pages) , 9 tables
    DDC: 305.8
    Keywords: SOCIAL SCIENCE / Minority Studies ; Blacks Politics and government
    Abstract: Bringing together U.S. and Brazilian scholars, as well as Afro-Brazilian political activists, Racial Politics in Contemporary Brazil represents a significant advance in understanding the complexities of racial difference in contemporary Brazilian society. While previous scholarship on this subject has been largely confined to quantitative and statistical research, editor Michael Hanchard presents a qualitative perspective from a variety of disciplines, including history, sociology, political science, and cultural theory.The contributors to Racial Politics in Contemporary Brazil examine such topics as the legacy of slavery and its abolition, the historical impact of social movements, race-related violence, and the role of Afro-Brazilian activists in negotiating the cultural politics surrounding the issue of Brazilian national identity. These essays also provide comparisons of racial discrimination in the United States and Brazil, as well as an analysis of residential segregation in urban centers and its affect on the mobilization of blacks and browns. With a focus on racialized constructions of class and gender andsexuality, Racial Politics in Contemporary Brazil reorients the direction of Brazilian studies, providing new insights into Brazilian culture, politics, and race relations.This volume will be of importance to a wide cross section of scholars engaged with Brazil in particular, and Latin American studies in general. It will also appeal to those invested in the larger issues of political and social movements centered on the issue of race.Contributors. Benedita da Silva, Nelson do Valle Silva, Ivanir dos Santos, Richard Graham, Michael Hanchard, Carlos Hasenbalg, Peggy A. Lovell, Michael Mitchell, Tereza Santos, Edward Telles, Howard Winant
    Note: Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 12. Dez 2020) , In English
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  • 5
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Durham : Duke University Press
    ISBN: 0822382199 , 0822323826 , 0822324164 , 9780822382195 , 9780822323822 , 9780822324164
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource (xii, 202 p) , 23 m
    Edition: Online-Ausg. 2011 Electronic reproduction; Available via World Wide Web
    Series Statement: Post-contemporary interventions
    Parallel Title: Print version Subalternity and Representation : Arguments in Cultural Theory
    DDC: 305.5/6
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    Keywords: Culture conflict ; Marginality, Social Political aspects ; Learning and scholarship Political aspects ; Knowledge, Theory of Political aspects ; Marginality, Social ; Postcolonialism ; Electronic books ; Electronic books ; Aufsatzsammlung ; Electronic books ; Aufsatzsammlung
    Abstract: A discussion of current debates in cultural and subaltern studies, with a particular focus on Latin America, that offers the possibility of constituting new political practices
    Description / Table of Contents: Contents; Acknowledgments; Introduction; 1 Writing in Reverse: The Subaltern and the Limits of Academic Knowledge; 2 Transculturation and Subalternity: The "Lettered City" and the Tupac Amaru Rebellion; 3 Our Rigoberta? I, Rigoberta Menchú, Cultural Authority, and the Problem of Subaltern Agency; 4 Hybrid or Binary? On the Category of "the People" in Subaltern and Cultural Studies; 5 Civil Society, Hybridity, and the " 'Political' Aspect of Cultural Studies" (on Canclini); 6 Territoriality, Multiculturalism, and Hegemony: The Question of the Nation; Notes; Index
    Note: Includes bibliographical references (p. [169]-193) and index , Electronic reproduction; Available via World Wide Web
    URL: Cover
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  • 6
    ISBN: 9780822382171
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 online resource (487 pages) , 3 illustrations, 1 table
    Series Statement: Series Q
    DDC: 306.76/6/0946
    Keywords: SOCIAL SCIENCE / LGBT Studies / Gay Studies ; Homosexuality and literature ; Homosexuality ; Homosexuality ; Literature and society ; Literature and society ; Sex in literature
    Abstract: Martyred saints, Moors, Jews, viragoes, hermaphrodites, sodomites, kings, queens, and cross-dressers comprise the fascinating mosaic of historical and imaginative figures unearthed in Queer Iberia. The essays in this volume describe and analyze the sexual diversity that proliferated during the period between the tenth and the sixteenth centuries when political hegemony in the region passed from Muslim to Christian hands.To show how sexual otherness is most evident at points of cultural conflict, the contributors use a variety of methodologies and perspectives and consider source materials that originated in Castilian, Latin, Arabic, Catalan, and Galician-Portuguese. Covering topics from the martydom of Pelagius to the exploits of the transgendered Catalina de Erauso, this volume is the first to provide a comprehensive historical examination of the relations among race, gender, sexuality, nation-building, colonialism, and imperial expansion in medieval and early modern Iberia. Some essays consider archival evidence of sexual otherness or evaluate the use of "deviance" as a marker for cultural and racial difference, while others explore both male and female homoeroticism as literary-aesthetic discourse or attempt to open up canonical texts to alternative readings.Positing a queerness intrinsic to Iberia's historical process and cultural identity, Queer Iberia will challenge the field of Iberian studies while appealing to scholars of medieval, cultural, Hispanic, gender, and gay and lesbian studies.Contributors. Josiah Blackmore, Linde M. Brocato, Catherine Brown, Israel Burshatin, Daniel Eisenberg, E. Michael Gerli, Roberto J. González-Casanovas, Gregory S. Hutcheson, Mark D. Jordan, Sara Lipton, Benjamin Liu, Mary Elizabeth Perry, Michael Solomon, Louise O. Vasvári, Barbara Weissberger
    Note: Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 12. Dez 2020) , In English
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  • 7
    ISBN: 9780822397472
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 online resource (277 pages)
    Series Statement: Latin America Otherwise Ser.
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als
    DDC: 306.349
    Keywords: Cotton plantation workers ; Peru ; Pisco River Valley ; History.. ; Peasants ; Peru ; Pisco River Valley ; History.. ; Cotton trade ; Peru ; Pisco River Valley ; Personnel management ; History.. ; Industrial relations ; Peru ; Pisco River Valley ; History ; Electronic books
    Abstract: Intro -- Contents -- List of Maps, Tables, and Figures -- Preface -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction: Peasants, Plantations, and Resistance -- Chapter 1: Planters, Managers, and Consent -- Chapter 2: Indenture, Wages, and Dominance -- Chapter 3: Stagnation, Recovery, and Peasant Opportunities -- Chapter 4: Plantation Growth and Peasant Choices -- Chapter 5: Yanaconas, Mechanization, and Migrant Labor -- Chapter 6: Yanaconas, Migrants, and Political Consciousness -- Conclusion: Plantation Society and Peruvian Culture -- Notes -- Glossary -- Bibliography -- Index.
    Note: Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources
    URL: Cover
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  • 8
    ISBN: 9780822378242
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 online resource (445 pages)
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als
    DDC: 302.23/45/0954
    Keywords: Television broadcasting ; Social aspects ; India.. ; Television programs ; India.. ; Television in community development ; India.. ; Television and women ; India.. ; Television in politics ; India ; Electronic books
    Abstract: Intro -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Chapter 1. Culture Wars -- Part I. Fields of Power: The National Television Family -- Chapter 2. National Television and the "Viewing Family" -- Chapter 3. "Women-Oriented" Narratives and the New Indian Woman -- Part II. Engendering Communities -- Chapter 4. Mediating Modernities: The Ramayan and the Creation of Community and Nation -- Chapter 5. Television Tales, National Narratives, and a Woman's Rage: Multiple Interpretations of Draupadi's "Disrobing" -- Part III. Technologies of Violence -- Chapter 6. "Air Force Women Don't Cry": Militaristic Nationalism and Representations of Gender -- Chapter 7. Popular Narrative, the Politics of Location, and Memory -- Epilogue: Sky Wars -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Index.
    Note: Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources
    URL: Cover
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  • 9
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Durham : Duke University Press
    ISBN: 9780822399759 , 082239975X
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (xv, 409 Seiten) , Illustrationen
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    Keywords: Agriculture India ; Alīpura ; Agriculture and state India ; Alīpura ; Rural development India ; Alīpura ; Ethnoscience India ; Alīpura ; Environmental policy India ; Alīpura ; Landwirtschaft ; Ländliche Entwicklung ; Agrarpolitik ; Umweltpolitik ; Alīpura (India) Rural conditions ; Alipura ; Electronic books ; Alipura Region ; Agrarpolitik ; Alipura Region ; Umweltpolitik ; Alipura Region ; Ländliche Entwicklung ; Alipura Region ; Landwirtschaft
    Note: Includes bibliographical references (pages [379]-397) and index
    URL: Volltext  (URL des Erstveröffentlichers)
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  • 10
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Durham : Duke University Press
    ISBN: 9780822382492 , 0822382490
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (xi, 462 Seiten)
    Series Statement: Post-contemporary interventions
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    Keywords: Intellectual property United States ; Critical legal studies United States ; Popular culture United States ; Rechtsschutz ; Zivilisation ; Geistiges Eigentum ; United States Cultural policy ; USA ; Electronic books ; USA ; Geistiges Eigentum ; Rechtsschutz ; Zivilisation
    Note: Introduction: Authoring Culture. A Critical Cultural Legal Studies. Against Culture(s). Anthropology's Trademark and Its Academic Others. Authoring Alterity. Contested Cultures. Legalities,Identities, and Mass Media. Authorship and Alterity -- Objects of Property and Subjects of Politics: Objects and Subjects. Historicizing the Subject. Postmodern Culture. It's a Small, Small world. Postmodern Goods. Author(iz)ing the Corporate Persona. Manufacturing Distinction. Fixing the Signifier/Owning the Sign. Activist Appropriations. PolicingPostmodern Precincts. Xerox Cultures. Dialogicsof Postmodern Politics -- Author(iz)ing the Celebrity: Engendering Alternative Identities: The Value of the CelebrityPersona. CelebrityAuthorship. The CelebrityForm and the Politicsof Postmodernism. Doing Gender. Respecting Judy. Fictionalized Sexualities. Enterprising Women. Engendering and EndangeringAlternative Identities -- , - Tactics of Appropriation and the Politics of Recognition: PoliticalArticulations. Official Signifiers. Postmodernity and the Rumor. Racial Inscriptions and Iterations. Corporeal Vulnerability. Signifyin(g) Powers -- Embodied Trademarks: Mimesis and Alterity on American Commercial Frontiers. Mimicry, Alterity, and Embodiment. Marked and Unmarked Bodies. Contemporary Contestations. Fighting Redskins. Consuming Crazy Horse. Mimicking Authors at the Altars of Property -- The Properties of Culture and the Politics of Possessing Identity: Whose VoiceIs It Anyway? The European Art/Culture System. Contemporary Properties of Culture and Identity. Listening to Native Claims "in Context". Representation without Representation: Visibility without Voice. Possessive Individualism Revisited: Authorship and Cultural Identity. Aboriginal Title -- , - Dialogic Democracy I: Authorship and Alterity in Public Spheres: The Author in the Modern Public Sphere. FreeSpeech in the Condition of Postmodernity. Objects and Subjects Redux -- Dialogic Democracy II: Alterity and Articulation in the Space of the Political: Locating the Politics of the Public Sphere. Mass Mediation and the Publics of Civil Society. The Spaceof the Signature. The Unworked Community. An Ethics of Contingency. - Includes bibliographical references (pages [398]-443) and index
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  • 11
    ISBN: 9780822379850
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 online resource (456 pages) , 26 tables, 7 maps, 7 figures
    DDC: 305.5/633/098423
    Keywords: HISTORY / Latin America / South America ; Agriculture Economic aspects ; History ; Mercantile system History ; Peasants History
    Abstract: Winner of the 1990 Best Book Award from the New England Council on Latin American StudiesThis study of Bolivia uses Cochabamba as a laboratory to examine the long-term transformation of native Andean society into a vibrant Quechua-Spanish-mestizo region of haciendas and smallholdings, towns and villages, peasant markets and migratory networks caught in the web of Spanish imperial politics and economics. Combining economic, social, and ethnohistory, Brooke Larson shows how the contradictions of class and colonialism eventually gave rise to new peasant, artisan, and laboring groups that challenged the evolving structures of colonial domination. Originally published in 1988, this expanded edition includes a new final chapter that explores the book's implications for understanding the formation of a distinctive peasant political culture in the Cochabamba valleys over the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries
    Note: Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 12. Dez 2020) , In English
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  • 12
    ISBN: 9780822396970
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 online resource (416 pages) , 5 tables
    Series Statement: Comparative and international working-class history
    DDC: 305.5/62/09728
    Keywords: POLITICAL SCIENCE / Labor & Industrial Relations ; Peasants History ; Peasants History ; Working class History ; Working class History
    Abstract: Identity and Struggle at the Margins of the Nation-State brings together new research on the social history of Central America and the Spanish-speaking Caribbean during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Aviva Chomsky and Aldo A. Lauria Santiago have gathered both well-known and emerging scholars to demonstrate how the actions and ideas of rural workers, peasants, migrants, and women formed an integral part of the growth of the export economies of the era and to examine the underacknowledged impact such groups had on the shaping of national histories.Responding to the fact that the more common, elite-centered "national" histories distort or erase the importance of gender, race, ethnicity, popular consciousness, and identity, contributors to this volume correct this imbalance by moving these previously overlooked issues to the center of historical research and analysis.
    Abstract: In so doing, they describe how these marginalized working peoples of the Hispanic Caribbean Basin managed to remain centered on not only class-based issues but on a sense of community, a desire for dignity, and a struggle for access to resources. Individual essays include discussions of plantation justice in Guatemala, highland Indians in Nicaragua, the effects of foreign corporations in Costa Rica, coffee production in El Salvador, banana workers in Honduras, sexuality and working-class feminism in Puerto Rico, the Cuban sugar industry, agrarian reform in the Dominican Republic, and finally, potential directions for future research and historiography on Central America and the Caribbean.This collection will have a wide audience among Caribbeanists and Central Americanists, as well as students of gender studies, and labor, social, Latin American, and agrarian history.Contributors. Patricia Alvarenga, Barry Carr, Julie A.
    Abstract: Charlip, Aviva Chomsky, Dario Euraque, Eileen Findlay, Cindy Forster, Jeffrey L. Gould, Lowell Gudmundson, Aldo A. Lauria Santiago, Francisco Scarano, Richard Turits
    Note: Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 12. Dez 2020) , In English
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  • 13
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Durham : Duke University Press
    ISBN: 0822382148 , 0822321300 , 0822321491 , 9780822382140 , 9780822321309 , 9780822321491
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource (xiv, 344 p) , 25 cm
    Edition: Online-Ausg. 2011 Electronic reproduction; Available via World Wide Web
    Series Statement: New Americanists
    Parallel Title: Print version National Manhood : Capitalist Citizenship and the Imagined Fraternity of White Men
    DDC: 305.31
    Keywords: Masculinity ; Racism ; Sexism ; Men, White Attitudes ; Middle class men Psychology ; Middle class men Attitudes ; Men, White Psychology ; Men Identity
    Abstract: How white manhood comes to stand for the nation in the nineteenth-century U.S
    Description / Table of Contents: Contents; Preface; Introduction: Naked Nature; 1 Purity Control: Consolidating National Manhood in the Early Republic; 2 "That's Not My Wife, That's an Indian Squaw": Inindianation and National Manhood; 3 "Our Castle Still Remains Unshaken": Professional Manhood, Science, Whiteness; 4 Gynecological Manhood: The Worries of Whiteness and the Disorders of Women; 5 The Melancholy of White Manhood, or, Democracy's Privileged Spot; Afterword: The President in 2045, or, Managed Democracy; Notes; Bibliography; Index
    Note: Includes bibliographical references (p. [307]-333) and index , Electronic reproduction; Available via World Wide Web
    URL: Cover
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  • 14
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Durham : Duke University Press | Berlin : Walter de Gruyter GmbH
    ISBN: 9780822398387
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (844 p.) , 10 b&w photographs
    Edition: 1994
    Series Statement: New Americanists
    DDC: 303.48/4/092
    Abstract: For half a century Lydia Maria Child was a household name in the United States. Hardly a sphere of nineteenth-century life can be found in which Lydia Maria Child did not figure prominently as a pathbreaker. Although best known today for having edited Harriet A. Jacobs's Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl, she pioneered almost every department of nineteenth-century American letters-the historical novel, the short story, children's literature, the domestic advice book, women's history, antislavery fiction, journalism, and the literature of aging. Offering a panoramic view of a nation and culture in flux, this innovative cultural biography (originally published by Duke University Press in 1994) recreates the world as well as the life of a major nineteenth-figure whose career as a writer and social reformer encompassed issues central to American history.
    URL: Cover
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  • 15
    ISBN: 9780822378105
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 online resource (288 pages) , 54 b&w photographs
    Series Statement: Console-ing passions: television and cultural power
    DDC: 302.23/45/08900973
    Keywords: SOCIAL SCIENCE / Minority Studies
    Abstract: Recent media events like the confirmation hearings for Clarence Thomas, the beating of Rodney King and its aftermath, and the murder trial of O.J. Simpson have trained our collective eye on the televised spectacle of race. Living Color combines media studies, cultural studies, and critical race theory to investigate the representation of race on American TV.Ranging across television genres, historical periods, and racial formations, Living Color-as it positions race as a key element of television's cultural influence-moves the discussion out of a black-and-white binary and illustrates how class, gender, and sexuality interact with images of race. In addition to essays on representations of "Oriental" performers and African Americans in the early years of television, this collection also examines how the celebrity of the late MTV star Pedro Zamora countered racist and homophobic discourses; reveals how news coverage on drug use shifted from the white middle-class cocaine user in the early 1980s to the black "crack mother" of the 1990s; and takes on TV coverage of the Rodney King beating and the subsequent unrest in Los Angeles. Other essays consider O.J. Simpson's murder trial, comparing television's treatment of Simpson to that of Michael Jackson, Magic Johnson, Michael Jordan, and Clarence Thomas and look at the racism directed at Asian Americans by the recurring "Dancing Itos" on Jay Leno's Tonight Show
    Note: Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 12. Dez 2020) , In English
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  • 16
    ISBN: 9780822396352
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 online resource (592 pages) , 25 b&w photographs, 2 maps
    Series Statement: American encounters/global interactions
    DDC: 303.48/28073
    Keywords: HISTORY / Latin America / General
    Abstract: New concerns with the intersections of culture and power, historical agency, and the complexity of social and political life are producing new questions about the United States' involvement with Latin America. Turning away from political-economic models that see only domination and resistance, exploiters and victims, the contributors to this pathbreaking collection suggest alternate ways of understanding the role that U.S. actors and agencies have played in the region during the postcolonial period.Exploring a variety of nineteenth- and twentieth-century encounters in Latin America, these theoretically engaged essays by distinguished U.S. and Latin American historians and anthropologists illuminate a wide range of subjects. From the Rockefeller Foundation's public health initiatives in Central America to the visual regimes of film, art, and advertisements; these essays grapple with new ways of conceptualizing public and private spheres of empire. As such, Close Encounters of Empire initiates a dialogue between postcolonial studies and the long-standing scholarship on colonialism and imperialism in the Americas as it rethinks the cultural dimensions of nationalism and development
    Note: Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 12. Dez 2020) , In English
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  • 17
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Durham : Duke University Press | Berlin : Walter de Gruyter GmbH
    ISBN: 9780822378112
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (344 p.) , 38 b&w photographs
    DDC: 305.48/9664
    Abstract: Masculinity without men. In Female Masculinity Judith Halberstam takes aim at the protected status of male masculinity and shows that female masculinity has offered a distinct alternative to it for well over two hundred years. Providing the first full-length study on this subject, Halberstam catalogs the diversity of gender expressions among masculine women from nineteenth-century pre-lesbian practices to contemporary drag king performances.Through detailed textual readings as well as empirical research, Halberstam uncovers a hidden history of female masculinities while arguing for a more nuanced understanding of gender categories that would incorporate rather than pathologize them. She rereads Anne Lister's diaries and Radclyffe Hall's The Well of Loneliness as foundational assertions of female masculine identity. She considers the enigma of the stone butch and the politics surrounding butch/femme roles within lesbian communities. She also explores issues of transsexuality among "transgender dykes"-lesbians who pass as men-and female-to-male transsexuals who may find the label of "lesbian" a temporary refuge. Halberstam also tackles such topics as women and boxing, butches in Hollywood and independent cinema, and the phenomenon of male impersonators.Female Masculinity signals a new understanding of masculine behaviors and identities, and a new direction in interdisciplinary queer scholarship. Illustrated with nearly forty photographs, including portraits, film stills, and drag king performance shots, this book provides an extensive record of the wide range of female masculinities. And as Halberstam clearly demonstrates, female masculinity is not some bad imitation of virility, but a lively and dramatic staging of hybrid and minority genders.
    URL: Cover
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  • 18
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Durham : Duke University Press
    ISBN: 0822378426 , 9780822378426
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource (xvii, 393 pages) , illustrations
    Edition: Online-Ausg.
    Series Statement: Post-contemporary interventions
    Parallel Title: Print version Cultures of globalization
    DDC: 306
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    Keywords: Cultural relations ; International economic relations ; Culture ; Konferenzschrift ; Aufsatzsammlung
    Abstract: A pervasive force that evades easy analysis, globalization has come to represent the export and import of culture, the speed and intensity of which has increased to unprecedented levels in recent years. The Cultures of Globalization presents an international panel of intellectuals who consider the process of globalization as it concerns the transformation of the economic into the cultural and vice versa; the rise of consumer culture around the world; the production and cancellation of forms of subjectivity; and the challenges it presents to national identity, local culture, and traditional forms of everyday life.Discussing overlapping themes of transnational consequence, the contributors to this volume describe how the global character of technology, communication networks, consumer culture, intellectual discourse, the arts, and mass entertainment have all been affected by recent worldwide trends. Appropriate to such diversity of material, the authors approach their topics from a variety of theoretical perspectives, including those of linguistics, sociology, economics, anthropology, and the law. Essays examine such topics as free trade, capitalism, the North and South, Eurocentrism, language migration, art and cinema, social fragmentation, sovereignty and nationhood, higher education, environmental justice, wealth and poverty, transnational corporations, and global culture. Bridging the spheres of economic, political, and cultural inquiry, The Cultures of Globalization offers crucial insights into many of the most significant changes occurring in today?s world.Contributors. Noam Chomsky, Ioan Davies, Manthia Diawara, Enrique Dussel, David Harvey, Sherif Hetata, Fredric Jameson, Geeta Kapur, Liu Kang, Joan Martinez-Alier, Masao Miyoshi, Walter D. Mignolo, Alberto Moreiras, Paik Nak-chung, Leslie Sklair, Subramani, Barbara Trent
    Description / Table of Contents: I. Globalization and philosophy. Beyond Eurocentrism : the world-system and the limits of modernity / Enrique DusselGlobalization, civilization processes, and the relocation of languages and cultures / Walter D. Mignolo -- Notes on globalization as a philosophical issue / Fredric Jameson. II. Alternative localities. Global fragments : a second Latinamericanism / Alberto Moreiras -- Toward a regional imaginary in Africa / Manthia Diawara -- Negotiating African culture : toward a decolonization of the fetish / Ioan Davies -- The end of free states : on transnationalization of culture / Subramani -- Is there an alternative to (capitalist) globalization? : the debate about modernity in China / Liu Kang.
    Description / Table of Contents: III. Culture and the nation. Globalization and culture : navigating the void / Geeta KapurNations and literatures in the age of globalization / Paik Nak-chung -- Media in a capitalist culture / Barbara Trent -- "Globalization," culture, and the university / Masao Miyoshi. IV. Consumerism and ideology. Dollarization, fragmentation, and God / Sherif Hetata -- Social movements and global capitalism / Leslie Sklair -- "Environmental justice" (local and global) / Jona Martinez-Alier -- What's green and makes the environment go round? / David Harvey -- Free trade and free market : pretense and practice / Noam Chomsky -- In place of a conclusion / Masao Miyoshi.
    Note: Includes bibliographical references and index
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    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Durham : Duke University Press | Berlin : Walter de Gruyter GmbH
    ISBN: 9781478004349
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (224 p.) , 28 photographs
    Edition: 2018
    Series Statement: Public planet books
    DDC: 305.800973
    Abstract: Twentieth Anniversary Edition with a new preface and afterwordFrom the removal of Confederate monuments in New Orleans in the spring of 2017 to the violent aftermath of the white nationalist march on the Robert E. Lee monument in Charlottesville later that summer, debates and conflicts over the memorialization of Confederate “heroes” have stormed to the forefront of popular American political and cultural discourse. In Written in Stone Sanford Levinson considers the tangled responses to controversial monuments and commemorations while examining how those with political power configure public spaces in ways that shape public memory and politics. Paying particular attention to the American South, though drawing examples as well from elsewhere in the United States and throughout the world, Levinson shows how the social and legal arguments regarding the display, construction, modification, and destruction of public monuments mark the seemingly endless confrontation over the symbolism attached to public space.This twentieth anniversary edition of Written in Stone includes a new preface and an extensive afterword that takes account of recent events in cities, schools and universities, and public spaces throughout the United States and elsewhere. Twenty years on, Levinson's work is more timely and relevant than ever.
    Note: Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 28. Sep 2020)
    URL: Cover
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  • 20
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    Online Resource
    Durham : Duke University Press | Berlin : Walter de Gruyter GmbH
    ISBN: 9780822396024
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (208 p.) , 17 b&w photographs
    Series Statement: Series Q
    DDC: 306.76/6/0973
    Abstract: In A Small Boy and Others, Michael Moon makes a vital contributon to our understanding of the dynamics of sexuality and identity in modern American culture. He explores a wide array of literary, artistic, and theatrical performances ranging from the memoirs of Henry James and the dances of Vaslav Nijinsky to the Pop paintings of Andy Warhol and such films as Midnight Cowboy, Blue Velvet, and Jack Smith's Flaming Creatures.Moon illuminates the careers of James, Warhol, and others by examining the imaginative investments of their protogay childhoods in their work in ways that enable new, more complex cultural readings. He deftly engages notions of initiation and desire not within the traditional framework of "sexual orientation" but through the disorienting effects of imitation. Whether invoking the artist Joseph Cornell's early fascination with the Great Houdini or turning his attention to James's self-described "initiation into style" at the age of twelve-when he first encountered the homoerotic imagery in paintings by David, Géricault, and Girodet-Moon reveals how the works of these artists emerge from an engagement that is obsessive to the point of "queerness."Rich in historical detail and insistent in its melding of the recent with the remote, the literary with the visual, the popular with the elite, A Small Boy and Others presents a hitherto unimagined tradition of brave and outrageous queer invention. This long-awaited contribution from Moon will be welcomed by all those engaged in literary, cultural, and queer studies.
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  • 21
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    Online Resource
    Durham : Duke University Press | Berlin : Walter de Gruyter GmbH
    ISBN: 9780822398943
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (432 p.) , 6 illustrations, 5 maps, 4 graphs
    Series Statement: Latin America otherwise : languages, empires, nations
    DDC: 305.8/0097217
    Abstract: Wandering Peoples is a chronicle of cultural resiliency, colonial relations, and trespassed frontiers in the borderlands of a changing Spanish empire. Focusing on the native subjects of Sonora in Northwestern Mexico, Cynthia Radding explores the social process of peasant class formation and the cultural persistence of Indian communities during the long transitional period between Spanish colonialism and Mexican national rule. Throughout this anthropological history, Radding presents multilayered meanings of culture, community, and ecology, and discusses both the colonial policies to which peasant communities were subjected and the responses they developed to adapt and resist them.Radding describes this colonial mission not merely as an instance of Iberian expansion but as a site of cultural and political confrontation. This alternative vision of colonialism emphasizes the economic links between mission communities and Spanish mercantilist policies, the biological consequences of the Spanish policy of forced congregación, and the cultural and ecological displacements set in motion by the practices of discipline and surveillance established by the religious orders. Addressing wider issues pertaining to ethnic identities and to ecological and cultural borders, Radding's analysis also underscores the parallel production of colonial and subaltern texts during the course of a 150-year struggle for power and survival.
    URL: Cover
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  • 22
    ISBN: 9780822397281
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (408 p.) , 37 b&w photographs
    Series Statement: Post-Contemporary Interventions
    DDC: 306.4/84
    Keywords: Electronic books
    Abstract: Dance, whether considered as an art form or embodied social practice, as product or process, is a prime subject for cultural analysis. Yet only recently have studies of dance become concerned with the ideological, theoretical, and social meanings of dance practices, performances, and institutions. In Meaning in Motion, Jane C. Desmond brings together the work of critics who have ventured into the boundaries between dance and cultural studies, and thus maps a little-known and rarely explored critical site.Writing from a broad range of perspectives, contributors from disciplines as varied as art history and anthropology, dance history and political science, philosophy and women's studies chart the questions and challenges that mark this site. How does dance enact or rework social categories of identity? How do meanings change as dance styles cross borders of race, nationality, or class? How do we talk about materiality and motion, sensation and expressivity, kinesthetics and ideology? The authors engage these issues in a variety of contexts: from popular social dances to the experimentation of the avant-garde; from nineteenth-century ballet and contemporary Afro-Brazilian Carnival dance to hip hop, the dance hall, and film; from the nationalist politics of folk dances to the feminist philosophies of modern dance. Giving definition to a new field of study, Meaning in Motion broadens the scope of dance analysis and extends to cultural studies new ways of approaching matters of embodiment, identity, and representation.Contributors. Ann Cooper Albright, Evan Alderson, Norman Bryson, Cynthia Cohen Bull, Ann Daly, Brenda Dixon Gottschild, Susan Foster, Mark Franko, Marianne Goldberg, Amy Koritz, Susan Kozel, Susan Manning, Randy Martin, Angela McRobbie, Kate Ramsey, Anna Scott, Janet Wolff...
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  • 23
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Durham : Duke University Press
    ISBN: 9780822396673
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (377 pages) , illustrations
    Series Statement: Latin America otherwise
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als Everynight life : culture and dance in Latin/o America
    DDC: 792.8/098
    RVK:
    RVK:
    Keywords: Dance History ; Dance Sociological aspects ; Dance Political aspects ; Sozialgeschichte ; Tanz ; Kultur ; Lateinamerika ; Lateinamerika ; Tanz ; Kultur ; Sozialgeschichte
    Note: Description based on print version record
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  • 24
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Durham : Duke University Press | Berlin : Walter de Gruyter GmbH
    ISBN: 9780822382300
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (232 p.)
    DDC: 305.896/073
    Abstract: How do adult children of interracial parents-where one parent is Jewish and one is Black-think about personal identity? This question is at the heart of Katya Gibel Azoulay's Black, Jewish, and Interracial. Motivated by her own experience as the child of a Jewish mother and Jamaican father, Gibel Azoulay blends historical, theoretical, and personal perspectives to explore the possibilities and meanings that arise when Black and Jewish identities merge. As she asks what it means to be Black, Jewish, and interracial, Gibel Azoulay challenges deeply ingrained assumptions about identity and moves toward a consideration of complementary racial identities.Beginning with an examination of the concept of identity as it figures in philosophical and political thought, Gibel Azoulay moves on to consider and compare the politics and traditions of the Black and Jewish experience in America. Her inquiry draws together such diverse subjects as Plessy v. Ferguson, the Leo Frank case, "passing," intermarriage, civil rights, and anti-Semitism. The paradoxical presence of being both Black and Jewish, she argues, leads questions of identity, identity politics, and diversity in a new direction as it challenges distinct notions of whiteness and blackness. Rising above familiar notions of identity crisis and cultural confrontation, she offers new insights into the discourse of race and multiculturalism as she suggests that identity can be a more encompassing concept than is usually thought. Gibel Azoulay adds her own personal history and interviews with eight other Black and Jewish individuals to reveal various ways in which interracial identities are being lived, experienced, and understood in contemporary America.
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  • 25
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Durham : Duke University Press
    ISBN: 9780822378181
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 online resource (196 pages)
    DDC: 306.874/3
    Keywords: FAMILY & RELATIONSHIPS / Parenting / Motherhood
    Abstract: In this compelling memoir by a writer, mother, and feminist, Jane Lazarre confronts the myth of the "good mother" with her fiercely honest and intimate portrait of early motherhood as a time of profound ambivalence and upheaval, filled with desperation as well as joy, the struggle to reclaim a sense of self, and sheer physical exhaustion. Originally published in 1976, The Mother Knot is a feminist classic, as relevant today as it was twenty years ago
    Note: Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 12. Dez 2020) , In English
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  • 26
    ISBN: 9780822397748
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 online resource (432 pages) , 23 b&w photographs
    Series Statement: New Americanists
    DDC: 305.32/089
    Keywords: SOCIAL SCIENCE / Men's Studies ; Gender identity ; Masculinity ; Men Psychology ; Race ; Sex role
    Abstract: Although in recent years scholars have explored the cultural construction of masculinity, they have largely ignored the ways in which masculinity intersects with other categories of identity, particularly those of race and ethnicity. The essays in Race and the Subject of Masculinities address this concern and focus on the social construction of masculinity-black, white, ethnic, gay, and straight-in terms of the often complex and dynamic relationships among these inseparable categories.Discussing a wide range of subjects including the inherent homoeroticism of martial-arts cinema, the relationship between working-class ideologies and Elvis impersonators, the emergence of a gay, black masculine aesthetic in the works of James Van der Zee and Robert Mapplethorpe, and the comedy of Richard Pryor, Race and the Subject of Masculinities provides a variety of opportunities for thinking about how race, sexuality, and "manhood" are reinforced and reconstituted in today's society. Editors Harry Stecopoulos and Michael Uebel have gathered together essays that make clear how the formation of masculine identity is never as obvious as it might seem to be. Examining personas as varied as Eddie Murphy, Bruce Lee, Tarzan, Malcolm X, and Andre Gidé, these essays draw on feminist critique and queer theory to demonstrate how cross-identification through performance and spectatorship among men of different races and cultural backgrounds has served to redefine masculinity in contemporary culture. By taking seriously the role of race in the making of men, Race and the Subject of Masculinities offers an important challenge to the new studies of masculinity.Contributors. Herman Beavers, Jonathan Dollimore, Richard Dyer, Robin D. G. Kelly, Christopher Looby, Leerom Medovoi, Eric Lott, Deborah E. McDowell, José E. Muñoz, Harry Stecopoulos, Yvonne Tasker, Michael Uebel, Gayle Wald, Robyn Wiegman
    Note: Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 06. Jan 2021) , In English
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  • 27
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Durham : Duke University Press | Berlin : Walter de Gruyter GmbH
    ISBN: 9780822397434
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (200 p.)
    Edition: 1995
    Series Statement: Post-Contemporary Interventions
    DDC: 305.8/00973
    Abstract: Arguing that the contemporary commitment to the importance of cultural identity has renovated rather than replaced an earlier commitment to racial identity, Walter Benn Michaels asserts that the idea of culture, far from constituting a challenge to racism, is actually a form of racism. Our America offers both a provocative reinterpretation of the role of identity in modernism and a sustained critique of the role of identity in postmodernism."We have a great desire to be supremely American," Calvin Coolidge wrote in 1924. That desire, Michaels tells us, is at the very heart of American modernism, giving form and substance to a cultural movement that would in turn redefine America's cultural and collective identity-ultimately along racial lines. A provocative reinterpretation of American modernism, Our America also offers a new way of understanding current debates over the meaning of race, identity, multiculturalism, and pluralism.Michaels contends that the aesthetic movement of modernism and the social movement of nativism came together in the 1920s in their commitment to resolve the meaning of identity-linguistic, national, cultural, and racial. Just as the Johnson Immigration Act of 1924, which excluded aliens, and the Indian Citizenship Act of the same year, which honored the truly native, reconceptualized national identity, so the major texts of American writers such as Cather, Faulkner, Hurston, and Williams reinvented identity as an object of pathos-something that can be lost or found, defended or betrayed. Our America is both a history and a critique of this invention, tracing its development from the white supremacism of the Progressive period through the cultural pluralism of the Twenties. Michaels's sustained rereading of the texts of the period-the canonical, the popular, and the less familiar-exposes recurring concerns such as the reconception of the image of the Indian as a symbol of racial purity and national origins, the relation between World War I and race, contradictory appeals to the family as a model for the nation, and anxieties about reproduction that subliminally tie whiteness and national identity to incest, sterility, and impotence.
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  • 28
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Durham : Duke University Press | Berlin : Walter de Gruyter GmbH
    ISBN: 9780822378167
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (168 p.)
    Edition: 1996
    DDC: 306.874
    Abstract: "I am Black," Jane Lazarre's son tells her. "I have a Jewish mother, but I am not 'biracial.' That term is meaningless to me." She understands, she says-but he tells her, gently, that he doesn't think so, that she can't understand this completely because she is white. Beyond the Whiteness of Whiteness is Jane Lazarre's memoir of coming to terms with this painful truth, of learning to look into the nature of whiteness in a way that passionately informs the connections between herself and her family. A moving account of life in a biracial family, this book is a powerful meditation on motherhood and racism in America, the story of an education into the realities of African American culture.Lazarre has spent over twenty-five years living in a Black American family, married to an African American man, birthing and raising two sons. A teacher of African American literature, she has been influenced by an autobiographical tradition that is characterized by a speaking out against racism and a grounding of that expression in one's own experience-an overlapping of the stories of one's own life and the world. Like the stories of that tradition, Lazarre's is a recovery of memories that come together in this book with a new sense of meaning. From a crucial moment in which consciousness is transformed, to recalling and accepting the nature and realities of whiteness, each step describes an aspect of her internal and intellectual journey. Recalling events that opened her eyes to her sons' and husband's experience as Black Americans-an operation, turned into a horrific nightmare by a doctor's unconscious racism or the jarring truths brought home by a visit to an exhibit on slavery at the Richmond Museum of the Confederacy-or her own revealing missteps, Lazarre describes a movement from silence to voice, to a commitment to action, and to an appreciation of the value of a fluid, even ambiguous, identity. It is a coming of age that permits a final retelling of family history and family reunion.With her skill as a novelist and her experience as a teacher, Jane Lazarre has crafted a narrative as compelling as it is telling. It eloquently describes the author's delight at being accepted into her husband's family and attests to the power of motherhood. And as personal as this story is, it is a remarkably incisive account of how perceptions of racial difference lie at the heart of the history and culture of America.
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  • 29
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Durham : Duke University Press
    ISBN: 0822382032 , 0822317753 , 0822317729 , 9780822382034 , 9780822317753 , 9780822317722
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource (viii, 341 p) , maps , 23 cm
    Edition: Online-Ausg. 2011 Electronic reproduction; Available via World Wide Web
    Series Statement: Asia-Pacific
    Parallel Title: Print version Borders of Chinese Civilization : Geography and History at Empire's End
    DDC: 303.48/25105209034
    Keywords: Chinese Ethnic identity ; Japan Relations ; China Relations ; Japan Civilization ; Chinese influences
    Abstract: D. R. Howland explores China's representations of Japan in the changing world of the late nineteenth century and, in so doing, examines the cultural and social borders between the two neighbors. Looking at Chinese accounts of Japan written during the 1870s and 1880s, he undertakes an unprecedented analysis of the main genres the Chinese used to portray Japan-the travel diary, poetry, and the geographical treatise. In his discussion of the practice of "brushtalk," in which Chinese scholars communicated with the Japanese by exchanging ideographs, Howland further shows how the Chinese viewed
    Description / Table of Contents: Contents; Acknowledgments; Note; Introduction; I Encountering Japan; 1. Civilization from the Center: The Geomoral Context of Tributary Expectations; Civilization and Proximity; The Bounds of Diplomatic Protocol; Japan in the Qing Record; An Aside: The Aborted Legacy of the Ming; The Matter of International Treaties; The Decision to Grant Japan a Treaty (1870); Japanese Incident/Dwarf Intrusion (1874); 2. Civilization as Universal Practice: The Context of Writing and Poetry; Brushtalking; The Written Code: Hanwen/Kanbun; The Play of the Code; Tong Wen: Shared Writing/Shared Civilization
    Description / Table of Contents: Playing the Code: Occasional PoetryCelebrating Tong Wen: Poetry and History; The Value of Civilization in Japan; II Representing Japan; Prologue: Geographical Knowledge and Forms of Representation; 3. Journeys to the East: The Geography of Historical Sites and Self in the Travelogue; Images of the East; Recovering History through Geographical Sites; Travel Accounts; 4. The Historiographical Use of Poetry; The Poems on Divers Japanese Affairs; The Epistemological Basis of the Poetry-History Homology; Poetry and Geography; Evidential Research
    Description / Table of Contents: 5. The Utility of Objectification in the Geographic TreatiseThe Decade of Geographic Treatises on Japan; The Local Treatise as a Model; Utility as Means and End; Strategies of Objectification; III Representing Japan's Westernization; 6. Negotiating Civilization and Westernization; Analogy and Containment; The Precedence of Learning before Action; Western Learning and Western Ways; Alternative Approaches to World Order; Afterword; Notes; Bibliography; Glossary; Index
    Note: Includes bibliographical references (p. [303]-322) and index , Electronic reproduction; Available via World Wide Web
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  • 30
    ISBN: 9780822396376
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (288 p.) , 22 b&w photographs
    Series Statement: Body, Commodity, Text
    DDC: 391.009
    Abstract: This volume examines the dynamic relationship between the body, clothing, and identity in sub-Saharan Africa and raises questions that have previously been directed almost exclusively to a Western and urban context. Unusual in its treatment of the body surface as a critical frontier in the production and authentification of identity, Clothing and Difference shows how the body and its adornment have been used to construct and contest social and individual identities in Nigeria, Zimbabwe, Tanzania, Kenya, and other African societies during both colonial and post-colonial times.Grounded in the insights of anthropology and history and influenced by developments in cultural studies, these essays investigate the relations between the personal and the public, and between ideas about the self and those about the family, gender, and national groups. They explore the bodily and material creation of the changing identities of women, spirits, youths, ancestors, and entrepreneurs through a consideration of topics such as fashion, spirit possession, commodity exchange, hygiene, and mourning.By taking African societies as its focus, Clothing and Difference demonstrates that factors considered integral to Western social development-heterogeneity, migration, urbanization, transnational exchange, and media representation-have existed elsewhere in different configurations and with different outcomes. With significance for a wide range of fields, including gender studies, cultural studies, art history, performance studies, political science, semiotics, economics, folklore, and fashion and textile analysis/design, this work provides alternative views of the structures underpinning Western systems of commodification, postmodernism, and cultural differentiation.Contributors. Misty Bastian, Timothy Burke, Hildi Hendrickson, Deborah James, Adeline Masquelier, Elisha Renne, Johanna Schoss, Brad Weiss...
    URL: Cover
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    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Durham : Duke University Press | Berlin : Walter de Gruyter GmbH
    ISBN: 9780822378433
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (168 p.)
    DDC: 305.8/00973
    Abstract: In Coming through the Fire, prominent scholar and writer C. Eric Lincoln addresses the most important issue of our time with insights forged by a lifetime of confronting racial oppression in America. Born in a small rural town in northern Alabama, raised by his grandparents, Lincoln portrays in rich detail the nuances of racial conflict and control that characterized the community of Athens, personal experiences which would lead him to dedicate his life to illuminating issues of race and social identity. The contradictions and calamities of being black and poor in the United States become a purifying fire for his searing analyses of the contemporary meanings of race and color.Coming through the Fire, with its fiercely intelligent, passionate, and clear-eyed view of race and class conflict, makes a major contribution to understanding-and thereby healing-the terrible rift that has opened up in the heart of America. Lincoln explores the nature of biracial relationships, the issue of transracial adoption, violence-particularly black-on-black violence-the "endangered" black male, racism as power, the relationship between Blacks and Jews, our multicultural melting pot, and Minister Louis Farrakhan.Without sidestepping painful issues, or sacrificing a righteous anger, the author argues for "no-fault reconciliation," for mutual recognition of the human endowment we share regardless of race, preparing us as a nation for the true multiculture tomorrow will demand.Readers familiar with Lincoln's earlier groundbreaking work on the Black Muslims and on the black church will be eagerly awaiting the publication of Coming through the Fire. Others will simply find C. Eric Lincoln's personal story and his exploration of survival and race in America to be absorbing and compelling reading.
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  • 32
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Durham : Duke University Press | Berlin : Walter de Gruyter GmbH
    ISBN: 9780822398677
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (368 p.) , 8 b&w photographs
    Series Statement: Post-Contemporary Interventions
    DDC: 302.23/092
    Abstract: How is history produced? How do individuals write-or rewrite-their parts while engaged in the production of history? Michael Lynch and David Bogen take the example of the Iran-contra hearings to explore these questions. These hearings, held in 1987 by the Joint House-Senate Select Committee on Secret Military Assistance to Iran and the Nicaragua Opposition, provided the nation with a media spectacle and a rare chance to see a struggle over the writing of history. There was Oliver North, prime suspect and designated scapegoat, turning into a hero of the American Right before the very eyes of the nation. How this transformation occurred, with the complicity of the press and the public, becomes disturbingly clear in The Spectacle of History.Lynch and Bogen detail the practices through which the historical agents at the center of the hearings composed, confirmed, used, erased, and denied the historical record. They show how partisan skirmishes over the disclosure of records and testimony led to a divided and irresolute outcome, an outcome further facilitated by the "applied deconstruction" deployed by North and his allies. The Spectacle of History immerses the reader in a crowded field of texts, utterances, visual displays, and media commentaries, but, more than a case study, it develops unique insight into problems at the heart of society and social theory-lying and credibility, the production of civic spectacle, the relationship between testimony and history, the uses of memory, and the interplay between speech and writing.Drawing on themes from sociology, literary theory, and ethnomethodology and challenging prevailing concepts held by contemporary communication and cultural studies, Lynch and Bogen extract valuable theoretical lessons from this specific and troubling historical episode.
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  • 33
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Durham : Duke University Press
    ISBN: 0822381915 , 0822315785 , 0822315939 , 9780822381914 , 9780822315780 , 9780822315933
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource (xviii, 226 p) , maps , 23 cm
    Edition: Online-Ausg. 2011 Electronic reproduction; Available via World Wide Web
    Parallel Title: Print version Neither Cargo nor Cult : Ritual Politics and the Colonial Imagination in Fiji
    DDC: 306.099611
    Keywords: Navosavakadua ; Cargo cults ; Fiji Biography ; Fiji Politics and government
    Abstract: In the 1880s an oracle priest, Navosavakadua, mobilized Fijians of the hinterlands against the encroachment of both Fijian chiefs and British colonizers. British officials called the movement the Tuka cult, imagining it as a contagious superstition that had to be stopped. Navosavakadua and many of his followers, deemed ""dangerous and disaffected natives,"" were exiled. Scholars have since made Tuka the standard example of the Pacific cargo cult, describing it as a millenarian movement in which dispossessed islanders sought Western goods by magical means. In this study of colonial and pos
    Description / Table of Contents: CONTENTS; List of Figures; Preface: Neither Cargo nor Cult; Acknowledgments; 1 Introduction: Culture, History, and Colonialism; 2 Embattled People of the Land: The Ra Social Landscape, 1840-1875; 3 Navosavakadua as Priest of the Land; 4 Colonial Constructions of Disorder: Navosavakadua as "Dangerous and Disaffected Native"; 5 Navosavakadua's Ritual Polity; 6 Routinizing Articulating Systems: Jehovah and the People of the Land, 1891-1940; 7 Narratives of Navosavakadua in the 1980s and 1990s; 8 Navosavakadua among the Vatukaloko; 9 Conclusion: Do Cults Exist? Do States Exist?; Bibliography
    Description / Table of Contents: Index
    Note: Includes bibliographical references (p. [211]-217) and index , Electronic reproduction; Available via World Wide Web
    URL: Cover
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  • 34
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Durham : Duke University Press
    ISBN: 0822399474 , 9780822399476
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource (viii, 267 pages)
    Edition: Online-Ausg. [S.l.] HathiTrust Digital Library 2010 Electronic reproduction
    Series Statement: New Americanists
    Parallel Title: Print version American anatomies
    DDC: 305
    Keywords: African American women ; Sex role ; Sex role ; United States.. ; African American women.. ; United States ; Race relations ; Electronic books ; United States Race relations ; Aufsatzsammlung
    Abstract: "In this brilliantly combative study, Robyn Wiegman challenges contemporary clichés about race and gender, a formulation that is itself a cliché in need of questioning. As part of what she calls her "feminist disloyalty," she turns a critical, even skeptical, eye on current debates about multiculturalism and "difference" while simultaneously exposing the many ways in which white racial supremacy has been reconfigured since the institutional demise of segregation. Most of all, she examines the hypocrisy and contradictoriness of over a century of narratives that posit Anglo-Americans as heroic agents of racism's decline. Whether assessing Uncle Tom's Cabin, lynching, Leslie Fiedler's racialist mapping of the American novel, the Black Power movement of the 60s, 80s buddy films, or the novels of Richard Wright and Toni Morrison, Wiegman unflinchingly confronts the paradoxes of both racism and antiracist agendas, including those advanced from a feminist perspective
    Abstract: American Anatomies takes the long view: What epistemological frameworks allowed the West, from the Renaissance forward, to schematize racial and gender differences and to create social hierarchies based on these differences? How have those epistemological regimes changed - and not changed - over time? Where are we now? With painstaking care, political passion, and intellectual daring, Wiegman analyzes the biological and cultural bases of racial and gender bias in order to reinvigorate the discussion of identity politics. She concludes that, for very different reasons, identity proves to be dangerous to minority and majority alike."--pub. desc
    Description / Table of Contents: ""Contents ""; ""Acknowledgments""; ""Taking Refuge: An Introduction""; ""Economies of Visibility""; ""1. Visual Modernity""; ""2. Sexing the Difference""; ""The Ends of ""Man""""; ""3. The Anatomy of Lynching""; ""4. Bonds of (In)Difference""; ""White Mythologies""; ""5. Canonical Architecture""; ""6. The Alchemy of Disloyalty""; ""Notes""; ""Bibliography""; ""Index""
    Note: Includes bibliographical references (pages 239-259) and index , Use copy Restrictions unspecified star MiAaHDL , Electronic reproduction
    URL: Cover
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  • 35
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Durham : Duke University Press | Berlin : Walter de Gruyter GmbH
    ISBN: 9780822397298
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (392 p.) , 6 drawings
    DDC: 306
    Abstract: Having multiple wives was one of the mainstays of male privilege during the Ming and Qing dynasties of late imperial China. Based on a comprehensive reading of eighteenth-century Chinese novels and a theoretical approach grounded in poststructuralist, psychoanalytic, and feminist criticism, Misers, Shrews, and Polygamists examines how such privilege functions in these novels and provides the first full account of literary representations of sexuality and gender in pre-modern China.In many examples of rare erotic fiction, and in other works as well-known as Dream of the Red Chamber, Keith McMahon identifies a sexual economy defined by the figures of the "miser" and the "shrew"-caricatures of the retentive, self-containing man and the overflowing, male-enervating woman. Among these and other characters, the author explores the issues surrounding the practice of polygamy, the logic of its overvaluation of masculinity, and the nature of sexuality generally in Chinese society. How does the man with many wives manage and justify his sexual authority? Why and how might he escape or limit this presumed authority, sometimes to the point of portraying himself as abject before the shrewish woman? How do women accommodate or coddle the man, or else oppose, undermine, or remold him? And in what sense does the man place himself lower than the spiritually and morally superior woman?The most extensive English-language study of Chinese literature from the eighteenth century, this examination of polygamy will interest not only students of Chinese history, culture, and literature but also all those concerned with histories of gender and sexuality.
    URL: Cover
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  • 36
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Durham : Duke University Press
    ISBN: 9780822397083 , 0822397080
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (viii, 288 Seiten)
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als
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    RVK:
    Keywords: Jazz History and criticism ; Musical canon ; Kritische Theorie ; Jazz ; Electronic books ; Aufsatzsammlung ; Aufsatzsammlung ; Jazz ; Kritische Theorie
    Note: Includes bibliographical references and index , The jazz canon and its consequences / Krin Gabbard -- "Moldy figs" and modernists : jazz at war (1942-1946) / Bernard Gendron -- Jazz in crisis, 1948-1958 : ideology and representation / Steven B. Elworth -- Other : from noun to verb / Nathaniel MacKey -- Historical context and the definition of jazz : putting more of the history in "jazz history" / William Howland Kenney -- Oral histories of jazz musicians : the NEA transcripts as texts in context / Burton W. Peretti -- The media of memory : the seductive menace of records in jazz history / Jed Rasula -- "Out of notes" : signification, interpretation, and the problem of Miles Davis / Robert Walser -- Critical alchemy : Anthony Braxton and the imagined tradition / Ronald M. Radano -- Ephemera underscored : writing around free improvisation / John Corbett -- Double V, double time : bebop's politics of style / Eric Lott -- Ascension : music and the black arts movement / Lorenzo Thomas
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  • 37
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Durham : Duke University Press
    ISBN: 0822396122 , 9780822396123
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource (x, 188 pages)
    Edition: Online-Ausg.
    Parallel Title: Print version At home in the world
    DDC: 306.0899915
    Keywords: Homelessness Philosophy ; Philosophy, Warlpiri ; Warlpiri (Australian people) Social conditions ; Home Philosophy
    Description / Table of Contents: ""Acknowledgments ""; ""Chapter One""; ""Chapter Two ""; ""Chapter Three ""; ""Chapter Four""; ""Chapter Five ""; ""Chapter Six ""; ""Chapter Seven ""; ""Chapter Eight ""; ""Chapter Nine ""; ""Chapter Ten ""; ""Chapter Eleven ""; ""Chapter Twelve ""; ""Chapter Thirteen ""; ""Chapter Fourteen ""; ""Epilogue ""; ""Postscript ""; ""Notes ""
    Note: Includes bibliographical references (pages 177-188)
    URL: Cover
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  • 38
    ISBN: 9780822397953
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (264 p.) , 8 b&w photographs
    DDC: 301/.092
    Abstract: To listen to David M. Schneider is to hear the voice of American anthropology. To listen at length is to hear much of the discipline's history, from the realities of postwar practice and theory to Schneider's own influence on the development of symbolic and interpretive anthropology in the 1970s and 1980s. Schneider on Schneider offers readers this rare opportunity, and with it an engrossing introduction into a world of intellectual rigor, personal charm, and wit.In this work, based on conversations with Richard Handler, Schneider tells the story of his days devoted to anthropology-as a student of Clyde Kluckhohn and Talcott Parsons and as a writer and teacher whose work on kinship and culture theory revolutionized the discipline. With a master's sense of the telling anecdote, he describes his education at Cornell, Yale, and Harvard, his fieldwork on the Micronesian island of Yap and among the Mescalero Apache, and his years teaching at the London School of Economics, Berkeley, and the University of Chicago. Musing on the current state and the future of anthropology, Schneider's cast of characters reads like a who's who of postwar social science. His reflections on anthropological field research and academic politics address some of the most pressing ethical and epistemological issues facing scholars today, while yielding tales of unexpected amusement.With its humor and irony, its wealth of information and searching questions about the state of anthropology, Schneider on Schneider not only provides an important resource for the history of twentieth-century social science, but also brings to life the entertaining voice of an engaging storyteller.
    URL: Cover
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  • 39
    ISBN: 9780822397441
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 online resource (544 pages) , 41 b&w photographs
    Series Statement: Series Q
    DDC: 305.9/0664
    Keywords: SOCIAL SCIENCE / Sociology / General ; Gay men Attitudes ; Gay men Social life and customs ; Lesbians Attitudes ; Lesbians Social life and customs ; Popular culture History and criticism
    Abstract: Out in Culture charts some of the ways in which lesbians, gays, and queers have understood and negotiated the pleasures and affirmations, as well as the disappointments, of mass culture. The essays collected here, combining critical and theoretical works from a cross-section of academics, journalists, and artists, demonstrate a rich variety of gay and lesbian approaches to film, television, popular music, and fashion. This wide-ranging anthology is the first to juxtapose pioneering work in gay and lesbian media criticism with recent essays in contemporary queer cultural studies.Uniquely accessible, Out in Culture presents such popular writers as B. Ruby Rich, Essex Hemphill, and Michael Musto as well as influential critics such as Richard Dyer, Chris Straayer, and Julia Lesage, on topics ranging from the queer careers of Agnes Moorehead and Pee Wee Herman to the cultural politics of gay drag, lesbian style, the visualization of AIDS, and the black snap! queen experience.
    Abstract: Of particular interest are two "dossiers," the first linking essays on the queer content of Alfred Hitchcock's films, and the second on the production and reception of popular music within gay and lesbian communities. The volume concludes with an extensive bibliography-the most comprehensive currently available-of sources in gay, lesbian, and queer media criticism.Out in Culture explores the distinctive and original ways in which gays, lesbians, and queers have experienced, appropriated, and resisted the images and artifacts of popular culture. This eclectic anthology will be of interest to a broad audience of general readers and scholars interested in gay and lesbian issues; students of film, media, gender, and cultural studies; and those interested in the emerging field of queer theory.Contributors. Sabrina Barton, Edith Becker, Rhona J. Berenstein, Nayland Blake, Michelle Citron, Danae Clark, Corey K.
    Abstract: Creekmur, Alexander Doty, Richard Dyer, Heather Findlay, Jan Zita Grover, Essex Hemphill, John Hepworth, Jeffrey Hilbert, Lucretia Knapp, Bruce La Bruce, Al LaValley, Julia Lesage, Michael Moon, Michael Musto, B. Ruby Rich, Marlon Riggs, Arlene Stein, Chris Straayer, Anthony Thomas, Mark Thompson, Valerie Traub, Thomas Waugh, Patricia White, Robin Wood
    Note: Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 06. Jan 2021) , In English
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  • 40
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Durham : Duke University Press
    ISBN: 0822381966 , 0822316609 , 0822316722 , 9780822381969 , 9780822316602 , 9780822316725
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource (197 p) , 24 cm
    Edition: Online-Ausg. 2011 Electronic reproduction; Available via World Wide Web
    Series Statement: Post-Contemporary Interventions
    Parallel Title: Print version The Body in Late-Capitalist USA
    DDC: 306.4
    Keywords: Sex role ; Families ; Mental health ; Human body Social aspects ; Capitalism ; United States Social conditions 1980- ; Electronic books
    Abstract: In The Body in Late-Capitalist USA, Donald M. Lowe explores the varied social practices that code and construct the body. Arguing that our bodily lives are shaped by a complex of daily and ongoing practices-how we work, what we buy and consume-Lowe contends that as a result of the commodification of these and other social practices in the late-twentieth century, what we often understand to be the needs of the body are in fact means for capital accumulation.Moving beyond studies of representations and images of the body, Lowe focuses on the intersection of body practices, language, and the Soci
    Description / Table of Contents: Contents; Acknowledgments; Introduction: Language, Body Practices, and the Social; 1 Production Practices; a. Flexible Accumulation and the Labor Market; b. Cybernetic Systems and the Labor Process; c. The Discipline of Neoclassical Economics; 2 Consumption Practices; a. Product Characteristics and Use Value; b. Image in Late-Capitalist Advertising; c. The Consumption of Lifestyle; d. The Semiotics of Late-Capitalist Commodity; 3 The Hegemony of Exchangist Practices; 4 Social Reproduction Practices; a. Changing Household and the Politics of ""The Family""; b. Re-Racialization
    Description / Table of Contents: c. The Body and Bio-Technical Systems5 Sexuality and Gender Construction; a. Gender and Sexuality; b. Sexual Lifestyle and Late-Capitalist Consumption; c. Gender Construction in Late Capitalism; 6 Redisciplining the Subject; a. The Discourse of Psychiatry; b. Changing Mental Health Practices; c. The Bounds of Psychopathology; Retrospect: The Problematic of the Body in Late Capitalism; References; Index
    Note: Includes bibliographical references (p. [179]-192) and index , Electronic reproduction; Available via World Wide Web
    URL: Cover
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  • 41
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Durham : Duke University Press | Berlin : Walter de Gruyter GmbH
    ISBN: 9780822378129
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (352 p.) , 20 illustrations
    Series Statement: Post-Contemporary Interventions
    DDC: 305.892/4041/09034
    Abstract: "I knew a Man, who having nothing but a summary Notion of Religion himself, and being wicked and profligate to the last Degree in his Life, made a thorough Reformation in himself, by labouring to convert a Jew."-Daniel Defoe, The Farther Adventures of Robinson Crusoe (1719)When the hero of Defoe's novel listens skeptically to this anecdote related by a French Roman Catholic priest, he little suspects that in less than a century the conversion of the Jews would become nothing short of a national project-not in France but in England. In this book, Michael Ragussis explores the phenomenon of Jewish conversion-the subject of popular enthusiasm, public scandal, national debate, and dubbed "the English madness" by its critics-in Protestant England from the 1790s through the 1870s.Moving beyond the familiar catalog of anti-Semitic stereotypes, Ragussis analyzes the rhetoric of conversion as it was reinvented by the English in sermons, stories for the young, histories of the Jews, memoirs by Jewish converts, and popular novels. Alongside these texts and the countertexts produced by English Jews, he situates such writers as Edgeworth, Scott, Disraeli, Arnold, Trollope, and Eliot within the debate over conversion and related issues of race, gender, and nation-formation. His work reveals how a powerful group of emergent cultural projects-including a revisionist tradition of the novel, the new science of ethnology, and the rewriting of European history-redefined English national identity in response to the ideology of conversion, the history of the Jews, and "the Jewish question."Figures of Conversion offers an entirely new way of regarding Jewish identity in nineteenth-century British culture and will be of importance not only to literary scholars but also to scholars of Judaic and religious studies, history, and cultural studies.
    URL: Cover
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  • 42
    ISBN: 9780822377719 , 0822377713
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (xiv, 237 Seiten)
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als
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    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als
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    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als
    DDC: 305.8
    RVK:
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    Keywords: Foucault, Michel 1926-1984 ; Histoire de la sexualité ; Foucault, Michel ; Foucault, Michel ; Foucault, Michel ; Geschichte 1800-1900 ; Racism ; Indigenous peoples ; Sexualität ; Ethnizität ; Rassismus ; Kolonialismus ; Electronic books ; Foucault, Michel 1926-1984 L' usage des plaisirs ; Sexualität ; Ethnizität ; Rassismus ; Geschichte 1800-1900 ; Foucault, Michel 1926-1984 ; Sexualität ; Foucault, Michel 1926-1984 L' usage des plaisirs ; Kolonialismus ; Foucault, Michel 1926-1984 ; Rassismus ; Foucault, Michel 1926-1984 Histoire de la sexualité
    Abstract: Michel Foucault's History of Sexuality has been one of the most influential books of the last two decades. It has had an enormous impact on cultural studies and work across many disciplines on gender, sexuality, and the body. Bringing a new set of questions to this key work, Ann Laura Stoler examines volume one of History of Sexuality in an unexplored light. She asks why there has been such a muted engagement with this work among students of colonialism for whom issues of sexuality and power are so essential. Why is the colonial context absent from Foucault's history of a European sexual discourse that for him defined the bourgeois self? In Race and the Education of Desire, Stoler challenges Foucault's tunnel vision of the West and his marginalization of empire. She also argues that this first volume of History of Sexuality contains a suggestive if not studied treatment of race. Drawing on Foucault's little-known 1976 College de France lectures, Stoler addresses his treatment of the relationship between biopower, bourgeois sexuality, and what he identified as racisms of the state. In this critical and historically grounded analysis based on cultural theory and her own extensive research in Dutch and French colonial archives, Stoler suggests how Foucault's insights have in the past constrained -- and in the future may help shape -- the ways we trace the genealogies of race. Race and the Education of Desire will revise current notions of the connections between European and colonial historiography and between the European bourgeois order and the colonial treatment of sexuality. Arguing that a history of European nineteenth-century sexuality must also be a history of race, it will change the way we think about Foucault." from http://search.barnesandnoble.com (Jan. 25, 2011.)
    Note: Includes bibliographical references (pages [211]-227) and index , I. Colonial Studies and the History of Sexuality -- II. Placing Race in the History of Sexuality -- III. Toward a Genealogy of Racisms: The 1976 Lectures at the College de France -- IV. Cultivating Bourgeois Bodies and Racial Selves -- V. Domestic Subversions and Children's Sexuality -- VI. The Education of Desire and the Repressive Hypothesis
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    URL: Cover
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