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  • HeBIS  (693)
  • MPI-MMG  (72)
  • Ethn. Museum Berlin  (37)
  • Berkeley : University of California Press
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  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Long Beach, CA : Western States Folklore Society | Berkeley : University of California Press | Los Angeles, Calif. : California Folklore Society ; 6.1947 -
    ISSN: 2325-811X , 0043-373x
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource
    Dates of Publication: 6.1947 -
    Additional Information: In Literature online
    Parallel Title: Druckausg. Western folklore
    Former Title: Vorg.: California folklore quarterly
    DDC: 390
    Keywords: Volkskultur ; USA Weststaaten ; Zeitschrift ; Zeitschrift ; Elektronische Publikation ; Zeitschrift ; Zeitschrift ; USA Weststaaten ; Volkskultur ; Zeitschrift ; Elektronische Publikation
    Note: Herausgebendes Organ 1947-[?]: California Folklore Society , Gesehen am 14.04.2020
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  • 2
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press | Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest
    ISBN: 9780520393332
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (325 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    Series Statement: Berkeley Series in British Studies v.23
    DDC: 306.760941
    Keywords: Geschichte 1801-2000 ; Crossdressing ; Drag Queen ; Großbritannien ; Electronic books
    Abstract: "A must-read for anyone interested in the history of drag performance."--​Publishers Weekly A rich and provocative history of drag's importance in modern British culture.   Drag: A British History is a groundbreaking study of the sustained popularity and changing forms of male drag performance in modern Britain. With this book, Jacob Bloomfield provides fresh perspectives on drag and recovers previously neglected episodes in the history of the art form.   Despite its transgressive associations, drag has persisted as an intrinsic, and common, part of British popular culture--drag artists have consistently asserted themselves as some of the most renowned and significant entertainers of their day. As Bloomfield demonstrates, drag was also at the center of public discussions around gender and sexuality in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, from Victorian sex scandals to the "permissive society" of the 1960s. This compelling new history demythologizes drag, stressing its ordinariness while affirming its important place in British cultural heritage.
    Note: Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources
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  • 3
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press | Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest
    ISBN: 9780520393875
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (244 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    DDC: 302.2301
    Keywords: Electronic books
    Abstract: In this bold rewriting of visual culture, Brooke Belisle uses dimensionality to rethink the history and theory of media aesthetics. With Depth Effects, she traces A.I.-enabled techniques of computational imaging back to spatial strategies of early photography, analyzing everyday smartphone apps by way of almost-forgotten media forms. Drawing on the work of Maurice Merleau-Ponty, Belisle explores depth both as a problem of visual representation (how can flat images depict a voluminous world?) and as a philosophical paradox (how do things cohere beyond the limits of our view?). She explains how today's depth effects continue colonialist ambitions toward totalizing ways of seeing. But she also shows how artists stage dimensionality to articulate what remains invisible and irreducible.
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  • 4
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press | Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest
    ISBN: 9780520395886
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (281 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    DDC: 304.2097265
    Keywords: Electronic books
    Abstract: In Rooting in a Useless Land, Chelsea Fisher examines the deep histories of environmental-justice conflicts in Mexico's Yucatán Peninsula. She draws on her innovative archaeological research in Yaxunah, an Indigenous Maya farming community dealing with land dispossession, but with a surprising twist: Yaxunah happens to be entangled with prestigious sustainable-development projects initiated by some of the most famous chefs in the world. Fisher contends that these sustainable-development initiatives inadvertently bolster the useless-land narrative--a colonial belief that Maya forests are empty wastelands--which has been driving Indigenous land dispossession and environmental injustice for centuries. Rooting in a Useless Land explores how archaeology, practiced within communities, can restore history and strengthen relationships built on contested ground.
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  • 5
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press | Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest
    ISBN: 9780520380783
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (223 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    Series Statement: Gender and Justice Series v.11
    DDC: 305.3109748110905
    Keywords: Electronic books
    Abstract: On Shifting Ground examines how it is to become a man in a place and time defined by economic contraction and carceral expansion. Jamie J. Fader draws on in-depth interviews with a racially diverse sample of Philadelphia's millennial men to analyze the key tensions that organize their lives: isolation versus connectedness, stability versus "drama," hope versus fear, and stigma and shame versus positive, masculine affirmation. In the unfamiliar cultural landscape of contemporary adult masculinity, these men strive to define themselves in terms of what they can accomplish despite negative labels, as well as seeking to avoid "becoming a statistic" in the face of endemic risk.
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  • 6
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press | Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest
    ISBN: 9780520395749
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (296 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    Series Statement: Atelier: Ethnographic Inquiry in the Twenty-First Century Series v.10
    DDC: 303.4825405492
    Keywords: Electronic books
    Abstract: A Thousand Tiny Cuts chronicles the slow transformation of a connected region into national borderlands. Drawing on a decade of fieldwork in northern Bangladesh and eastern India, Sahana Ghosh shows the foundational place of gender and sexuality in the making and management of threat in relation to mobility. Rather than focusing solely on border fences and border crossings, she demonstrates that bordering reorders relations of value. The cost of militarization across this ostensibly "friendly" border is devaluation--of agrarian land and crops, of borderland youth undesirable as brides and grooms in their respective national hinterlands, of regional infrastructures now disconnected, and of social and physical geographies disordered by surveillance. Through a textured ethnography of the gendered political economy of mobility across postcolonial borderlands in South Asia, this ambitious book challenges anthropological understandings of the violence of bordering, migration and citizenship, and transnational inequalities that are based on Euro-American borders and security regimes.
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  • 7
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press | Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest
    ISBN: 9780520383821
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (vii, 226 Seiten)
    DDC: 305.896/073
    Keywords: Electronic books
    Note: Literaturangaben
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  • 8
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press | Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest
    ISBN: 9780520388901
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (328 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    DDC: 302.34083
    Keywords: Electronic books
    Abstract: Reveals how friendships and social media can help girls survive even the most tragic consequences of American poverty.   My Girls explores the overlooked yet transformative power of female friendship in a low-income Boston-area neighborhood. In this innovative and compassionate book, researcher Jasmin Sandelson joins teenage girls in their homes, at their hangouts and parties, and online to show how they use their connections to secure the care and support that adults in their lives can't give.   Friendships among young people in poor, urban communities--often framed as "risky" sources of peer pressure and conflict--offer crucial support and self-esteem. In a new, positive take that reveals the primacy of phones and social media in contemporary friendships, Sandelson demonstrates how girls look to one another to battle boredom, find stability, embrace adulthood, and process trauma and grief. This illuminating study--one of the first to combine digital and in-person fieldwork--blends firsthand narratives with tweets, Snaps, and Instagram and Facebook posts. My Girls places young women of color at the center of their own stories to illuminate the worlds of love and care they create.
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  • 9
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press | Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest
    ISBN: 9780520393936
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (211 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    DDC: 304.250985
    Keywords: Electronic books
    Abstract: Andean Meltdown examines how climate change and its consequences for Peru's glaciers are affecting the country's water supply and impacting Andean society and culture in unprecedented ways. Drawing on forty years of extensive research, relationship building, and community engagement in Peru, Karsten Paerregaard provides an ethnographic exploration of Andean ritual practices and performances in the context of an altered climate. By documenting Andean peoples' responses to rapid glacier retreat and urgent water shortages, Paerregaard considers the myriad ways climate change intersects with environmental, social, and political change. A pathbreaking contribution to cultural anthropology and environmental humanities, Andean Meltdown challenges prevailing theoretical thinking about the culture-nature nexus and offers a new perspective on Andean peoples' understanding of their role as agents in the shifting relationship between humans and nonhumans.
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  • 10
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press | Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest
    ISBN: 9780520393622
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (244 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    DDC: 304.2082
    Keywords: Electronic books
    Abstract: Fighting for the River portrays women's intimate, embodied relationships with river waters and explores how those relationships embolden local communities' resistance to private run-of-the-river hydroelectric power plants in Turkey. Building on extensive ethnographic research, Özge Yaka develops a body-centered, phenomenological approach to women's environmental activism and combines it with a relational ontological perspective. In this way, the book pushes beyond the "natural resources" frame to demonstrate how our corporeal connection to nonhuman entities is constitutive of our more-than-human lifeworld. Fighting for the River takes the human body as a starting point to explore the connection between lived experience and nonhuman environments, treating bodily senses and affects as the media of more-than-human connectivity and political agency. Analyzing local environmental struggles as struggles for coexistence, Yaka frames human-nonhuman relationality as a matter of socio-ecological justice.
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  • 11
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press | Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest
    ISBN: 9780520388581
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (345 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    DDC: 327.72
    Keywords: Electronic books
    Abstract: The rise of Trumpism and the Covid-19 pandemic have galvanized debates about globalization. Eric D. Larson presents a timely look at the last time the concept spurred unruly agitation: the late twentieth century. Offering a transnational history of the emergence of the global justice movement in the United States and Mexico, he considers how popular organizations laid the foundations for this "movement of movements." Farmers, urban workers, and Indigenous peoples grounded their efforts to confront free-market reforms in frontline struggles for economic and racial justice. As they strove to change the direction of the world economy, they often navigated undercurrents of racism, nationalism, and neoliberal multiculturalism, both within and beyond their networks. Larson traces the histories of three popular organizations, examining the Mexican roots of the idea of food sovereignty; racism and whiteness at the momentous Battle of Seattle protests outside the 1999 World Trade Organization meetings; and the rise of dramatic street demonstrations around the globe. Juxtaposing these stories, he reinterprets some of the crucial moments, messages, and movements of the era.
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  • 12
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press | Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest
    ISBN: 9780520393004
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (256 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    Series Statement: California Studies in Food and Culture Series v.81
    DDC: 394.1/209
    Keywords: Electronic books
    Abstract: What we learn when an anthropologist and a historian talk about food.   From the origins of agriculture to contemporary debates over culinary authenticity, Ways of Eating introduces readers to world food history and food anthropology. Through engaging stories and historical deep dives, Benjamin A. Wurgaft and Merry I. White offer new ways to understand food in relation to its natural and cultural histories and the social rules that shape our meals.   Wurgaft and White use vivid storytelling to bring food practices to life, weaving stories of Panamanian coffee growers, medieval women beer makers, and Japanese knife forgers. From the Venetian spice trade to the Columbian Exchange, from Roman garum to Vietnamese nớc chấm, Ways of Eating provides an absorbing account of world food history and anthropology. Migration, politics, and the dynamics of group identity all shape what we eat, and we can learn to trace these social forces from the plate to the kitchen, the factory, and the field.
    Note: Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources
    URL: Cover  (lizenzpflichtig)
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  • 13
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press
    ISBN: 9780520973039
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (430 Seiten) , Illustrationen
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als
    DDC: 306.76609730904
    Keywords: Gays History 20th century ; Gays History 21st century ; Public history ; Gays-United States-History-20th century ; Public history-United States ; Electronic books ; USA ; Universität ; LGBT ; Protestbewegung ; Geschichte
    Abstract: Over the course of the last half century, queer history has developed as a collaborative project involving academic researchers, community scholars, and the public. Initially rejected by most colleges and universities, queer history was sustained for many years by community-based contributors and audiences. Academic activism eventually made a place for queer history within higher education, which in turn helped queer historians become more influential in politics, law, and society. Through a collection of essays written over three decades by award-winning historian Marc Stein, Queer Public History charts the evolution of queer historical interventions in the academic sphere and explores the development of publicly oriented queer historical scholarship. From the AIDS crisis of the 1980s and the rise of queer activism in the 1990s to debates about queer immigration, same-sex marriage, and the politics of gay pride in the early twenty-first century, Stein introduces readers to key themes in queer public history. A manifesto for renewed partnerships between academic and community-based historians, strengthened linkages between queer public history and LGBT scholarly activism, and increased public support for historical research on gender and sexuality, this anthology reconsiders and reimagines the past, present, and future of queer public history.
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  • 14
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press
    ISBN: 9780520972568
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 online resource (xiv, 367 pages)
    Additional Information: Rezensiert in Strong, Justin D. [Rezension von: Shah, Nayan, 1966-, Refusal to eat] 2023
    Additional Information: Rezensiert in Smoyer, Amy B. [Rezension von: Shah, Nayan, 1966-, Refusal to eat] 2023
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als Shah, Nayan, 1966 - Refusal to eat
    DDC: 303.6109
    RVK:
    Keywords: Electronic books ; Großbritannien ; Irland ; USA ; Indien ; Südafrika ; Australien ; Papua-Neuguinea ; Suffragette ; Aktivist ; Politischer Gefangener ; Gefängnis ; Hungerstreik
    Abstract: The first global history of hunger strikes as a tactic in prisons, conflicts, and protest movements. The power of the hunger strike lies in its utter simplicity. The ability to choose to forego eating is universally accessible, even to those living under conditions of maximal constraint, as in the prisons of apartheid South Africa, Israeli prisons for Palestinian prisoners, and the detention camp at Guantánamo Bay. It is a weapon of the weak, potentially open to all. By choosing to hunger strike, a prisoner wields a last-resort personal power that communicates viscerally, in a way that is undeniable--especially when broadcast over prison barricades through media and to movements outside. Refusal to Eat is the first book to compile a global history of this vital form of modern protest, the hunger strike. In this enormously ambitious but concise book, Nayan Shah observes how hunger striking stretches and recasts to turn a personal agony into a collective social agony in conflicts and contexts all around the world, laying out a remarkable number of case studies over the last century and more. From suffragettes in Britain and the US in the early twentieth century to Irish political prisoners, Bengali prisoners, and detainees at post-9/11 Guantánamo Bay; from Japanese Americans in US internment camps to conscientious objectors in the 1960s; from South Africans fighting apartheid to asylum seekers in Australia and Papua New Guinea, Shah shows the importance of context for each case and the interventions the protesters faced. The power that hunger striking unleashes is volatile, unmooring all previous resolves, certainties, and structures and forcing supporters and opponents alike to respond in new ways. It can upend prison regimens, medical ethics, power hierarchies, governments, and assumptions about gender, race, and the body's endurance. This
    Abstract: Cover -- Refusal to Eat -- Title -- Copyright -- CONTENTS -- List of Illustrations -- Preface -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- PART ONE HUNGER STRIKING IN THE CRISIS OF IMPERIAL DEMOCRACY -- 1 Suffragists and the Shaping of Hunger Striking -- 2 The Medical Ethics of Forcible Feeding and a Brief History of Four Objects -- 3 Irish Republicans Innovating Hunger Strikes for Anticolonial Rebellion -- 4 Gandhi's Fasts, Prisoner Hunger Strikes, and Indian Independence -- PART TWO HUNGER STRIKING AND DEMOCRATIC UPHEAVALS -- 5 Solidarity and Survival in the Tule Lake Stockade -- 6 South African Anti-apartheid Hunger Strikes -- 7 Controversies of Medical Intervention in Northern Ireland -- 8 Biomedical Technologies, Medical Ethics, and the Management of Hunger Strikers -- 9 Australian Refugee Detention, Trauma, and Mental Health Crisis -- 10 Captives in U.S. Detention and Their Networks of Resistance and Solidarity -- Conclusion: Hunger-Striking Contingencies -- Notes -- Selected Bibliography -- Index.
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  • 15
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press | Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest
    ISBN: 9780520386259
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (401 pages)
    DDC: 306.362097
    RVK:
    Keywords: Sklavenhandel ; Menschenhandel ; USA ; Electronic books
    Abstract: A comprehensive study of how slavery and enslaved people shaped the modern world.   A World Transformed explores how slavery thrived at the heart of the entire Western world for more than three centuries. Arguing that slavery can be fully understood only by stepping back from traditional national histories, this book collects the scattered accounts of the latest modern scholarship into a comprehensive history of slavery and its shaping of the world we know. Celebrated historian James Walvin tells a global story that covers everything from the capitalist economy, labor, and the environment, to social culture and ideas of family, beauty, and taste.   This book underscores just how thoroughly slavery is responsible for the making of the modern world. The enforced transportation and labor of millions of Africans became a massive social and economic force, catalyzing the rapid development of multiple new and enormous trading systems with profound global consequences. The labor and products of enslaved people changed the consumption habits of millions--in India and Asia, Europe and Africa, in colonized and Indigenous American societies. Across time, slavery shaped many of the dominant features of Western taste: items and habits or rare and costly luxuries, some of which might seem, at first glance, utterly removed from the horrific reality of slavery. A World Transformed traces the global impacts of slavery over centuries, far beyond legal or historical endpoints, confirming that the world created by slave labor lives on today.
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  • 16
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press
    ISBN: 9780520387850
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 online resource (143 pages)
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als Lawson, James M., - 1928- Revolutionary nonviolence
    DDC: 303.6/1
    Keywords: Electronic books
    Abstract: A persuasive account of the philosophy and power of nonviolence organizing, and a resource for building and sustaining effective social movements. Despite the rich history of nonviolent philosophy, many people today are unfamiliar with the basic principles and practices of nonviolence--even as these concepts have guided so many direct-action movements to overturn forms of racial apartheid, military and police violence, and dictatorships around the world. Revolutionary Nonviolence is a crucial resource on the long history of nonviolent philosophy through the teachings of Rev. James M. Lawson Jr., one of the great practitioners of revolution through deliberate and sustained nonviolence. His ongoing work demonstrates how we can overcome violence and oppression through organized direct action, presenting a powerful roadmap for a new generation of activists. Rev. Lawson's work as a theologian, pastor, and social-change activist has inspired hope and liberation for more than sixty years. To hear and see him speak is to experience the power of the prophetic tradition in the African American and social gospel. In Revolutionary Nonviolence, Michael K. Honey and Kent Wong reflect on Rev. Lawson's talks and dialogues, from his speeches at the Nashville sit-in movement in 1960 to his lectures in the current UCLA curriculum. This volume provides a comprehensive introduction to Rev. Lawson's teachings on how to center nonviolence in successfully organizing for change.
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  • 17
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press | Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest
    ISBN: 9780520384408
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (186 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    DDC: 306.74097223
    Keywords: Electronic books
    Abstract: A free open access ebook is available upon publication. Learn more at www.luminosoa.org. The relationships between female sex workers and their noncommercial male partners are often assumed to be coercive and anchored in risk, dismissed as "pimp-prostitute" arrangements by researchers and the general public alike. Yet, these stereotypes unjustly erase the complexity of lives we imagine to be consumed by social suffering. Dangerous Love centers a framework of love to rethink sex workers' intimate relationships as commitments to collective solidarity and survival in contexts of oppression. Combining epidemiological research and ethnographic fieldwork in Tijuana, Mexico, Jennifer Leigh Syvertsen examines how individuals try to find love and meaning in lives marked by structural violence, social marginalization, drug addiction, and HIV/AIDS. Linking the political economy of inequalities along the border with emotional lived experience, this book explores how intimate relationships become dangerous safe havens that fundamentally shape both partners' well-being. Through these stories, we are urged to reimagine the socially transformative power of love to carve new pathways to health equity.
    Note: Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources
    URL: Cover  (lizenzpflichtig)
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  • 18
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press | Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest
    ISBN: 9780520390065
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (270 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    Series Statement: South Asia Across the Disciplines Series
    DDC: 305.5/122095409033
    Keywords: Electronic books
    Abstract: A free ebook version of this title is available through Luminos, University of California Press's Open Access publishing program. Visit www.luminosoa.org to learn more. Winner of the 2022 Joseph W. Elder Prize in the Indian Social Sciences Merchants of Virtue explores the question of what it meant to be Hindu in precolonial South Asia. Divya Cherian presents a fine-grained study of everyday life and local politics in the kingdom of Marwar in eighteenth-century western India to uncover how merchants enforced their caste ideals of vegetarianism and bodily austerity as universal markers of Hindu identity. Using legal strategies and alliances with elites, these merchants successfully remade the category of "Hindu," setting it in contrast to "Untouchable" in a process that reconfigured Hinduism in caste terms. In a history pertinent to understanding India today, Cherian establishes the centrality of caste to the early-modern Hindu self and to its imagination of inadmissible others.
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  • 19
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press | Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest
    ISBN: 9780520389373
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (386 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    Series Statement: New Directions in Palestinian Studies v.6
    DDC: 305.892740956946
    Keywords: Electronic books
    Abstract: A free open access ebook is available upon publication. Learn more atwww.luminosoa.org. Beginning in 1948, Israeli paramilitary forces began violently displacing Palestinian Arabs from Palestine. Nakba and Survival tells the stories of Palestinians in Haifa and the Galilee during, and in the decade after, mass dispossession. Manna uses oral histories and Palestinian and Israeli archives, diaries, and memories to meticulously reconstruct the social history of the Palestinians who remained and returned to become Israeli citizens. This book focuses in particular on the Galilee, using the story of Manna's own family and their village Majd al-Krum after the establishment of Israel to shed light on the cruelties faced by survivors of the military regime. While scholars of the Palestinian national movement have often studied Palestinian resistance to Israel as related to the armed struggle and the cultural struggle against the Jewish state, Manna shows that remaining in Israel under the brutality of occupation and fighting to return to Palestinian communities after displacement are acts of heroism in their own right.  The Institute for Palestine Studies extends our sincere appreciation to Samir Abdulhadi for his generous support of the translation and publication of this book. Translation by Jenab Tutunji.
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  • 20
    Book
    Book
    Berkeley : University of California Press
    ISBN: 9780520357488 , 9780520305892
    Language: English
    Pages: X, 342 Seiten
    DDC: 305.800973
    RVK:
    Keywords: Rasse ; Soziale Einstellung ; Empirische Sozialforschung
    Note: Originally published: 1983
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  • 21
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press
    ISBN: 9780520972643
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 online resource (258 pages)
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als Slater, Tom Shaking up the city
    DDC: 307.76
    RVK:
    Keywords: Stadtsoziologie ; City ; Urbanität ; Stadtlandschaft ; Wohnen ; Gentrifizierung ; Nachbarschaft ; Ungleichheit ; Electronic books ; Stadtsoziologie
    Abstract: Shaking Up the City critically examines many of the concepts and categories within mainstream urban studies that serve dubious policy agendas. Through a combination of theory and empirical evidence, Tom Slater "shakes up" mainstream urban studies in a concise and pointed fashion by turning on its head much of the prevailing wisdom in the field. To this end, he explores the themes of data-driven innovation, urban resilience, gentrification, displacement and rent control, neighborhood effects, territorial stigmatization, and ethnoracial segregation. With important contributions to ongoing debates in sociology, geography, urban planning, and public policy, this book engages closely with struggles for land rights and housing justice to offer numerous insights for scholarship and political action to guard against the spread of an urbanism rooted in vested interest..
    Abstract: Cover -- Shaking Up the City -- Title -- Copyright -- Dedication -- Contents -- List of Illustrations -- Foreword: Urban Polarization and Epistemic Reflexivity -- Acknowledgments -- 1. Challenging the Heteronomy of Urban Research -- 2. The Resilience of Neoliberal Urbanism -- 3. Gentrification beyond False Choice Urbanism -- 4. Displacement, Rent Control, and Housing Justice -- 5. Neighborhood Effects as Tautological Urbanism -- 6. The Production and Activation of Territorial Stigma -- 7. Ghetto Blasting -- 8. Some Possibilities for Critical Urban Studies -- Notes -- References -- Index.
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  • 22
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press
    ISBN: 9780520973978
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 online resource (364 pages)
    Series Statement: Communication for Social Justice Activism Ser. v.3
    Series Statement: Communication for Social Justice Activism Volume 3
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als
    DDC: 302.2
    Keywords: Communication Social aspects ; Food security Social aspects ; Food supply Moral and ethical aspects ; Electronic books
    Abstract: Everybody Eats tells the story of food justice in Greensboro, North Carolina--a midsize city in the southern United States. The city's residents found themselves in the middle of conversations about food insecurity and justice when they reached the top of the Food Research and Action Center's list of major cities experiencing food hardship. Greensboro's local food communities chose to confront these high rates of food insecurity by engaging neighborhood voices, mobilizing creative resources at the community level, and sustaining conversations across the local food system. Within three years of reaching the peak of FRAC's list, Greensboro saw an 8 percent drop in its food hardship rate and moved from first to fourteenth in FRAC's list. Using eight case studies of food justice activism, from urban farms to mobile farmers markets, shared kitchens to food policy councils, Everybody Eats highlights the importance of communication--and communicating social justice specifically--in building the kinds of infrastructure needed to create secure and just food systems.
    Abstract: Intro -- Title Page -- Copyright -- Contents -- List of Illustrations -- Acknowledgments -- Overview -- Part I The Language of Food (In)security -- 1. Navigating the Language of Food Systems -- 2. Tracing the Discourses of Food (In)security -- Part II Engaging Communities: Case Studies -- 3. The Warnersville Community Food Task Force -- 4. The Downtown Greensboro Food Truck Pilot Project -- Part III Mobilizing Resources: Case Studies -- 5. The Warnersville Community Garden -- 6. The Mobile Oasis Farmers Market -- Part IV Documenting Process: Case Studies -- 7. Ethnosh -- 8. Kitchen Connects GSO -- Part V Sustaining Conversations: Case Studies -- 9. The Guilford Food Council -- 10. The Renaissance Community Co-op -- Conclusion: Securing Food for a Just Future -- Appendix A: Warnersville Community Food Task Force Project Concept -- Appendix B: Blank Model Partner Wheel -- Appendix C: Mobile Oasis Recipes by Anita Cunningham -- Appendix D: Guilford Food Council Charter -- Notes -- Selected Bibliography -- Index -- About the Authors and Contributors.
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  • 23
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press
    ISBN: 9780520382251
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 online resource (329 pages)
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als
    DDC: 307.76
    Keywords: Electronic books
    Abstract: Cities are becoming increasingly fragmented materially, socially, and spatially. From broken toilets and everyday things, to art and forms of writing, fragments are signatures of urban worlds and provocations for change. In Fragments of the City, Colin McFarlane examines such fragments, what they are and how they come to matter in the experience, politics, and expression of cities. How does the city appear when we look at it through its fragments? For those living on the economic margins, the city is often experienced as a set of fragments. Much of what low-income residents deal with on a daily basis is fragments of stuff, made and remade with and through urban density, social infrastructure, and political practice. In this book, McFarlane explores infrastructure in Mumbai, Kampala, and Cape Town; artistic montages in Los Angeles and Dakar; refugee struggles in Berlin; and the repurposing of fragments in Hong Kong and New York. Fragments surface as material things, as forms of knowledge, as writing strategies. They are used in efforts to politicize the city and in urban writing to capture life and change in the world's major cities. Fragments of the City surveys the role of fragments in how urban worlds are understood, revealed, written, and changed.
    Abstract: Cover -- Fragments of the City -- Title -- Copyright -- Contents -- List of Figures -- Prologue -- Reading Fragments -- PURSUING FRAGMENTS -- Routes -- On the Margins -- An Urban World -- PULLING TOGETHER, FALLING APART -- Materializing the City -- Urban Life Support -- Volumetric Urbanism -- Fragmenting Cities -- Social Infrastructure -- Care and Consolidation -- KNOWING FRAGMENTS -- In the Relation -- Presence-Absence -- The Gap -- Knowledge Fragments -- WRITING IN FRAGMENTS -- Montaging Urban Modernity -- Without Closure -- Points of Departure -- Fragments and Possibility -- POLITICAL FRAMINGS -- Attending to Fragments -- Maintaining -- In-Between -- Generative Translation -- Reformation -- Junk Art -- Relocating -- Surveying Wholes -- Political Becoming -- Occupation -- Being Present -- Provisioning -- Value -- Exhibiting Stories -- WALKING CITIES -- Encountering the City -- Intersecting Writings -- Routes and Their Limits -- Remnants -- Space and Time -- IN COMPLETION -- An Exploded View -- Experimenting -- Connective Devices -- Excursions -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Index.
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  • 24
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press
    ISBN: 9780520383593
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 online resource (171 pages)
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als
    DDC: 577.2/4
    Keywords: Fire-History-Social aspects ; Fire ecology ; Climatic changes-Effect of human beings on ; Electronic books
    Abstract: A provocative rethinking of how humans and fire have evolved together over time--and our responsibility to reorient this relationship before it's too late.​ The Pyrocene tells the story of what happened when a fire-wielding species, humanity, met an especially fire-receptive time in Earth's history. Since terrestrial life first appeared, flames have flourished. Over the past two million years, however, one genus gained the ability to manipulate fire, swiftly remaking both itself and eventually the world. We developed small guts and big heads by cooking food; we climbed the food chain by cooking landscapes; and now we have become a geologic force by cooking the planet. Some fire uses have been direct: fire applied to convert living landscapes into hunting grounds, forage fields, farms, and pastures. Others have been indirect, through pyrotechnologies that expanded humanity's reach beyond flame's grasp. Still, preindustrial and Indigenous societies largely operated within broad ecological constraints that determined how, and when, living landscapes could be burned. These ancient relationships between humans and fire broke down when people began to burn fossil biomass--lithic landscapes--and humanity's firepower became unbounded. Fire-catalyzed climate change globalized the impacts into a new geologic epoch. The Pleistocene yielded to the Pyrocene. Around fires, across millennia, we have told stories that explained the world and negotiated our place within it. The Pyrocene continues that tradition, describing how we have remade the Earth and how we might recover our responsibilities as keepers of the planetary flame.
    Note: Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources
    URL: Cover
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  • 25
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press
    ISBN: 9780520976702
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 online resource (289 pages)
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als
    DDC: 306.8509597
    Keywords: Families Moral and ethical aspects ; Sacrifice ; Love ; Families-Moral and ethical aspects-Vietnam ; Sacrifice-Vietnam ; Love-Vietnam ; Electronic books
    Abstract: How do families remain close when turbulent forces threaten to tear them apart? In this groundbreaking book based on more than a decade of research set in Vietnam, Merav Shohet explores what happens across generations to families that survive imperialism, war, and massive political and economic upheaval. Placing personal sacrifice at the center of her story, Shohet recounts vivid experiences of conflict, love, and loss. In doing so, her work challenges the idea that sacrifice is merely a blood-filled religious ritual or patriotic act. Today, domestic sacrifices--made largely by women--precariously knot family members together by silencing suffering and naturalizing cross-cutting gender, age, class, and political hierarchies. In rethinking ordinary ethics, this intimate ethnography reveals how quotidian acts of sacrifice help family members forge a sense of continuity in the face of trauma and decades of dramatic change.
    Abstract: Cover -- Silence and Sacrifice -- Title -- Copyright -- Dedication -- Contents -- List of Illustrations -- Acknowledgments -- Notes on Vietnamese and Transcription Conventions -- Prologue: Landing -- Introduction: Vietnam Is a Country, Not a War -- PART I. SUSTAINING NATIONAL AND FAMILY SACRIFICE -- 1. "Not only those on the battlefield": (Extra)Ordinary Sacrifice -- 2. Rituals and Routines of Sacrifice: Respect Those Above, Yield to Those Below -- 3. Troubling Love: Models for Gender (In)Equality? -- PART II. CARE NARRATIVES AND THE LIMITS OF LOVE -- 4. Waiting as Care? Sacrifice and Tình Cảm in Troubled Times -- 5. Children and Lovers: Marriage, Morality, and Motherhood -- Conclusion: Mourning in Silent Sacrifice -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Index.
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  • 26
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press
    ISBN: 9780520970441
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 online resource (334 pages)
    Series Statement: Reproductive Justice: a New Vision for the 21st Century Ser. v.5
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als
    DDC: 306.850973
    Keywords: Reproductive rights-United States ; Families-History-United States-21st century ; Families-History-United States-20th century ; Electronic books
    Abstract: The landmark case Roe v. Wade redefined family: it is now commonplace for Americans to treat having children as a choice. But the historic decision also coincided with widening inequality, an ongoing trend that continues to make choice more myth than reality. In this new and timely history, Matthiesen shows how the effects of incarceration, for-profit healthcare, disease, and poverty have been worsened by state neglect, forcing most to work harder to maintain a family..
    Abstract: Cover -- Reproduction Reconceived -- Title -- Copyright -- Contents -- Introduction -- 1. The Labor of Illegibility: Lesbian and Single Motherhood According to the Law -- 2. The Labor of Captivity: Incarcerated Mothers and Their Children -- 3. The Labor of Survival: Racism, Poverty, and the Uses of Infant Mortality Rates -- 4. The Labor of Risk: Or, How to Have a Family in the HIV/AIDS Epidemic -- 5. The Labor of "Choice": Navigating the Abortion Debate and Lifelines of Last Resort -- Epilogue -- Acknowledgments -- Notes -- Selected Bibliography -- Index.
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  • 27
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press
    ISBN: 9780520974647
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 online resource (488 pages)
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als
    DDC: 305.48697095414
    Keywords: Electronic books
    Abstract: A crystal-clear account of the entangled history of Western and Muslim feminisms. Western feminists, pundits, and policymakers tend to portray the Muslim world as the last and most difficult frontier of global feminism. Challenging this view, Elora Shehabuddin presents a unique and engaging history of feminism as a story of colonial and postcolonial interactions between Western and Muslim societies. Muslim women, like other women around the world, have been engaged in their own struggles for generations: as individuals and in groups that include but also extend beyond their religious identity and religious practices. The modern and globally enmeshed Muslim world they navigate has often been at the weaker end of disparities of wealth and power, of processes of colonization and policies of war, economic sanctions, and Western feminist outreach. Importantly, Muslims have long constructed their own ideas about women's and men's lives in the West, with implications for how they articulate their feminist dreams for their own societies. Stretching from the eighteenth-century Enlightenment era to the War on Terror present, Sisters in the Mirror shows how changes in women's lives and feminist strategies have consistently reflected wider changes in national and global politics and economics. Muslim women, like non-Muslim women in various colonized societies and non-white and poor women in the West, have found themselves having to negotiate their demands for rights within other forms of struggle--for national independence or against occupation, racism, and economic inequality. Through stories of both well-known and relatively unknown figures, Shehabuddin recounts instances of conflict alongside those of empathy, collaboration, and solidarity across this extended period. Sisters in the Mirror is organized around stories of encounters between women and
    Abstract: Intro -- Imprint -- Subvention -- Title -- Copyright -- Dedication -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- 1 Muslims of the East -- 2 Soulless Seraglios in the Grievances of Englishwomen -- 3 Gospel, Adventure, and Introspection in an Expanding Empire -- 4 Feminism and Empire -- 5 Writing Feminism, Writing Freedom -- 6 In the Shadow of the Cold War -- 7 Encounters in Global Feminism -- 8 In Search of Solidarity across Seven Seas and Thirteen Rivers -- Epilogue -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Index.
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  • 28
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press
    ISBN: 9780520965485
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 online resource (374 pages)
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als
    Keywords: Electronic books
    Abstract: In Agrotropolis, historian J. T. Way traces the developments of Guatemalan urbanization and youth culture since 1983. In case studies that bring together political economy, popular music, and everyday life, Way explores the rise of urban space in towns seen as quintessentially "rural" and showcases grassroots cultural assertiveness. In a post-revolutionary era, young people coming of age on the globally inflected city street used popular culture as one means of creating a new national imaginary that rejects Guatemala's racially coded system of castes. Drawing on local sources, deep ethnographies, and the digital archive, Agrotropolis places working-class Maya and mestizo hometowns and creativity at the center of planetary urban history.
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  • 29
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press
    ISBN: 9780520976955
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 online resource (217 pages)
    Series Statement: California Series in Public Anthropology Ser. v.51
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als
    DDC: 649.151
    Keywords: Fathers of children with disabilities ; Electronic books
    Abstract: The stories of fathers caring for non-verbal children and how these experiences alter their understandings of care, masculinity, and living a full life. Vulnerable narratives of fatherhood are few and far between; rarer still is an ethnography that delves into the practical and emotional realities of intensive caregiving. Grounded in the intimate everyday lives of men caring for children with major physical and intellectual disabilities, Worlds of Care undertakes an exploration of how men shape their identities in the context of caregiving. Anthropologist Aaron J. Jackson fuses ethnographic research and creative nonfiction to offer an evocative account of what is required for men to create habitable worlds and find some kind of "normal" when their circumstances are anything but. Combining stories from his fieldwork in North America with reflections on his own experience caring for his severely disabled son, Jackson argues that care has the potential to transform our understanding of who we are and how we relate to others.
    Abstract: Cover -- Worlds of Care -- Title -- Copyright -- Dedication -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- 1. The Practice of Care -- 2. The Depths of Time: Past Becomings and Habitable Worlds -- Interlude Gary's Arrival Story -- 3. Between Bodies: The Fleshy Work of Caregiving -- 4. Conditions of Possibility: Fathering, Masculinity, and Moral (Re)Orientations -- Interlude Connectivities -- 5. Belonging and Being-for-Others -- 6. The Axiom of Equality -- Epilogue -- Notes -- References -- Index.
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  • 30
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press
    ISBN: 9780520973275
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 online resource (285 pages)
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als
    DDC: 307.7209797
    Keywords: Electronic books
    Abstract: How rural areas have become uneven proving grounds for the American Dream Late-stage capitalism is trying to remake rural America in its own image, and the resistance is telling. Small-town economies that have traditionally been based on logging, mining, farming, and ranching now increasingly rely on tourism, second-home ownership, and retirement migration. In Dividing Paradise, Jennifer Sherman tells the story of Paradise Valley, Washington, a rural community where amenity-driven economic growth has resulted in a new social landscape of inequality and privilege, with deep fault lines between old-timers and newcomers. In this complicated cultural reality, "class blindness" allows privileged newcomers to ignore or justify their impact on these towns, papering over the sentiments of anger, loss, and disempowerment of longtime locals. Based on in-depth interviews with individuals on both sides of the divide, this book explores the causes and repercussions of the stark inequity that has become commonplace across the United States. It exposes the mechanisms by which inequality flourishes and by which Americans have come to believe that disparity is acceptable and deserved. Sherman, who is known for her work on rural America, presents here a powerful case study of the ever-growing tensions between those who can and those who cannot achieve their visions of the American dream..
    Abstract: Cover -- Dividing Paradise -- Title -- Copyright -- Dedication -- Contents -- Prologue: Discovering Paradise -- Acknowledgments -- 1. Rural Deindustrialization, Decline, and Rebirth -- 2. Changing Times in Paradise -- 3. Living the Dream: Newcomers Making It Work in Paradise -- 4. Trouble in Paradise: Old-Timers' Struggles to Survive -- 5. "Certain Circles": The Deepening Divide -- 6. Paradise Lost: Making Sense of Community Change and the Elusive American Dream -- 7. Crossing the Divide and Reclaiming the Dream -- Epilogue: The Rural Dream in the Pandemic's Wake -- Appendix A. Methods, Sample, and Local Demographic Information -- Appendix B. The Newcomer/Old-Timer Distinction -- Notes -- References -- Index.
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  • 31
    ISBN: 9780520973701
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 online resource (304 pages)
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als
    DDC: 305.800978843
    Keywords: Equality ; Electronic books
    Abstract: How is it possible for a town to exist where the median household income is about 73,000, but the median home price is about 4,000,000? Boring into the "impossible" math of Aspen, Colorado, Stuber explores how middle-class people have found a way to live in this supergentrified town. Interviewing a range of residents, policymakers, and officials, Stuber shows that what resolves the math equation between incomes and home values in Aspen, Colorado--the X-factor that makes middle-class life possible--is the careful orchestration of diverse class interests within local politics and the community. She explores how this is achieved through a highly regulatory and extractive land use code that provides symbolic and material value to highly affluent investors and part-year residents, as well as less-affluent locals, many of whom benefit from an array of subsidies--including an extensive affordable housing program--that redistribute economic resources in ways that make it possible for middle-class residents to live there. Stuber further examines how Latinos, who provide much of the service work in Aspen and who tend to live outside the town, fit into the social geography of one of the most unequal places in the country. Overall, Stuber argues that the Aspen's ability to balance the interests of its diverse class constituencies is not a foregone conclusion; rather, it is the result of efforts by local stakeholders--citizens, government, developers, and vacationers--to preserve the town's unique feel and value, and "keep Aspen, Aspen" in all its complex dynamics.
    Abstract: Cover -- Aspen and the American Dream -- Title -- Copyright -- Dedication -- Contents -- List of Figures and Tables -- Introduction: The Impossible Math of Aspen, Colorado -- 1. Place-Based Class Cultures -- 2. Living the "Aspen Dream"? Redefining and Realizing the Good Life -- 3. Steadying the Pendulum -- 4. Place-Making and the Construction of "Small-Town Character" -- 5. "But Does It Deliver Value?": Negotiating Aspen's Land Use Code -- 6. A Mall at the Base of a Mountain? -- 7. Buscando el Sueño Americano: Latinos in the Valley -- Conclusion: The Limits and Possibilities of Place-Making in the Era of Supergentrification -- Acknowledgments -- Appendix: Methodology -- Notes -- References -- Index.
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  • 32
    ISBN: 9780520966703
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 online resource (340 pages)
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als
    DDC: 306.730285
    Keywords: Online dating ; Electronic books
    Abstract: The data behind a distinct form of racism in online dating The Dating Divide is the first comprehensive look at "digital-sexual racism," a distinct form of racism that is mediated and amplified through the impersonal and anonymous context of online dating. Drawing on large-scale behavioral data from a mainstream dating website, extensive archival research, and more than seventy-five in-depth interviews with daters of diverse racial backgrounds and sexual identities, Curington, Lundquist, and Lin illustrate how the seemingly open space of the internet interacts with the loss of social inhibition in cyberspace contexts, fostering openly expressed forms of sexual racism that are rarely exposed in face-to-face encounters. The Dating Divide is a fascinating look at how a contemporary conflux of individualization, consumerism, and the proliferation of digital technologies has given rise to a unique form of gendered racism in the era of swiping right--or left. The internet is often heralded as an equalizer, a seemingly level playing field, but the digital world also acts as an extension of and platform for the insidious prejudices and divisive impulses that affect social politics in the "real" world. Shedding light on how every click, swipe, or message can be linked to the history of racism and courtship in the United States, this compelling study uses data to show the racial biases at play in digital dating spaces.
    Abstract: Intro -- Title -- Copyright -- Contents -- List of Tables and Figures -- Introduction: Dear Tinder, Guess Who's Coming to Dinner -- 1. Where Hate Trumps Love: The Birth and Legacy of Antimiscegenation in the United States -- 2. From the Back Porch to the Computer Screen: The Rise of Choice in Courtship -- 3. New Rules? Gendered Online Engagement -- 4. A Privilege Endures: Dating While White in the Era of Online Dating -- 5. The Unique Disadvantage: Dating While Black -- 6. The Asian Experience: Resistance and Complicity -- 7. "Hey, You're Latin. Do You Like to Dance?": The Privilege and Disadvantage of Latino/a Daters -- 8. Postracial Multiracialism: A Challenge to the White Racial Frame? -- Conclusion: Abolishing the Dating Divide -- Acknowledgments -- Appendix: Data and Methods -- Interviews -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Index.
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  • 33
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press | Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest
    ISBN: 9780520381995
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (187 pages)
    DDC: 393.9309510905
    Keywords: Electronic books
    Abstract: A free open access ebook is available upon publication. Learn more atwww.luminosoa.org. In rural China funerals are conducted locally, on village land by village elders. But in urban areas, people have neither land for burials nor elder relatives to conduct funerals. Chinese urbanization, which has increased drastically in recent decades, involves the creation of cemeteries, state-run funeral homes, and small private funerary businesses. The Funeral of Mr. Wang examines social change in urbanizing China through the lens of funerals, the funerary industry, and practices of memorialization. It analyzes changes in family life, patterns of urban sociality, transformations in economic relations, the politics of memorialization, and the echoes of these changes in beliefs about the dead and ghosts.
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  • 34
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press
    ISBN: 9780520381452
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 online resource (278 pages)
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als
    DDC: 305.809
    Keywords: Whites Race identity 20th century ; History ; Whites-Race identity-United States-History-20th century ; Electronic books
    Abstract: Reuniting white America after Vietnam. "If war among the whites brought peace and liberty to the blacks," Frederick Douglass asked in 1875, peering into the nation's future, "what will peace among the whites bring?" The answer then and now, after civil war and civil rights: a white reunion disguised as a veterans' reunion. How White Men Won the Culture Wars shows how a broad contingent of white men--conservative and liberal, hawk and dove, vet and nonvet--transformed the Vietnam War into a staging ground for a post-civil rights white racial reconciliation. Conservatives could celebrate white vets as deracinated embodiments of the nation. Liberals could treat them as minoritized heroes whose voices must be heard. Erasing Americans of color, Southeast Asians, and women from the war, white men could agree, after civil rights and feminism, that they had suffered and deserved more. From the POW/MIA and veterans' mental health movements to Rambo and "Born in the U.S.A.," they remade their racial identities for an age of color blindness and multiculturalism in the image of the Vietnam vet. No one wins in a culture war--except, Joseph Darda argues, white men dressed in army green.
    Abstract: Intro -- Cover -- How White Men Won the Culture Wars -- Title -- Copyright -- Dedication -- Contents -- Introduction: The Thin White Line -- 1. Post-Traumatic Whiteness -- 2. Veteran American Literature -- 3. Whiteness on the Edge of Town -- 4. The Ethnicization of Veteran America -- 5. Like a Refugee -- Epilogue: Veteran America First -- Acknowledgments -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Index.
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  • 35
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press
    ISBN: 9780520973763
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 online resource (154 pages)
    Series Statement: Reproductive Justice: a New Vision for the 21st Century Ser. v.4
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als
    DDC: 363.9/60973
    Keywords: Electronic books
    Abstract: Understanding the social history and urgent social implications of gendered compulsory birth control, an unbalanced and unjust approach to pregnancy prevention. The average person concerned about becoming pregnant spends approximately thirty years trying to prevent conception. People largely do so alone using prescription birth control, a situation often taken for granted in the United States as natural and beneficial. In Just Get On the Pill, a keenly researched and incisive examination, Krystale Littlejohn investigates how birth control becomes a fundamentally unbalanced and gendered responsibility. She uncovers how parents, peers, partners, and providers draw on narratives of male and female birth control methods to socialize cisgender women into sex and ultimately into shouldering the burden for preventing pregnancy. Littlejohn draws on extensive interviews to document this gendered compulsory birth control--a phenomenon in which people who give birth are held accountable for preventing and resolving pregnancies in gender-constrained ways. She shows how this gendered approach encroaches on reproductive autonomy and poses obstacles for preventing disease. While diverse cisgender women are the focus, Littlejohn shows that they are not the only ones harmed by this dynamic. Indeed, gendered approaches to birth control also negatively impact trans, intersex, and gender nonconforming people in overlooked ways. In tracing the divisive politics of pregnancy prevention, Littlejohn demonstrates that the gendered division of labor in birth control is not natural. It is unjust.
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  • 36
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press
    ISBN: 9780520968479
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 online resource (324 pages)
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als
    DDC: 362.1988/80978
    Keywords: Electronic books ; Pro-life movement-West (U.S.)-Case studies
    Abstract: Tiny You tells the story of one of the most successful political movements of the twentieth century: the grassroots campaign against legalized abortion. While Americans have rapidly changed their minds about sex education, pornography, arts funding, gay teachers, and ultimately gay marriage, opposition to legalized abortion has only grown. As other socially conservative movements have lost young activists, the pro-life movement has successfully recruited more young people to its cause. Jennifer L. Holland explores why abortion dominates conservative politics like no other cultural issue. Looking at anti-abortion movements in four western states since the 1960s--turning to the fetal pins passed around church services, the graphic images exchanged between friends, and the fetus dolls given to children in school--she argues that activists made fetal life feel personal to many Americans. Pro-life activists persuaded people to see themselves in the pins, images, and dolls they held in their hands and made the fight against abortion the primary bread-and-butter issue for social conservatives. Holland ultimately demonstrates that the success of the pro-life movement lies in the borrowed logic and emotional power of leftist activism.
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  • 37
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press
    ISBN: 9780520974814
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 online resource (286 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als
    DDC: 305.80092
    Keywords: Ethnologists-Greece-History
    Abstract: Ancient Greek ethnographies--descriptions of other peoples--provide unique resources for understanding ancient environmental thought and assumptions, as well as anxieties, about how humans relate to nature as a whole. In Other Natures, Clara Bosak-Schroeder examines the works of seminal authors such as Herodotus and Diodorus Siculus to persuasively demonstrate how non-Greek communities affected and were in turn deeply affected by their local animals, plants, climate, and landscape. She shows that these authors used ethnographies of non-Greek peoples to explore, question, and challenge how Greeks ate, procreated, nurtured, collaborated, accumulated, and consumed. In recuperating this important strain of ancient thought, Bosak-Schroeder makes it newly relevant to vital questions and ideas being posed in the environmental humanities today, arguing that human life and well-being are inextricable from the life and well-being of the nonhuman world. By turning to such ancient ethnographies, we can uncover important models for confronting environmental crisis.
    Abstract: Cover -- Other Natures -- Title -- Copyright -- Dedication -- CONTENTS -- Acknowledgments -- A Note on the Greek -- Introduction -- PART I. ANCIENT PERSPECTIVES -- 1. Sources and Methods -- 2. Rulers and Rivers -- 3. Female Feck -- 4. Dietary Entanglements -- 5. Resisting Luxury -- PART II. PRESENT CONCERNS -- 6. After the Encounter -- 7. Transformation in the Natural History Museum -- Notes -- References -- Index Locorum -- Index.
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  • 38
    ISBN: 9780520971011
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 online resource (386 pages)
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als
    DDC: 305.40973
    Keywords: Women Longitudinal studies Social conditions ; Women Conduct of life ; Electronic books
    Abstract: Commenced in 1958 with 142 young women who were seniors at Mills College, the Mills Study has become the largest and longest longitudinal study of women's adult development, with assessments of these women in their twenties, forties, fifties, sixties, and seventies. Women on the River of Life synthesizes five decades of research to paint a picture of women's personality and development across the lifespan. The book explores questions of family, work, life-path, maturity, wisdom, creativity, attachment, and purpose in life, unfolding in the context of a rapidly changing historical period with far-reaching consequences for the kinds of lives women would envision for themselves. Helson and Mitchell breathe life into abstract theories and concepts with the real-life stories and voices of the study's participants. Woven throughout the book are the authors' reminiscences on the profound endeavor of sustaining a longitudinal study of women's lives through time.
    Abstract: Cover -- Women on the River of Life -- Title -- Copyright -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction and Overview -- 1. How the Mills Study Came About -- 2. Transforming into a Study of Women's Adult Development -- 3. Sustaining Fifty Years of the Mills Study -- PART I. EARLY ADULTHOOD -- 4. The Roots of Creativity in Women -- 5. The Social Clock Projects -- 6. Marriage and Motherhood -- 7. Illustrating Two Developmental Theories -- 8. Loevinger's Theory of Ego Development -- PART II. MAJOR INFLUENCES -- 9. The Enormous Impact of Gender Expectations -- 10. The Sweep of History: Individualism, Gay Liberation, the Counterculture -- 11. The Astonishing Importance of Personality -- PART III. MIDDLE AGE -- 12. The Social Clock in Middle Age -- 13. Ups and Downs in Middle Age -- 14. Whatever Happened to Creativity in Women? -- 15. Women's Prime of Life -- PART IV. DEVELOPMENTAL ACHIEVEMENTS -- 16. The Centrality of Attachment -- 17. Paths of Development: Three Conceptions of Positive Mental Health -- 18. Wisdom -- 19. Generativity and Individuation: Tasks of the Second Half of Life -- PART V. THE CROWN OF LIFE -- 20. Answering Four Questions about Creative Personality -- 21. The Place of Purpose in Life in Women's Positive Aging: Women with Low Purpose -- 22. The Place of Purpose in Life in Women's Positive Aging: Women with High Purpose -- 23. Late Adulthood: The Third Age -- Complete Published Work of the Mills Study -- References -- Index.
    Note: Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources
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  • 39
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press
    ISBN: 9780520974388
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 online resource (278 pages)
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als
    DDC: 306.87420973
    Keywords: Fatherhood Case studies ; Parenting Case studies ; Fatherhood responsibility movement Case studies ; Electronic books
    Abstract: In Essential Dads, sociologist Jennifer Randles shares the stories of more than 60 marginalized men as they sought to become more engaged parents through a government-supported "responsible" fatherhood program. Dads' experiences serve as a unique window into long-standing controversies about the importance of fathering, its connection to inequality, and the state's role in shaping men's parenting. With a compassionate and hopeful voice, Randles proposes a more equitable political agenda for fatherhood, one that carefully considers the social and economic factors shaping men's abilities to be involved in their children's lives and the ideologies that rationalize the necessity of that involvement..
    Abstract: Cover -- Essential Dads -- Title -- Copyright -- Dedication -- Contents -- 1. Knowing What a Father Is -- 2. Being There Beyond Breadwinning -- 3. Resources for Responsibility -- 4. Making a Case to Mothers -- 5. New Fathers and Old Ideas -- 6. Teaching the Essential Father -- 7. Having It Better -- Acknowledgments -- Appendix: Pregnancy and Parenthood in the Field -- Notes -- References -- Index.
    Note: Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources
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  • 40
    ISBN: 9780520973725
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 online resource (296 pages)
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als Cohen, David S., 1972 - Obstacle course
    DDC: 362.1988/800973
    Keywords: Abortion-United States ; Abortion-United States ; Electronic books ; USA ; Schwangerschaftsabbruch
    Abstract: It seems unthinkable that citizens of one of the most powerful nations in the world must risk their lives and livelihoods in the search for access to necessary health care. And yet it is no surprise that in many places throughout the United States, getting an abortion can be a monumental challenge. Anti-choice politicians and activists have worked tirelessly to impose needless restrictions on this straightforward medical procedure that, at best, delay it and, at worst, create medical risks and deny women their constitutionally protected right to choose. Obstacle Course tells the story of abortion in America, capturing a disturbing reality of insurmountable barriers people face when trying to exercise their legal rights to medical services. Authors David S. Cohen and Carole Joffe lay bare the often arduous and unnecessarily burdensome process of terminating a pregnancy: the sabotaged decision-making, clinics in remote locations, insurance bans, harassing protesters, forced ultrasounds and dishonest medical information, arbitrary waiting periods, and unjustified procedure limitations. Based on patients' stories as well as interviews with abortion providers and allies from every state in the country, Obstacle Course reveals the unstoppable determination required of women in the pursuit of reproductive autonomy as well as the incredible commitment of abortion providers. Without the efforts of an unheralded army of medical professionals, clinic administrators, counselors, activists, and volunteers, what is a legal right would be meaningless for the almost one million people per year who get abortions. There is a better way--treating abortion like any other form of health care--but the United States is a long way from that ideal..
    Abstract: Cover -- Obstacle Course -- Title -- Copyright -- Dedication -- Contents -- 1. Introduction: The Turbulent State of Abortion in America -- 2. Making the Decision: Coping with Roadblocks, Deception, and Lies -- 3. Finding and Getting to a Clinic: Hard to Find, Harder to Reach -- 4. Coming Up With the Money: The Biggest Barrier -- 5. Getting In: Chaos at the Clinic Door -- 6. Counseling at the Clinic: Government-Mandated Deceit -- 7. Waiting Periods: Logistical Nightmares, Potentially Serious Delays -- 8. The Procedure: Politics Overrides Medical Expertise -- 9. An Alternate Vision: Abortion as Normal Health Care -- Notes -- Acknowledgments -- Index.
    Note: Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources
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  • 41
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press
    ISBN: 9780520973428 , 0520973429
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (xvii, 231 Seiten)
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als Chuang, Julia Beneath the China boom
    DDC: 300
    RVK:
    RVK:
    Keywords: Urbanization-China ; China ; Binnenwanderung ; Ländlicher Raum ; Wirtschaftsentwicklung ; Wirtschaftspolitik
    Abstract: For nearly four decades, China's manufacturing boom has been powered by the labor of 287 million rural migrant workers, who travel seasonally between villages where they farm for subsistence and cities where they work. Yet recently local governments have moved away from manufacturing and toward urban expansion and construction as a development strategy. As a result, at least 88 million rural people to date have lost rights to village land. In Beneath the China Boom, Julia Chuang follows the trajectories of rural workers, who were once supported by a village welfare state and are now landless.
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  • 42
    ISBN: 9780520973367
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 online resource (285 pages)
    Series Statement: California Series in Hip Hop Studies v.1
    DDC: 305.48896073077434
    Keywords: Foundation of Women in Hip Hop ; Electronic books
    Abstract: Detroit, MIchigan, has long been recognized as a center of musical innovation and social change. Rebekah Farrugia and Kellie D. Hay draw on seven years of fieldwork to illuminate the important role that women have played in mobilizing a grassroots response to political and social pressures at the heart of Detroit's ongoing renewal and development project. Focusing on the Foundation, a women-centered hip hop collective, Women Rapping Revolution argues that the hip hop underground is a crucial site where Black women shape subjectivity and claim self-care as a principle of community organizing. Through interviews and sustained critical engagement with artists and activists, this study also articulates the substantial role of cultural production in social, racial, and economic justice efforts.
    Abstract: Intro -- Title -- Copyright -- Dedication -- Contents -- Foreword -- Foreword -- Preface -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction: Intersections of Detroit, Women, and Hip Hop -- 1 Detroit Hip Hop and the Rise of the Foundation -- 2 Hip Hop Sounds and Sensibilities in Post-Bankruptcy Detroit -- 3 Negotiating Genderqueer Identity Formation -- 4 Vulnerable Mavericks Wreck Rap's Conventions -- 5 "Legendary," Environmental Justice, and Collaborative Cultural Production -- 6 Hip Hop Activism in Action -- Conclusion: Women, Hip Hop, and Cultural Organizing -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Index.
    Note: Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources
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  • 43
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press
    ISBN: 9780520969698
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 online resource (320 pages)
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als
    DDC: 305.3
    Keywords: Gender identity ; Electronic books
    Abstract: Beyond Gender Binaries uses a feminist, intersectional, and invitational approach to understanding identities and how they relate to communication. Taking readers outside the familiar binary constructions of gender and identity, Cindy L. Griffin addresses--through a feminist intersectional lens--communication, identity, power and privilege, personhood and citizenship, safety in public and private spaces, and hegemony and colonialism. Twelve chapters focus on critical learning through careful exploration of key terms and concepts. Griffin illustrates these with historical and contemporary examples and provides concrete guides to intersectional approaches to communication. This textbook highlights not just the ways individuals, systems, structures, and institutions use communication to privilege particular identities discursively and materially, but also the myriad ways that communication can be used to disrupt privilege and respectfully acknowledge the nonbinary and intersectional nature of every person's identity. Key features include: Intersectional approaches to explaining and understanding identities and communication are the foundation of each chapter and inform the presentation of information throughout the book. Contemporary and historical examples are included in every chapter, highlighting the intersectional nature of identity and the role of communication in our interactions with other people. Complex and challenging ideas are presented in clear, respectful, and accessible ways throughout the book.
    Note: Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources
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  • 44
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press
    ISBN: 9780520974685
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 online resource (232 pages)
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als
    DDC: 305
    Keywords: Social values Political aspects ; Social values-Political aspects ; Electronic books
    Abstract: How much is a human life worth? Individuals, families, companies, and governments routinely place a price on human life. The calculations that underlie these price tags are often buried in technical language, yet they influence our economy, laws, behaviors, policies, health, and safety. These price tags are often unfair, infused as they are with gender, racial, national, and cultural biases that often result in valuing the lives of the young more than the old, the rich more than the poor, whites more than blacks, Americans more than foreigners, and relatives more than strangers. This is critical since undervalued lives are left less-protected and more exposed to risk. Howard Steven Friedman explains in simple terms how economists and data scientists at corporations, regulatory agencies, and insurance companies develop and use these price tags and points a spotlight at their logical flaws and limitations. He then forcefully argues against the rampant unfairness in the system. Readers will be enlightened, shocked, and, ultimately, empowered to confront the price tags we assign to human lives and understand why such calculations matter.
    Note: Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources
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  • 45
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press
    ISBN: 9780520973732
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 online resource (254 pages)
    Series Statement: Reproductive Justice: a New Vision for the 21st Century Ser. v.3
    Series Statement: Reproductive justice : a new vision for the twenty-first century 3
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als
    DDC: 306.8743
    Keywords: Teenagers Sexual behavior ; Teenage pregnancy Case studies Prevention ; Teenage pregnancy Prevention ; Government policy ; Electronic books
    Abstract: Distributing Condoms and Hope is a feminist ethnographic account of how youth sexual health programs in the racially and economically stratified city of "Millerston" reproduce harm in the marginalized communities they are meant to serve. Chris A. Barcelos makes space for the stories of young mothers, who often recognize the narrow ways that public health professionals respond to pregnancies. Barcelos's findings show that teachers, social workers, and nurses ignore systemic issues of race, class, and gender and instead advocate for individual-level solutions such as distributing condoms and promoting "hope." Through a lens of reproductive justice, Distributing Condoms and Hope imagines a different approach to serving marginalized youth--a support system that neither uses their lives as a basis for disciplinary public policies nor romanticizes their struggles..
    Abstract: Cover -- Distributing Condoms and Hope -- Title -- Copyright -- Dedication -- Contents -- List of Illustrations -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction: This Is What Happens When You Get Pregnant as a Teenager -- 1. Race, Pregnancy, and Power in Millerston -- 2. The Messy Narratives of Disidentifying with Teen Motherhood -- 3. "It's their culture": Youth Sexual Health Promotion as a Gendered Racial Project -- 4. Sex, Science, and What Teens Do When It's Dark Outside -- 5. Educated Hope: Imagining Reproductive Justice in Millerston -- Appendix A. Organizations and Projects in Millerston -- Appendix B. Methodological Notes -- Notes -- References -- Index.
    Note: Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources
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  • 46
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press
    ISBN: 9780520970724
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (244 pages)
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als Lamont, Ellen The Mating Game : How Gender Still Shapes How We Date
    DDC: 306.730979461
    RVK:
    RVK:
    Keywords: Dating (Social customs) Case studies ; Dating (Social customs) ; California ; San Francisco ; Case studies ; Electronic books
    Abstract: Cover -- The Mating Game -- Title -- Copyright -- Dedication -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- 1. The Puzzling Persistence of Gendered Dating -- 2. The Quest for Egalitarian Love -- 3. New Goals, Old Scripts: Heterosexual Women Caught between Tradition and Equality -- 4. A Few Good (Heterosexual) Men: Inequality Disguised as Romance -- 5. Queering Courtship: LGBQ People Reimagine Relationships -- 6. The More Things Change . . . -- 7. Dated Dating and the Stalled Gender Revolution -- Appendix 1: Summary of Interview Respondents -- Appendix 2: Interview Guide -- Notes -- References -- Index.
    Abstract: Despite enormous changes in patterns of dating and courtship in twenty-first-century America, contemporary understandings of romance and intimacy remain firmly rooted in age-old assumptions of gender difference. These tenacious beliefs now vie with cultural messages of gender equality that stress independence, self-development, and egalitarian practices in public and private life. Through interviews with heterosexual and LGBTQ individuals, Ellen Lamont's The Mating Game explores how people with diverse sexualities and gender identities date, form romantic relationships, and make decisions about future commitments as they negotiate uncertain terrain fraught with competing messages about gender, sexuality, and intimacy
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  • 47
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press
    ISBN: 9780520974272
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: American Crossroads Ser v.57
    Series Statement: American crossroads
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als Colonial Migrants at the Heart of Empire : Puerto Rican Workers on U. S. Farms
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als
    DDC: 305.8687295073
    RVK:
    RVK:
    Keywords: Ausländischer Arbeitnehmer ; Migration ; Puerto Rico ; USA ; Puerto Ricans ; United States ; Migrations ; Electronic books ; Ausländischer Arbeitnehmer ; Puerto Rico ; Migration ; USA
    Abstract: Intro -- Title -- Copyright -- Dedication -- Contents -- List of Figures and Tables -- Acknowledgments -- List of Abbreviations -- Introduction -- Part One The Formation of Agrarian Labor Regimes -- 1 The Making of Colonial Migrant Farmworkers -- 2 Establishing the Farm Labor Program -- 3 Implementing Contract Migration -- Part Two Managing Hope, Despair, and Dissent -- 4 Pa'lla Afuera and the Life Experiences of Migrants -- 5 Labor Camps as Prisons in the Fields -- 6 Puerto Ricans in the Rural United States -- 7 Labor Organizing and the End of an Era -- Epilogue -- Notes -- References -- Index
    Abstract: Colonial Migrants at the Heart of Empire is the first in-depth look at the experiences of Puerto Rican migrant workers in continental U.S. agriculture in the twentieth century. The Farm Labor Program, established by the government of Puerto Rico in 1947, placed hundreds of thousands of migrant workers on U.S. farms and fostered the emergence of many stateside Puerto Rican communities. Ismael García-Colón investigates the origins and development of this program and uncovers the unique challenges faced by its participants. A labor history and an ethnography, Colonial Migrants evokes the violence, fieldwork, food, lodging, surveillance, and coercion that these workers experienced on farms and conveys their hopes and struggles to overcome poverty. Island farmworkers encountered a unique form of prejudice and racism arising from their dual status as both U.S. citizens and as "foreign others," and their experiences were further shaped by evolving immigration policies. Despite these challenges, many Puerto Rican farmworkers ultimately chose to settle in rural U.S. communities, contributing to the production of food and the Latinization of the U.S. farm labor force
    URL: Volltext  (URL des Erstveröffentlichers)
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  • 48
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press
    ISBN: 9780520975583
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 online resource (234 pages)
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als
    DDC: 305.235097274
    Keywords: Subculture ; Youth Social conditions ; Youth Political activity ; Electronic books
    Abstract: In his exciting new book, based on a decade of ethnographic fieldwork, Maurice Magaña considers how urban and migrant youth in Oaxaca embrace subcultures from hip-hop to punk and adopt creative organizing practices to create meaningful channels of participation in local social and political life. In the process, young people remake urban space and construct new identities in ways that directly challenge elite visions of their city and essentialist notions of what it means to be indigenous in the contemporary era. Cartographies of Youth Resistance is essential reading for students and scholars interested in youth politics and culture in Mexico, social movements, urban studies, and migration.
    Note: Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources
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  • 49
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press
    ISBN: 9780520971073
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 online resource (250 pages)
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als
    DDC: 306.760835
    Keywords: Sexual minority youth ; Electronic books
    Abstract: Lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer (LGBTQ) youth are disproportionately represented in the U.S. youth homelessness population. In Coming Out to the Streets, Brandon Andrew Robinson examines their lives. Based on interviews and ethnographic fieldwork in central Texas, Coming Out to the Streets looks into the LGBTQ youth's lives before they experience homelessness--within their families, schools, and other institutions--and later when they navigate the streets, deal with police, and access shelters and other services. Through this documentation, Brandon Andrew Robinson shows how poverty and racial inequality shape the ways that the LGBTQ youth negotiate their gender and sexuality before and while they are experiencing homelessness. To address LGBTQ youth homelessness, Robinson contends that solutions must move beyond blaming families for rejecting their child. In highlighting the voices of the LGBTQ youth, Robinson calls for queer and trans liberation through systemic change.
    Abstract: Cover -- Coming Out to the Streets -- Title -- Copyright -- Dedication -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction: "Coming Out to the Streets" -- 1. Reframing Family Rejection: Growing Up Poor and LGBTQ -- 2. Queer Control Complex: The Punishing Production of LGBTQ Youth -- 3. New Lavender Scare: Policing and the Criminalization of LGBTQ Youth Homelessness -- 4. Queer Street Smarts: LGBTQ Youth Navigating Homelessness -- 5. Respite, Resources, Rules, and Regulations: Homonormative Governmentality and LGBTQ Shelter Life -- Conclusion: There's No Place Like Home -- Appendix: Compassionate Detachment and Being a Volunteer Researcher -- Notes -- References -- Index.
    Note: Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources
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  • 50
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press
    ISBN: 9780520974159
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 online resource (289 pages)
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als
    DDC: 305.3
    Keywords: Transgender people Violence against ; Transgender people Social aspects ; Identity politics ; Electronic books
    Abstract: Anti-violence movements rooted in identity politics are commonplace, including those to stop violence against people of color, women, and LGBT people. Unlivable Lives reveals the unintended consequences of this approach within the transgender rights movement in the United States. It illustrates how this form of activism obscures the causes of and lasting solutions to violence and exacerbates fear among members of the identity group, running counter to the goal of making lives more livable. Analyzing over a thousand documents produced by thirteen national organizations, Westbrook charts both a history of the movement and a path forward that relies less on identity-based tactics and more on intersectionality and coalition building. Provocative and galvanizing, this book envisions new strategies for anti-violence and social justice movements and will revolutionize the way we think about this form of activism.
    Abstract: Cover -- Unlivable Lives -- Title -- Copyright -- Dedication -- Contents -- List of Illustrations -- Preface -- Acknowledgments -- Abbreviations -- 1. UNLIVABLE LIVES: THE ORIGINS AND OUTCOMES OF IDENTITY-BASED ANTI-VIOLENCE ACTIVISM -- 2. VIOLENCE MATTERS: PRODUCING IDENTITY THROUGH ACCOUNTS OF MURDER -- 3. ATYPICAL ARCHETYPES: THE CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES OF FAMOUS VICTIMS OF VIOLENCE -- 4. HOMOGENEOUS SUBJECTHOOD: HOW ACTIVISTS' FOCUS ON IDENTITY OBSCURES PATTERNS OF VIOLENCE -- 5. VALUABLE AND VULNERABLE: HOW ACTIVISTS' TACTICAL REPERTOIRES SHAPE SUBJECTHOOD AND GENERATE FEAR -- 6. SHAPING SOLUTIONS: HOW IDENTITY POLITICS INFLUENCES VIOLENCE-PREVENTION EFFORTS -- 7. FACILITATING LIVABLE LIVES: ALTERNATIVE APPROACHES TO ANTI-VIOLENCE ACTIVISM -- Appendix A: Transgender Anti-Violence Organizations -- Appendix B: Collecting Data on Murders of Transgender People -- Notes -- References -- Index.
    Note: Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources
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  • 51
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press
    ISBN: 9780520975231
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 online resource (226 pages)
    Series Statement: California Series in Public Anthropology Ser. v.49
    Series Statement: California series in public anthropology 49
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als
    DDC: 306.909593
    Keywords: Death Planning ; Medical ethics Decision making ; Death Religious aspects ; Buddhism ; Medical ethics ; Thailand ; Decision making ; Death ; Religious aspects ; Buddhism ; Death ; Thailand ; Planning ; Electronic books
    Abstract: The Spirit Ambulance is a journey into decision-making at the end of life in Thailand, where families attempt to craft good deaths for their elders in the face of clashing ethical frameworks, from a rapidly developing universal medical system, to national and global human-rights politics, to contemporary movements in Buddhist metaphysics. Scott Stonington's gripping ethnography documents how Thai families attempt to pay back a "debt of life" to their elders through intensive medical care, followed by a medically assisted rush from the hospital to home to ensure a spiritually advantageous last breath. The result is a powerful exploration of the nature of death and the complexities arising from the globalization of biomedical expertise and ethics around the world..
    Note: Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources
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  • 52
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press
    ISBN: 9780520971660
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (320 pages)
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als Davis, Alexander K Bathroom Battlegrounds : How Public Restrooms Shape the Gender Order
    DDC: 305.30973
    Keywords: Sex role-United States ; Electronic books
    Abstract: Cover -- Bathroom Battlegrounds -- Title -- Copyright -- Dedication -- Contents -- List of Illustrations -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- 1. Politicizing the Potty -- 2. Professionalizing Plumbing -- 3. Regulating Restrooms -- 4. Working against the Washroom -- 5. Leveraging the Loo -- 6. Transforming the Toilet -- Conclusion -- Appendix: Data and Methodology -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Index.
    Abstract: Today's debates about transgender inclusion and public restrooms may seem unmistakably contemporary, but they have a surprisingly long and storied history in the United States--one that concerns more than mere "potty politics." Alexander K. Davis takes readers behind the scenes of two hundred years' worth of conflicts over the existence, separation, and equity of gendered public restrooms, documenting at each step how bathrooms have been entangled with bigger cultural matters: the importance of the public good, the reach of institutional inclusion, the nature of gender difference, and, above all, the myriad privileges of social status. Chronicling the debut of nineteenth-century "comfort stations," twentieth-century mandates requiring equal-but-separate men's and women's rooms, and twenty-first-century uproar over laws like North Carolina's "bathroom bill," Davis reveals how public restrooms are far from marginal or unimportant social spaces. Instead, they are--and always have been--consequential sites in which ideology, institutions, and inequality collide
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  • 53
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press
    ISBN: 9780520957657
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (358 pages)
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als Pratt, Nicola, 1970 - Embodying geopolitics
    DDC: 305.420956
    Keywords: Women political activists History ; Women political activists History ; Women political activists History ; Women political activists History ; Women's rights Political aspects ; History ; Electronic books ; Ägypten ; Jordanien ; Libanon ; Geopolitik ; Frau ; Politische Beteiligung ; Geschichte
    Abstract: When women took to the streets during the mass protests of the Arab Spring, the subject of feminism in the Middle East and North Africa returned to the international spotlight. In the subsequent years, countless commentators treated the region's gender inequality as a consequence of fundamentally cultural or religious problems. In so doing, they overlooked the specifically political nature of these women's activism. Moving beyond such culturalist accounts, this book turns to the relations of power in regional and international politics to understand women's struggles for their rights. Based on over a hundred extensive personal narratives from women of different generations in Egypt, Jordan, and Lebanon, Nicola Pratt traces women's activism from national independence through to the Arab uprisings, arguing that activist women are critical geopolitical actors. Weaving together these personal accounts with the ongoing legacies of colonialism, Embodying Geopolitics demonstrates how the production and regulation of gender is integrally bound up with the exercise and organization of geopolitical power, with consequences for women's activism and its effects..
    Note: Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources
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  • 54
    ISBN: 9780520970458
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 online resource (296 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als
    DDC: 305.8001
    Keywords: Aufsatzsammlung
    Abstract: While some books present "ideal" ethnographic field methods, Inside Ethnography shares the realities of fieldwork in action. With a focus on strategies employed with populations at society's margins, twenty-one contemporary ethnographers examine their cutting-edge work with honesty and introspection, drawing readers into the field to reveal the challenges they have faced. Representing disciplinary approaches from criminology, sociology, anthropology, public health, business, and social work, and designed explicitly for courses on ethnographic and qualitative methods, crime, deviance, drugs, and urban sociology, the authors portray an evolving methodology that adapts to the conditions of the field while tackling emerging controversies with perceptive sensitivity. Their judicious advice on how to avoid pitfalls and remedy missteps provides unusual insights for practitioners, academics, and undergraduate and graduate students.
    Abstract: Cover -- Inside Ethnography -- Title -- Copyright -- Dedication -- CONTENTS -- Acknowledgments -- Preface -- Introduction -- PART ONE BECOMING AN ETHNOGR APHER -- 1 Going Native with Evil -- 2 Lost in the Park: Learning to Navigate the Unpredictability of Fieldwork -- 3 Unearthing Aggressive Advocacy: Challenges and Strategies in Social Service Ethnography -- 4 Going into the Gray: Conducting Fieldwork on Corporate Misconduct -- PART TWO TEAM ETHNOGRAPHY -- 5 Hide-and-Seek: Challenges in the Ethnography of Street Drug Users -- 6 Into the Epistemic Void: Using Rapid Assessment to Investigate the Opioid Crisis -- 7 Conducting International Reflexive Ethnography: Theoretical and Methodological Struggles -- PART THREE NAVIGATING THE UNUSUAL -- 8 Hidden: Accessing Narratives of Parental Drug Dealing and Misuse -- 9 Navigating Stigma: Researching Opioid and Injection Drug Use among Young Immigrants from the Former Soviet Union in New York City -- PART FOUR THE EMOTIONAL IMPACT OF DOING ETHNOGRAPHY -- 10 Dangerous Liaisons: Reflections on a Serial Ethnography -- 11 The Emotional Labor of Fieldwork with People Who Use Methamphetamine -- 12 Ethnography of Injustice: Death at a County Jail -- Conclusion: Looking Back, Moving Forward -- List of Contributors -- Index.
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  • 55
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press | Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest
    ISBN: 9780520968301
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (326 pages)
    DDC: 306.43
    Abstract: Drawing on current scholarship, Education and Society takes students on a journey through the many roles that education plays in contemporary societies. Addressing students' own experience of education before expanding to larger sociological conversations, Education and Society helps readers understand and engage with such topics as peer groups, gender and identity, social class, the racialization of achievement, the treatment of immigrant children, special education, school choice, accountability, discipline, global perspectives, and schooling as a social institution. The book prompts students to evaluate how schools organize our society and how society organizes our schools. Moving from students to schooling to social forces, Education and Society provides a lively and engaging introduction to theory and research and will serve as a cornerstone for courses such as sociology of education, foundations of education, critical issues in education, and school and society.
    Note: Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources
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  • 56
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press | Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest
    ISBN: 9780520973084
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (225 pages)
    DDC: 944.361004966
    RVK:
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    Keywords: Westafrikaner ; Migration ; Gare du Nord
    Abstract: Paris's Gare du Nord is one of the busiest international transit centers in the world. In the past three decades, it has become an important hub for West African migrants--self-fashioned adventurers--navigating life in the city. In this groundbreaking work, Julie Kleinman chronicles how West Africans use the Gare du Nord to create economic opportunities, confront police harassment, and forge connections to people outside of their communities. Drawing on ten years of ethnographic research, including an internship at the French national railway company, Kleinman reveals how racial inequality is ingrained in the order of Parisian public space. She vividly describes the extraordinary ways that African migrants retool French transit infrastructure to build alternative pathways toward social and economic integration where state institutions have failed. In doing so, these adventurers defy boundaries--between migrant and citizen, center and periphery, neighbor and stranger--that have shaped urban planning and immigration policy. Adventure Capital offers a new understanding of contemporary migration and belonging, capturing the central role that West African migrants play in revitalizing French urban life..
    Note: Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources
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  • 57
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press | Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest
    ISBN: 9780520973046
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (193 pages)
    DDC: 962.056
    RVK:
    Keywords: Protestbewegung ; Arabischer Frühling ; Erlebnisbericht ; Ägypten
    Abstract: This sophisticated book presents new theoretical and analytical insights into the momentous events in the Arab world that began in 2011 and, more importantly, into life and politics in the aftermath of these events. Focusing on the qualities of the sensory world, Maria Frederika Malmström explores the dramatic differences after the Egyptian revolution and their implications for society--the lack of sound in the floating landscape of Cairo after the ouster of President Mohamed Morsi, the role of material things in the sit-ins of 2013, the military evocation of masculinities (and the destruction of alternative ones), and how people experience pain, rage, disgust, euphoria, and passion in the body. While focused primarily on changes unfolding in Egypt, this study also investigates how materiality and affect provide new possibilities for examining societies in transition. A book of rare honesty and vulnerability, The Streets Are Talking to Me is a brilliant, unconventional, and self-conscious ethnography of the space where affect, material life, violence, political crisis, and masculinities meet one another..
    Note: Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources
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  • 58
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press | Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest
    ISBN: 9780520964846
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (x, 224 Seiten)
    DDC: 303.48/4
    RVK:
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    Keywords: Geschichte 2013-2018 ; Soziale Bewegung ; Kollektives Handeln ; Politische Mobilisierung ; Politischer Protest ; Protestbewegung ; Lateinamerika ; USA
    Note: Literaturverzeichnis: Seite 187-220
    URL: Volltext  (lizenzpflichtig)
    URL: Cover
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  • 59
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press | Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest
    ISBN: 9780520972827
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (246 pages)
    DDC: 305.55095109045
    Keywords: Electronic books
    Abstract: A free ebook version of this title is available through Luminos, University of California Press's Open Access publishing program. Visit www.luminosoa.org to learn more. This book is freely available in an open access edition thanks to TOME (Toward an Open Monograph Ecosystem)--a collaboration of the Association of American Universities, the Association of University Presses, and the Association of Research Libraries--and the generous support of the University of California, Davis. Learn more at the TOME website, available at: openmonographs.org. Creating the Intellectual redefines how we understand relations between intellectuals and the Chinese socialist revolution of the last century. Under the Chinese Communist Party, "the intellectual" was first and foremost a widening classification of individuals based on Marxist thought. The party turned revolutionaries and otherwise ordinary people into subjects identified as usable but untrustworthy intellectuals, an identification that profoundly affected patterns of domination, interaction, and rupture within the revolutionary enterprise. Drawing on a wide range of data, Eddy U takes the reader on a journey that examines political discourses, revolutionary strategies, rural activities, urban registrations, workplace arrangements, organized protests, and theater productions. He lays out in colorful detail the formation of new identities, forms of organization, and associations in Chinese society. The outcome is a compelling picture of the mutual constitution of the intellectual and the Chinese socialist revolution, the legacy of which still affects ways of seeing, thinking, acting, and feeling in what is now a globalized China.
    Note: Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources
    URL: Cover
    URL: Cover
    URL: Cover  (lizenzpflichtig)
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  • 60
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press | Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest
    ISBN: 9780520972483
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (278 pages)
    DDC: 306.3
    Keywords: Sozialstaat ; Soziale Frage ; Sozialpolitik ; Sozioökonomischer Wandel ; Kapitalismus ; Gleichstellung ; Aufsatzsammlung ; Electronic books
    Abstract: A free open access ebook is available upon publication. Learn more at www.luminosoa.org. Want, disease, ignorance, squalor, and idleness: first recognized together in mid-nineteenth-century Europe, these are the focus of the Social Question. In 1942 William Beveridge called them the "giant evils" while diagnosing the crises produced by the emergence of industrial society. More recently, during the final quarter of the twentieth century, the global spread of neoliberal policies enlarged these crises so much that the Social Question has made a comeback.   The Social Question in the Twenty-First Century maps out the linked crises across regions and countries and identifies the renewed and intensified Social Question as a labor issue above all. The volume includes discussions from every corner of the globe, focusing on American exceptionalism, Chinese repression, Indian exclusion, South African colonialism, democratic transitions in Eastern Europe, and other phenomena. The effects of capitalism dominating the world, the impact of the scarcity of waged work, and the degree to which the dispossessed poor bear the brunt of the crisis are all evaluated in this carefully curated volume. Both thorough and thoughtful, the book serves as collective effort to revive and reposition the Social Question, reconstructing its meaning and its politics in the world today.
    Note: Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources
    URL: Cover
    URL: Cover
    URL: Cover  (lizenzpflichtig)
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  • 61
    Book
    Book
    Berkeley : University of California Press
    ISBN: 9780520301078
    Language: English
    Pages: xiv, 373 Seiten , Illustrationen , 23 cm
    Series Statement: The new historicism 35
    Series Statement: UC Press voices revived
    DDC: 306.46
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    Note: Literaturverzeichnis: Seite 331-356 , Date of publication taken from publisher's web site
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  • 62
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    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press
    ISBN: 9780520970809
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (277 pages)
    Edition: Online-Ausg.
    Series Statement: Berkeley Series in British Studies v.13
    Parallel Title: Print version Greenhalgh, Charlotte Aging in Twentieth-Century Britain
    DDC: 305.260941
    Keywords: Older people
    Abstract: As today's baby boomers reach retirement and old age, this timely study looks back at the first generation who aged in the British welfare state. Using innovative research methods, Charlotte Greenhalgh sheds light on the experiences of elderly people in twentieth-century Britain. She adds further insights from the interviews and photographs of celebrated social scientists such as Peter Townsend, whose work helped transform care of the aged. A comprehensive and sensitive examination of the creative pursuits, family relations, work lives, health, and living conditions of the elderly, Aging in Twentieth-Century Britain charts the determined efforts of aging Britons to shape public understandings of old age in the modern era
    Abstract: Cover -- Aging in Twentieth-Century Britain -- Title -- Copyright -- Dedication -- CONTENTS -- List of Illustrations -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction: Aging and Twentieth-Century Britain -- 1. Experts and the Elderly: Social Research on Old Age -- 2. Talking with Peter Townsend: Elderly Britons at Home -- 3. Into the Institution: Residential Care for the Aged -- 4. "Making the Best of My Appearance": Grooming in Old Age -- 5. Games with Time: Autobiography and Aging -- Epilogue -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Index
    Note: Includes bibliographical references and index
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  • 63
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press
    ISBN: 9780520970656
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (281 pages)
    Series Statement: Western Histories Ser v.11
    Parallel Title: Print version Graham, Wade Braided Waters : Environment and Society in Molokai, Hawaii
    DDC: 304.2096924
    Keywords: Human ecology-Hawaii-Molokai ; Political ecology-Hawaii-Molokai ; Nature-Effect of human beings on-Hawaii-Molokai-History ; Water-supply-Political aspects-Hawaii-Molokai ; Molokai (Hawaii)-History ; Electronic books
    Abstract: Braided Waters sheds new light on the relationship between environment and society by charting the history of Hawaii's Molokai island over a thousand-year period of repeated settlement. From the arrival of the first Polynesians to contact with eighteenth-century European explorers and traders to our present era, this study shows how the control of resources--especially water--in a fragile, highly variable environment has had profound effects on the history of Hawaii. Wade Graham examines the ways environmental variation repeatedly shapes human social and economic structures and how, in turn, man-made environmental degradation influences and reshapes societies. A key finding of this study is how deep structures of place interact with distinct cultural patterns across different societies to produce similar social and environmental outcomes, in both the Polynesian and modern eras--a case of historical isomorphism with profound implications for global environmental history
    Abstract: Cover -- Braided Waters -- Title -- Copyright -- CONTENTS -- List of Illustrations -- List of Maps and Tables -- Foreword -- Introduction: Outer Island, In Between -- 1. Wet and Dry: The Polynesian Period, 1000-1778 -- 2. Traffick and Taboo: Trade, Biological Exchange, and Law in the Making of a New Pacific World, 1778-1848 -- 3. A Good Land: Molokai after the Mahele, 1845-1869 -- 4. The Bonanza Horizon: Molokai in the Sugar Era, 1870-1893 -- 5. A Bigger, Better Hawai'i: Making an American Molokai, 1893-1957 -- 6. From Lonely Isle to Friendly Isle: Economic Struggles in the Twentieth and Twenty-First Centuries and the Future of "the Most Hawaiian Island" -- Conclusion: Two Experiences of Settlement -- Appendix -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Index
    URL: Volltext  (lizenzpflichtig)
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  • 64
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press
    ISBN: 9780520964471
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (199 pages)
    Parallel Title: Print version Presser, Lois Inside Story : How Narratives Drive Mass Harm
    DDC: 303.6
    Keywords: Kriminalität ; Erzählung ; Berichterstattung ; Beeinflussung ; Masse
    Abstract: Stories have persuasive powers: they can influence how a person thinks and acts. Inside Story explores the capacity of stories to direct our thinking, heighten our emotions, and thereby motivate people to do harm to others and to tolerate harm done by others. From terrorist violence to "mere" complacency with institutionalized harm, the book weds case study to cross-disciplinary theory. It builds upon timely work in the field of narrative criminology and provides a thorough analysis of how stories can promote or inhibit harmful action. By offering a sociological analysis of the emotional yet intersubjective experience of dangerous stories, the book fleshes out the perplexing mechanics of cultural influence on crime and other forms of harm
    Abstract: Cover -- Inside Story -- Title -- Copyright -- CONTENTS -- Preface -- 1. Introduction: Narratives and Narrative Impacts -- 2. The Cultural Grounds of Mass Harm -- 3. Emotion, Narrative, and Transcendence -- 4. The Invitational Edge of Underdog Stories -- 5. Becoming Criminal: A Hegemonic Story of Antisociality -- 6. Better Living in Story Worlds -- Notes -- References -- Index
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  • 65
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press
    ISBN: 9780520968219
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (297 pages)
    Edition: Online-Ausg.
    Parallel Title: Print version Chapman, Dale The Jazz Bubble : Neoclassical Jazz in Neoliberal Culture
    DDC: 306.4/84250973
    RVK:
    Keywords: Gordon, Dexter ; Verve Records (Firm) History ; Verve Music Group History ; Jazz Economic aspects ; Jazz History and criticism ; Jazz Social aspects ; Sound recording industry Economic aspects ; Music-halls (Variety-theaters, cabarets, etc.) History ; Electronic books
    Abstract: Hailed by corporate, philanthropic, and governmental organizations as a metaphor for democratic interaction and business dynamics, contemporary jazz culture has a story to tell about the relationship between political economy and social practice in the era of neoliberal capitalism. The Jazz Bubble approaches the emergence of the neoclassical jazz aesthetic since the 1980s as a powerful, if unexpected, point of departure for a wide-ranging investigation of important social trends during this period, extending from the effects of financialization in the music industry to the structural upheaval created by urban redevelopment in major American cities. Dale Chapman draws from political and critical theory, oral history, and the public and trade press, making this a persuasive and compelling work for scholars across music, industry, and cultural studies
    Abstract: Cover -- The Jazz Bubble -- Title -- Copyright -- Dedication -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction: Banks, Bonds, and Blues -- 1. âControlled Freedomâ: Jazz, Risk, and Political Economy -- 2. âHomecomingâ: Dexter Gordon and the 1970s Fiscal Crisis in New York City -- 3. Selling the Songbook: The Political Economy of Verve Records (1956â1990) -- 4. Bronfmanâs Bauble: The Corporate History of the Verve Music Group (1990â2005) -- 5. Jazz and the Right to the City: Jazz Venues and the Legacy of Urban Redevelopment in California -- 6. The âYoshiâs Effectâ: Jazz, Speculative Urbanism, and Urban Redevelopment in Contemporary San Francisco -- Notes -- Works Cited -- Index
    Note: Includes bibliographical references and index
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  • 66
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press | Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest
    ISBN: 9780520964211
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (299 pages)
    DDC: 306.072/3
    RVK:
    Keywords: Alltag ; Feldforschung ; Kulturanthropologie
    Abstract: This book offers an invaluable look at what cultural anthropologists do when they are in the field. Through fascinating and often entertaining accounts of their lives and work in varied cultural settings, the authors describe the many forms fieldwork can take, the kinds of questions anthropologists ask, and the common problems they encounter. From these accounts and the experiences of the student field workers the authors have mentored over the years, In the Field makes a powerful case for the value of the anthropological approach to knowledge.
    Note: Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources
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  • 67
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press | Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest
    ISBN: 9780520968905
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (253 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    DDC: 306.09730000000002
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    Keywords: Soziale Probleme ; Unsicherheit ; USA
    Abstract: In an accessible and droll style, well-known sociologist Joel Best shines a light on how we navigate these anxious, insecure social times. While most of us still strive for the American Dream--to graduate from college, own a home, work toward early retirement--recent generations have been told that the next generation will not be able to achieve these goals, that things are getting--or are on the verge of getting--worse. In American Nightmares, Best addresses the apprehension that we face every day as we are bombarded with threats that the social institutions we count on are imperiled. Our schools are failing to teach our kids. Healthcare may soon be harder to obtain. We can't bank on our retirement plans. And our homes--still the largest chunk of most people's net worth--may lose much of their value. Our very way of life is being threatened! Or is it? With a steady voice and keen focus, Best examines how a culture develops fears and fantasies and how these visions are created and recreated in every generation. By dismantling current ideas about the future, collective memory, and sociology's marginalization in the public square, Best sheds light on how social problems--and our anxiety about them--are socially constructed.
    Note: Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources
    URL: Volltext  (lizenzpflichtig)
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  • 68
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press | Oxford : Oxford University Press
    ISBN: 9780520956872
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource , Illustrations (black and white), maps (black and white)
    DDC: 305.800979494
    RVK:
    Keywords: Schwarze ; Hispanos ; Ethnische Beziehungen ; African Americans ; Hispanic Americans ; Minorities ; Community development ; Community life ; Los Angeles, Calif. ; Los Angeles (Calif Ethnic relations ; Los Angeles (Calif Race relations ; Los Angeles (Calif Social conditions ; Aufsatzsammlung
    Abstract: This title provides a wide-ranging, interdisciplinary foray into the complicated world of multiethnic Los Angeles. The book focuses on the range of relationships and interactions between Latinas/os and African Americans in one of the most diverse cities in the United States, the book delivers supporting evidence that Los Angeles is a key place to study racial politics while also providing the basis for broader discussions of multiethnic America.
    Note: Previously issued in print: 2013 , Includes bibliographical references and index
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  • 69
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press | Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest
    ISBN: 9780520967557
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (169 pages)
    Series Statement: American Studies Now: Critical Histories of the Present Ser. v.5
    DDC: 304.28089699999998
    Abstract: This title is part of American Studies Now and available as an e-book first. Visit ucpress.edu/go/americanstudiesnow to learn more. From the 1960s to the present, activists, artists, and science fiction writers have imagined the consequences of climate change and its impacts on our future. Authors such as Octavia Butler and Leslie Marmon Silko, movie directors such as Bong Joon-Ho, and creators of digital media such as the makers of the Maori web series Anamata Future News have all envisioned future worlds in the wake of imminent environmental collapse, engaging audiences to think about the Earth's sustainability. As public awareness of climate change has grown, so has the popularity of imaginative works of climate fiction that connect science with activism. Today real world social movements helmed by Indigenous people and people of color are leading the way against the greatest threat to our environment: the fossil fuel industry. It is through these stories and movements by Natives and people of color--both in the real world and imagined through science fiction--that we understand the relationship between culture and activism and how both can be a valuable tool in creating our future. Imagining the Future of Climate Change introduces readers to the history and most significant flashpoints in climate justice through speculative fictions and social movements to explore post-disaster possibilities and the art of world-making.
    Note: Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources
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  • 70
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press
    ISBN: 9780520969193
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (204 pages)
    Parallel Title: Print version Enloe, Cynthia The Big Push : Exposing and Challenging Sustainable Patriarchy
    DDC: 306.858
    Keywords: Patriarchy
    Abstract: For over a century and in scores of countries, patriarchal presumptions and practices have been challenged by women and their male allies. "Sexual harassment" has entered common parlance; police departments are equipped with rape kits; more than half of the national legislators in Bolivia and Rwanda are women; and a woman candidate won the plurality of the popular votes in the 2016 United States presidential election. But have we really reached equality and overthrown a patriarchal point of view? The Big Push exposes how patriarchal ideas and relationships continue to be modernized to this day. Through contemporary cases and reports, renowned political scientist Cynthia Enloe exposes the workings of everyday patriarchy--in how Syrian women civil society activists have been excluded from international peace negotiations; how sexual harassment became institutionally accepted within major news organizations; or in how the UN Secretary General's post has remained a masculine domain. Enloe then lays out strategies and skills for challenging patriarchal attitudes and operations. Encouraging self-reflection, she guides us in the discomforting curiosity of reviewing our own personal complicity in sustaining patriarchy in order to withdraw our own support for it. Timely and globally conscious, The Big Push is a call for feminist self-reflection and strategic action with a belief that exposure complements resistance
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  • 71
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press
    ISBN: 9780520968837
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (291 pages)
    Edition: Online-Ausg.
    Parallel Title: Print version Singh, Nikhil Pal Race and America's Long War
    DDC: 305.800973
    RVK:
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    Keywords: Political culture History ; National characteristics, American History ; Racism History ; Racism--United States--History ; Racism ; United States ; History ; Electronic books ; United States Politics and government ; United States Social conditions
    Abstract: Donald Trump's election to the U.S. presidency in 2016, which placed control of the government in the hands of the most racially homogenous, far-right political party in the Western world, produced shock and disbelief for liberals, progressives, and leftists globally. Yet most of the immediate analysis neglects longer-term accounting of how the United States arrived here. Race and America's Long War examines the relationship between war, politics, police power, and the changing contours of race and racism in the contemporary United States. Nikhil Pal Singh argues that the United States' pursuit of war since the September 11 terrorist attacks has reanimated a longer history of imperial statecraft that segregated and eliminated enemies both within and overseas. America's territorial expansion and Indian removals, settler in-migration and nativist restriction, and African slavery and its afterlives were formative social and political processes that drove the rise of the United States as a capitalist world power long before the onset of globalization. Spanning the course of U.S. history, these crucial essays show how the return of racism and war as seemingly permanent features of American public and political life is at the heart of our present crisis and collective disorientation
    Abstract: Cover -- Race and America's Long War -- Title -- Copyright Page -- Table of Contents -- Preface and Acknowledgments -- Introduction: The Long War -- 1. Race, War, Police -- 2. From War Capitalism to Race War -- 3. The Afterlife of Fascism -- 4. Racial Formation and Permanent War -- 5. The Present Crisis -- Epilogue: The Two Americas -- Notes -- Index
    Note: Includes bibliographical references and index
    URL: Volltext  (lizenzpflichtig)
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  • 72
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    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press
    ISBN: 9780520962514
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (412 pages)
    Series Statement: Global Square Ser v.2
    Parallel Title: Print version Hodgson, Dorothy Global Africa : Into the Twenty-First Century
    DDC: 303.48/26
    RVK:
    Keywords: Globalization--Africa--21st century ; Globalization ; Africa ; 21st century ; Electronic books
    Abstract: Global Africais a striking, original volume that disrupts the dominant narratives that continue to frame our discussion of Africa, complicating conventional views of the region as a place of violence, despair, and victimhood. The volume documents the significant global connections, circulations, and contributions that African people, ideas, and goods have made throughout the world--from the United States and South Asia to Latin America, Europe, and elsewhere. Through succinct and engaging pieces by scholars, policy makers, activists, and journalists, the volume provides a wholly original view of a continent at the center of global historical processes rather than on the periphery. Global Africa offers fresh, complex, and insightful visions of a continent in flux
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  • 73
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press
    ISBN: 9780520965188
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (310 pages)
    Edition: Online-Ausg.
    Parallel Title: Print version Davis, Shannon N Gender in the Twenty-First Century : The Stalled Revolution and the Road to Equality
    DDC: 305.30973
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    Keywords: Work and family 21st century ; Sex role 21st century ; Equality before the law 21st century ; Sex role in the work environment 21st century ; Sex discrimination in employment 21st century ; Sex discrimination in employment - United States - 21st century ; Electronic books ; Aufsatzsammlung
    Abstract: How far have we really progressed toward gender equality in the United States? The answer is, "not far enough." This engaging and accessible work, aimed at students studying gender and social inequality, provides new insight into the uneven and stalled nature of the gender revolution in the twenty-first century. Honing in on key institutions--the family, higher education, the workplace, religion, the military, and sports--key scholars in the field look at why gender inequality persists. All contributions are rooted in new and original research and introductory and concluding essays provide a broad overview for students and others new to the field. The volume also explores how to address current inequities through political action, research initiatives, social mobilization, and policy changes. Conceived of as a book for gender and society classes with a mix of exciting, accessible, pointed pieces, Gender in the Twenty-First Century is an ideal book for students and scholars alike
    Abstract: Cover -- Contents -- List of Figures -- List of Tables -- Acknowledgments -- 1. Introduction "Gender as an Institution" -- PART I: CHANGING AND UNCHANGING INSTITUTIONS -- 2. The Family "There's No Such Thing as Having It All: Gender, Work, and Care in an Age of Insecurity" -- 3. Higher Education "Community Colleges as a Pathway for Low-Income Women to Enter the Engineering Technology Workforce" -- 4. The Workplace " 'Separating the Women from the Girls': Black Professional Men's Perceptions of Women Colleagues" -- 5. Religion "True Love Had Better Wait, or Else! Anxious Masculinity and the Gendered Politics of the Evangelical Purity Movement" -- 6. The Military "Gender, Residential Segregation, and Military Enlistment Patterns" -- 7. Sport "Conference Realignment and Its Impact on Women Student-Athletes" -- Review Questions for Part I: Changing and Unchanging Institutions -- PART II: GENDER POLITICS AND POLICIES -- 8. Corporate Boards and International Policies "Gender Parity on Corporate Boards: A Path to Women's Equality?" -- 9. Corporate Boards and US Policies "Hispanic Inclusion at the Highest Level of Corporate America: Progress or Not?" -- 10. Work-Family Integration "Work-Life Balance and the Relationship between Women in State Legislatures and Workers' Schedule Control" -- 11. Health "Black, Women, or Black Women: An Intersectionality Approach to Health Inequalities" -- 12. Immigration "Interactions between Gender and Immigration in Wage Inequality among STEM Workers, 1980-2010" -- 13. Sexuality "Queer Eye on the Gay Rodeo" -- Review Questions for Part II: Gender Politics and Policies -- PART III: CONCLUSION -- 14. Policies for Progress "Unstalling the Revolution: Policies toward Gender Equality" -- Review Questions for Part III: Conclusion -- References -- List of Contributors -- Index -- A -- B -- C -- D -- E -- F -- G -- H -- I -- J
    Abstract: K -- l -- M -- N -- O -- P -- Q -- R -- S -- T -- U -- V -- W -- Z
    Note: Includes bibliographical references and index
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    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press | Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest
    ISBN: 9780520967243
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (339 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    Series Statement: Violence in Latin American History Ser. v.3
    DDC: 303.60986100000002
    Abstract: Forgotten Peace examines Colombian society's attempt to move beyond the Western Hemisphere's worst mid-century conflict and shows how that effort molded notions of belonging and understandings of the past. Robert A. Karl reconstructs encounters between government officials, rural peoples, provincial elites, and urban intellectuals during a crucial conjuncture that saw reformist optimism transform into alienation. In addition to offering a sweeping reinterpretation of Colombian history--including the most detailed account of the origins of the FARC insurgency in any language--Karl provides a Colombian vantage on global processes of democratic transition, development, and memory formation in the 1950s and 1960s. Broad in scope, Forgotten Peace challenges contemporary theories of violence in Latin America.
    Note: Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources
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  • 75
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press | Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest
    ISBN: 9780520966024
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (275 pages)
    Edition: 2nd ed.
    DDC: 305.868/0730794
    Abstract: Since late 2001 more than fifty percent of the babies born in California have been Latino. When these babies reach adulthood, they will, by sheer force of numbers, influence the course of the Golden State. This essential study, based on decades of data, paints a vivid and energetic portrait of Latino society in California by providing a wealth of details about work ethic, family strengths, business establishments, and the surprisingly robust health profile that yields an average life expectancy for Latinos five years longer than that of the general population. Spanning one hundred years, this complex, fascinating analysis suggests that the future of Latinos in California will be neither complete assimilation nor unyielding separatism. Instead, the development of a distinctive regional identity will be based on Latino definitions of what it means to be American.   This updated edition now provides trend lines through the 2010 Census as well as information on the 1849 California Constitutional Convention and the ethnogenesis of how Latinos created the society of "Latinos de Estados Unidos" (Latinos in the US). In addition, two new chapters focus on Latino Post-Millennials-the first focusing on what it's like to grow up in a digital world; and the second describing the contestation of Latinos at a national level and the dynamics that transnational relationships have on Latino Post-Millennials in Mexico and Central America.
    Note: Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources
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  • 76
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press | Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest
    ISBN: 9780520966307
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (284 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    DDC: 303.482071
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    Keywords: Globalisierung ; Forschungsgegenstand ; Theorie ; Methodologie
    Abstract: The ability to deploy interdisciplinary theoretical perspectives that speak to interconnected global dimensions is critical if one's work is to be relevant and applicable to the emerging global-scale issues of our time. The Global Turn is a guide for students and scholars across all areas of the social sciences and humanities who wish to embark on global-studies research projects. The authors demonstrate how the global can be studied from a local perspective and vice versa. They show how global processes manifest at multiple levels--transnational, regional, national, and local--all of which are interconnected and mutually constitutive. This book takes readers through the steps of thinking like a global scholar in theoretical, methodological, and practical terms, and it explains the implications of global perspectives for research design.
    Note: Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources
    URL: Volltext  (lizenzpflichtig)
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  • 77
    ISBN: 9780520963818
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 online resource (336 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als Besnier, Niko The anthropology of sport
    Parallel Title: Print version Brownell, Susan The Anthropology of Sport : Bodies, Borders, Biopolitics
    DDC: 306.483
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    Keywords: Electronic books ; Sport ; Sport
    Abstract: Few activities bring together physicality, emotions, politics, money, and morality as dramatically as sport. In Brazil's stadiums or China's parks, on Cuba's baseball diamonds or Fiji's rugby fields, human beings test their physical limits, invest emotional energy, bet money, perform witchcraft, and ingest substances. Sport is a microcosm of what life is about. The Anthropology of Sport explores how sport both shapes and is shaped by the social, cultural, political, and historical contexts in which we live. Core themes discussed in this book include the body, modernity, nationalism, the state, citizenship, transnationalism, globalization, and gender and sexuality.
    Abstract: "Cover" -- "Contents" -- "List of Illustrations" -- "Acknowledgments" -- "Introduction" -- "1 Sport, Anthropology, and History" -- "2 Sport, Colonialism, and Imperialism" -- "3 Sport, Health, and the Environment" -- "4 Sport, Social Class, Race, and Ethnicity" -- "5 Sport and Sex, Gender, and Sexuality" -- "6 Sport, Cultural Performance, and Mega-events" -- "7 Sport, Nation, and Nationalism" -- "8 Sport in the World System" -- "Epilogue: Sport for Anthropology" -- "Notes" -- "Selected Bibliography" -- "Index" -- "A" -- "B" -- "C" -- "D" -- "E" -- "F" -- "G" -- "H" -- "I" -- "J" -- "K" -- "L" -- "M" -- "N" -- "O" -- "P" -- "Q" -- "R" -- "S" -- "T" -- "U" -- "V" -- "W" -- "X" -- "Y
    Note: Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources
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  • 78
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press | Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest
    ISBN: 9780520966673
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (493 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    DDC: 306.7009/034
    Abstract: Starting in the late nineteenth century, scholars and activists all over the world suddenly began to insist that understandings of sex be based on science. As Japanese and Indian sexologists influenced their German, British, and American counterparts and vice versa, sexuality, modernity, and imaginings of exotified "Others" became intimately linked. The first anthology to provide a worldwide perspective on the birth and development of the field, A Global History of Sexual Science contends that actors outside of Europe--in Asia, Latin America, and Africa--became important interlocutors in debates on prostitution, birth control, and transvestism. Ideas circulated through intellectual exchange, travel, and internationally produced and disseminated publications. Twenty scholars tackle specific issues, including the female orgasm and the criminalization of male homosexuality, to demonstrate how concepts and ideas introduced by sexual scientists gained currency throughout the modern world.
    Note: Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources
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  • 79
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press | Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest
    ISBN: 9780520967229
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (263 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    DDC: 305.89507307
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    Keywords: Asiaten ; Vorort ; Santa Clara Valley
    Abstract: Beyond the gilded gates of Google, little has been written about the suburban communities of Silicon Valley. Over the past several decades, the region's booming tech economy spurred rapid population growth, increased racial diversity, and prompted an influx of immigration, especially among highly skilled and educated migrants from China, Taiwan, and India. At the same time, the response to these newcomers among long-time neighbors and city officials revealed complex attitudes in even the most well-heeled and diverse communities.   Trespassers? takes an intimate look at the everyday life and politics inside Silicon Valley against a backdrop of these dramatic demographic shifts. At the broadest level, it raises questions about the rights of diverse populations to their own piece of the suburban American Dream. It follows one community over several decades as it transforms from a sleepy rural town to a global gateway and one of the nation's largest Asian American-majority cities. There, it highlights the passionate efforts of Asian Americans to make Silicon Valley their home by investing in local schools, neighborhoods, and shopping centers. It also provides a textured tale of the tensions that emerge over this suburb's changing environment. With vivid storytelling, Trespassers? uncovers suburbia as an increasingly important place for immigrants and minorities to register their claims for equality and inclusion.
    Note: Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources
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  • 80
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press | Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest
    ISBN: 9780520965881
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (307 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    DDC: 305.896/69073
    Abstract: In Beyond Expectations, Onoso Imoagene delves into the multifaceted identities of second-generation Nigerian adults in the United States and Britain. She argues that they conceive of an alternative notion of "black" identity that differs radically from African American and Black Caribbean notions of "black" in the United States and Britain. Instead of considering themselves in terms of their country of destination alone, second-generation Nigerians define themselves in complicated ways that balance racial status, a diasporic Nigerian ethnicity, a pan-African identity, and identification with fellow immigrants.     Based on over 150 interviews, Beyond Expectations seeks to understand how race, ethnicity, and class shape identity and how globalization, transnationalism, and national context inform sense of self.
    Note: Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources
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  • 81
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press | Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest
    ISBN: 9780520968233
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (289 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    DDC: 303.66083
    Abstract: In Playing War, Sabine Fr�hst�ck makes a bold proposition: that for over a century throughout Japan and beyond, children and concepts of childhood have been appropriated as tools for decidedly unchildlike purposes: to validate, moralize, humanize, and naturalize war, and to sentimentalize peace. She argues that modern conceptions of war insist on and exploit a specific and static notion of the child: that the child, though the embodiment of vulnerability and innocence, nonetheless possesses an inherent will to war, and that this seemingly contradictory creature demonstrates what it means to be human. In examining the intersection of children/childhood with war/military, Fr�hst�ck identifies the insidious factors perpetuating this alliance, thus rethinking the very foundations of modern militarism. She interrogates how essentialist notions of both childhood and war have been productively intertwined; how assumptions about childhood and war have converged; and how children and childhood have worked as symbolic constructions and powerful rhetorical tools, particularly in the decades between the nation- and empire-building efforts of the late-nineteenth and early twentieth centuries up to the uneven manifestations of globalization at the beginning of the twenty-first.
    Note: Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources
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  • 82
    E-Resource
    E-Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press
    ISBN: 9780520286306 , 9780520961579 (Sekundärausgabe)
    Language: English
    Pages: 299 p.
    Edition: Online-Ausg. Online-Ressource ISBN 9780520961579
    Edition: [Online-Ausg.]
    DDC: 305.230946
    Keywords: Online-Publikation
    Abstract: Much like the United States, the countries of Western Europe have experienced massive immigration in the last three decades. Spain, in particular, has been transformed from an immigrant-exporting country to one receiving hundreds of thousands of new immigrants. Today, almost 13 percent of the country's population is foreign-born. Spanish Legacies, written by internationally known experts on immigration, explores how the children of immigrants-the second generation-are coping with the challenges of adaptation to Spanish society, comparing their experiences with those of their peers in the Unite...
    Note: Description based upon print version of record , Online-Ausg.:
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  • 83
    Book
    Book
    Berkeley : University of California Press
    ISBN: 0520289978 , 9780520289970 , 9780520289987
    Language: English
    Pages: IX, 234 Seiten
    DDC: 304.2
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    Keywords: Anthropozän ; Holozän ; Umweltveränderung ; Anthropogener Einfluss ; Humanökologie ; Umweltgeologie ; Formation ; Schicht ; Historische Geologie ; Sediment ; Schichtenbildung ; Schichtung
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  • 84
    Book
    Book
    Berkeley : University of California Press
    ISBN: 9780520279346 , 9780520279353
    Language: English
    Pages: xvi, 261 Seiten , Illustrationen
    Series Statement: Music of the African diaspora 18
    DDC: 781.6508996073044361
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    Keywords: Geschichte 1945-1961 ; Amerikanischer Einwanderer ; Jazzmusiker ; Schriftsteller ; Schwarze ; Ethnische Identität ; Kulturkontakt ; Paris
    Note: Literaturverzeichnis Seite 227 - 242
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  • 85
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press | Oxford : Oxford University Press
    ISBN: 9780520950467
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressourcece
    DDC: 305.89667045731
    Keywords: Ghanaischer Einwanderer ; Auswanderung ; Soziale Situation ; Globalisierung ; Ghanaer ; Ghanaians Social conditions ; Immigrants Social conditions ; Fishers Economic conditions ; Italien ; Naples (Italy) Ethnic relations ; Senya Beraku (Ghana) Economic conditions ; Naples (Italy) Emigration and immigration ; Ghana Emigration and immigration
    Abstract: This title chronicles the lives of a group of fishermen from Ghana who took the long and dangerous journey to Southern Italy in search of work in a cutthroat underground economy.
    Note: Previously issued in print: 2011 , Includes bibliographical references
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  • 86
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press | Oxford : Oxford University Press
    ISBN: 9780520957619
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource , Illustrations (black and white).
    Series Statement: California studies in food and culture 48
    DDC: 394.12
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    Keywords: Arbeiterklasse ; Ess- und Trinksitte ; Ernährungslage ; Geschichte ; Food habits History 19th century ; Food habits History 20th century ; Working class Social conditions ; Working class Social life and customs ; Working class Economic conditions ; USA
    Abstract: In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, working-class Americans had eating habits that were distinctly shaped by jobs, families, neighbourhoods, and the tools, utilities, and size of their kitchens - along with their cultural heritage. This text is a deep exploration by historian and lecturer Katherine Turner that delivers an unprecedented and thoroughly researched study of the changing food landscape in American working-class families from industrialization through the 1950s.
    Note: Previously issued in print: 2014 , Includes bibliographical references and index
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  • 87
    ISBN: 9780520286290 , 9780520286306
    Language: English
    Pages: xxiv, 264 Seiten , Illustrationen
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als
    DDC: 305.230946
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    Keywords: Children of immigrants Cross-cultural studies ; Children of immigrants Social conditions ; Spain Emigration and immigration ; Social aspects
    Note: Includes bibliographical references and index
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  • 88
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press | Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest
    ISBN: 9780520963474
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (723 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    DDC: 306.3
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    Keywords: Entwicklungssoziologie
    Abstract: The Sociology of Development Handbook gathers essays that reflect the range of debates in development sociology and in the interdisciplinary study and practice of development. The essays address the pressing intellectual challenges of today, including internal and international migration, transformation of political regimes, globalization, changes in household and family formations, gender dynamics, technological change, population and economic growth, environmental sustainability, peace and war, and the production and reproduction of social and economic inequality.
    Note: Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources
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  • 89
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press | Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest
    ISBN: 9780520962729
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (347 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    DDC: 305.42
    Abstract: What is women's empowerment, and how and why does it matter for women's health? Despite the rise of a human rights-based approach to women's health and increasing awareness of the synergies between women's health and empowerment, a lack of consensus remains as to how to measure empowerment and successfully intervene in ways that improve health. Women's Empowerment and Global Health presents thirteen multidisciplinary case studies that demonstrate how science and advocacy can be creatively merged to enhance the agency and status of women. The content is enriched by ancillary videos that give background about programs in India, the United States, Mexico, Nicaragua, Zimbabwe, and South Africa. Women's Empowerment and Global Health provides the next generation of researchers and practitioners, as well as students in global and public health, sociology, anthropology, women's studies, law, business, and medicine, with cutting-edge and inspirational examples of programs that point the way toward achieving women's equality and fulfilling the right to health.
    Note: Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources
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  • 90
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press | Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest
    ISBN: 9780520960107
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (249 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    DDC: 302.231
    RVK:
    Keywords: Internet ; Zeichen ; Geschlechtergerechte Sprache ; Lateinamerika
    Abstract: Every user knows the importance of the "" symbol in internet communication. Though the symbol barely existed in Latin America before the emergence of email, Spanish-speaking feminist activists immediately claimed it to replace the awkward "o/a" used to indicate both genders in written text, discovering embedded in the internet an answer to the challenge of symbolic inclusion. In repurposing the symbol, they changed its meaning.   In Interpreting the Internet, Elisabeth Jay Friedman provides the first in-depth exploration of how Latin American feminist and queer activists have interpreted the internet to support their counterpublics. Aided by a global network of women and men dedicated to establishing an accessible internet, activists have developed identities, constructed communities, and honed strategies for social change. And by translating the internet into their own vernacular, they have transformed the technology itself. This book will be of interest to scholars and students in feminist and gender studies, Latin American studies, media studies, and political science, as well as anyone curious about the ways in which the internet shapes our lives.
    Note: Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources
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  • 91
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press | Oxford : Oxford University Press
    ISBN: 9780520953536
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource , Illustrations (black and white).
    Series Statement: California series in public anthropology 24
    DDC: 966.40440922
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    Keywords: Alltag ; Ethnologie ; War and society ; Sierra Leone ; Sierra Leone Personal narratives History Civil War, 1991-2002 ; Sierra Leone History Civil War, 1991-2002 ; Psychological aspects ; Sierra Leone History Civil War, 1991-2002 ; Social aspects
    Abstract: Utilizing narratives of seven different people - solider, rebel, student, trader, evangelist, father, and politician - this book provides fresh insight into how ordinary Sierra Leoneans survived the war that devastated their country for a decade.
    Note: Previously issued in print: 2012 , Includes bibliographical references and index
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  • 92
    E-Resource
    E-Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press
    ISBN: 9780520282766 , 9780520958692 (Sekundärausgabe)
    Language: English
    Pages: 253 p.
    Edition: Online-Ausg. Online-Ressource ISBN 9780520958692
    Edition: [Online-Ausg.]
    Series Statement: California Series in Public Anthropology v.32
    DDC: 303.60981
    Keywords: Online-Publikation
    Abstract: In Rio de Janeiro's favelas, traffickers assert power through conspicuous displays of wealth and force, brandishing high-powered guns, gold jewelry, and piles of cash and narcotics. Police, for their part, conduct raids reminiscent of action films or video games, wearing masks and riding in enormous armored cars called ""big skulls."" Images of these spectacles circulate constantly in local, national, and global media, masking everyday forms of violence, prejudice, and inequality. The Spectacular Favela offers a rich ethnographic examination of the political economy of spectacular violence in ...
    Note: Description based upon print version of record , Online-Ausg.:
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  • 93
    E-Resource
    E-Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press
    ISBN: 9780520286818 , 9780520961906 (Sekundärausgabe)
    Language: English
    Pages: 248 p.
    Edition: Online-Ausg. Ann Arbor, Michigan ProQuest Online-Ressource ISBN 9780520961906
    Edition: [Online-Ausg.]
    Series Statement: California Studies in Food and Culture v.57
    DDC: 394.1/2097281
    Abstract: A woman with hypertension refuses vegetables. A man with diabetes adds iron-fortified sugar to his coffee. As death rates from heart attacks, strokes, and diabetes in Latin America escalate, global health interventions increasingly emphasize nutrition, exercise, and weight loss-but much goes awry as ideas move from policy boardrooms and clinics into everyday life. Based on years of intensive fieldwork, The Weight of Obesity offers poignant stories of how obesity is lived and experienced by Guatemalans who have recently found their diets-and their bodies-radically transformed. Anthropologist Em...
    Note: Description based upon print version of record , Online-Ausg.:
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  • 94
    E-Resource
    E-Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press
    ISBN: 9780520282971 , 9780520958838 (Sekundärausgabe)
    Language: English
    Pages: 291 p.
    Edition: Online-Ausg. Online-Ressource ISBN 9780520958838
    Edition: [Online-Ausg.]
    DDC: 305.40972910905
    Keywords: Online-Publikation
    Abstract: From Cuba with Love deals with love, sexuality, and politics in contemporary Cuba. In this beautiful narrative, Megan Daigle explores the role of women in Cuban political culture by examining the rise of economies of sex, romance, and money since the early 1990s. Daigle draws attention to the violence experienced by young women suspected of involvement with foreigners at the hands of a moralistic state, an opportunistic police force, and even their own families and partners.Investigating the lived realities of the Cuban women (and some men) who date tourists and offering a unique perspective o...
    Note: Description based upon print version of record , Online-Ausg.:
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  • 95
    E-Resource
    E-Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press
    ISBN: 9780520281646 , 9780520961708 (Sekundärausgabe)
    Language: English
    Pages: 270 p.
    Edition: Online-Ausg. Online-Ressource ISBN 9780520961708
    Edition: [Online-Ausg.]
    DDC: 305.5/50973
    Keywords: Online-Publikation
    Abstract: For the past several decades, politicians and economists thought that high levels of inequality were good for the economy. But because America's middle class is now so weak, the US economy suffers from the kinds of problems that plague less-developed countries. As 〈I〉Hollowed Out〈/I〉 explains, to have strong, sustainable growth, the economy needs to work for everyone and expand from the middle out. This new thinking has the potential to supplant trickle-down economics-the theory that was so wrong about inequality and our economy-and shape economic policymaking for generations.
    Note: Description based upon print version of record , Online-Ausg.:
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  • 96
    E-Resource
    E-Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press
    ISBN: 9780520284296 , 9780520959903 (Sekundärausgabe)
    Language: English
    Pages: 435 p.
    Edition: Online-Ausg. Online-Ressource ISBN 9780520959903
    Edition: [Online-Ausg.]
    Series Statement: California World History Library v.22
    DDC: 305.89604210904
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    Keywords: Geschichte 1900-2000 ; Schwarze ; Entkolonialisierung ; Postkolonialismus ; London ; Online-Publikation
    Abstract: This vibrant history of London in the twentieth century reveals the city as a key site in the development of black internationalism and anticolonialism. Marc Matera shows the significant contributions of people of African descent to London's rich social and cultural history, masterfully weaving together the stories of many famous historical figures and presenting their quests for personal, professional, and political recognition against the backdrop of a declining British Empire. A groundbreaking work of intellectual history, Black London will appeal to scholars and students in a variety of ar...
    Note: Description based upon print version of record , Online-Ausg.:
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  • 97
    ISBN: 9780520285705 , 9780520961135 (Sekundärausgabe)
    Language: English
    Pages: 217 p.
    Edition: Online-Ausg. Online-Ressource ISBN 9780520961135
    Edition: [Online-Ausg.]
    DDC: 364.152098161
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    Keywords: Polizei ; Mord ; Organisiertes Verbrechen ; São Paulo ; Online-Publikation
    Abstract: We hold many assumptions about police work-that it is the responsibility of the state, or that police officers are given the right to kill in the name of public safety or self-defense. But in The Killing Consensus, Graham Denyer Willis shows how in São Paulo, Brazil, killing and the arbitration of ""normal"" killing in the name of social order are actually conducted by two groups-the police and organized crime-both operating according to parallel logics of murder. Based on three years of ethnographic fieldwork, Willis's book traces how homicide detectives categorize two types of killing: the f...
    Note: Description based upon print version of record , Online-Ausg.:
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  • 98
    E-Resource
    E-Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press
    ISBN: 9780520283510 , 9780520959378 (Sekundärausgabe)
    Language: English
    Pages: 301 p.
    Edition: Online-Ausg. Online-Ressource ISBN 9780520959378
    Edition: [Online-Ausg.]
    DDC: 364.1098
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    Keywords: Grenzgebiet ; Kriminalität ; Organisiertes Verbrechen ; Feldforschung ; Argentinien ; Brasilien ; Paraguay ; Online-Publikation
    Abstract: This highly original work of anthropology combines extensive ethnographic fieldwork and investigative journalism to explain how security is understood, experienced, and constructed along the Triple Frontera, the border region shared by Argentina, Brazil, and Paraguay. One of the major ""hot borders"" in the Western Hemisphere, the Triple Frontera is associated with drug and human trafficking, contraband, money laundering, and terrorism. It's also a place where residents, particularly on the Argentine side, are subjected to increased governmental control and surveillance.How does a scholar tell...
    Note: Description based upon print version of record , Online-Ausg.:
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  • 99
    ISBN: 9780520280861 , 9780520959972 (Sekundärausgabe)
    Language: English
    Pages: 894 p.
    Edition: Online-Ausg. Online-Ressource ISBN 9780520959972
    Edition: [Online-Ausg.]
    DDC: 305.80906809041
    Keywords: Carnegie Corporation of New York ; Minderheitenfrage ; Außenpolitik ; Apartheid ; Südafrika ; USA ; Online-Publikation
    Abstract: A pathbreaking history of the development of scientific racism, white nationalism, and segregationist philanthropy in the U.S. and South Africa in the early twentieth century, Waste of a White Skin focuses on the American Carnegie Corporation's study of race in South Africa, the Poor White Study, and its influence on the creation of apartheid.This book demonstrates the ways in which U.S. elites supported apartheid and Afrikaner Nationalism in the critical period prior to 1948 through philanthropic interventions and shaping scholarly knowledge production. Rather than comparing racial democracie...
    Note: Description based upon print version of record , Online-Ausg.:
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  • 100
    E-Resource
    E-Resource
    Berkeley : University of California Press
    ISBN: 9780520271012 , 9780520959125 (Sekundärausgabe)
    Language: English
    Pages: 331 p.
    Edition: Online-Ausg. Online-Ressource ISBN 9780520959125
    Edition: [Online-Ausg.]
    DDC: 398.20952
    Keywords: Online-Publikation
    Abstract: Monsters, ghosts, fantastic beings, and supernatural phenomena of all sorts haunt the folklore and popular culture of Japan. Broadly labeled yokai, these creatures come in infinite shapes and sizes, from tengu mountain goblins and kappa water spirits to shape-shifting foxes and long-tongued ceiling-lickers. Currently popular in anime, manga, film, and computer games, many yokai originated in local legends, folktales, and regional ghost stories.Drawing on years of research in Japan, Michael Dylan Foster unpacks the history and cultural context of yokai, tracing their roots, interpreting their m...
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