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  • Englisch  (27)
  • Polnisch
  • Berlin : Walter de Gruyter GmbH
  • History  (27)
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  • 1
    Online-Ressource
    Online-Ressource
    Ithaca, NY : Cornell University Press | Berlin : Walter de Gruyter GmbH
    ISBN: 9781501774164
    Sprache: Englisch
    Seiten: 1 Online-Ressource (270 p.) , 20 b&w halftones
    Serie: The United States in the World
    DDC: 303.48/2730510904
    Schlagwort(e): Electronic books. ; History ; Electronic books
    Kurzfassung: In People's Diplomacy, Kazushi Minami shows how the American and Chinese people rebuilt US-China relations in the 1970s, a pivotal decade bookended by Richard Nixon's 1972 visit to China and 1979 normalization of diplomatic relations. Top policymakers in Washington and Beijing drew the blueprint for the new bilateral relationship, but the work of building it was left to a host of Americans and Chinese from all walks of life, who engaged in "people-to-people" exchanges. After two decades of estrangement and hostility caused by the Cold War, these people dramatically changed the nature of US-China relations. Americans reimagined China as a country of opportunities, irresistible because of its prodigious potential, while Chinese reinterpreted the United States as an agent of modernization, capable of enriching their country and rejuvenating their lives. Drawing on extensive research at two dozen archives in the United States and China, People's Diplomacy redefines contemporary US-China relations as a creation of the American and Chinese people.
    URL: Cover
    URL: Volltext  (kostenfrei)
    URL: Volltext  (kostenfrei)
    URL: Cover
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  • 2
    ISBN: 9780812299946
    Sprache: Englisch
    Seiten: 1 Online-Ressource (288 p.) , 7 b/w
    Ausgabe: 2021
    Serie: Hagley Perspectives on Business and Culture
    DDC: 303.3/30973
    Schlagwort(e): Capitalism Social aspects ; History ; Information resources Economic aspects ; History ; Information resources Social aspects ; History ; Information technology Economic aspects ; History ; Information technology Social aspects ; History ; Social control Economic aspects ; History ; HISTORY / United States / 19th Century ; Advertising ; American labor history ; Consumer data ; Corporate espionage ; Digital economy ; Digital privacy ; Information ; Management ; Marketing ; Media Studies ; Pinkerton detective agency ; Plantation slavery ; Surveillance ; War on Drugs and Workplace policies
    Kurzfassung: Surveillance Capitalism in America offers a crucial historical perspective on the intimate relationship between surveillance and capitalism. While surveillance is often associated with governments, today the role of the private sector in the spread of everyday surveillance is the subject of growing public debate. Tech giants like Google and Facebook are fueled by a continuous supply of user data and digital exhaust. Surveillance is not just a side effect of digital capitalism; it is the business model itself, suggesting the emergence of a new and more rapacious mode of capitalism: surveillance capitalism.But how much has capitalism really changed? Surveillance Capitalism in America explores the historical development of commercial surveillance long before computers and suggests that surveillance has been central to American capitalism since the nation's founding. Managers surveilled labor, merchants surveilled consumers, and businesses surveilled each other. Focusing on events in the United States, the chapters in this volume examine the deep logic of modern surveillance as a mode of rationalization, bureaucratization, and social control from the early nineteenth century forward. Even more, business surveillance has often involved collaborations with the state, through favorable laws, policing, and information sharing. The history of surveillance capitalism is thus the history of technological, legal, and knowledge infrastructures built over decades.Together, the chapters in this volume reveal the long arc of surveillance capitalism, from the violent coercion of slave labor to the seductions of target marketing.
    Anmerkung: Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 27. Okt 2021)
    URL: Cover
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  • 3
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    New York, NY : Columbia University Press | Berlin : Walter de Gruyter GmbH
    ISBN: 9780231549295
    Sprache: Englisch
    Seiten: 1 Online-Ressource , 10-15 film stills
    Ausgabe: 2021
    Serie: Short Cuts
    RVK:
    Schlagwort(e): Geschichte ; Popmusik ; Musical ; Musikfilm ; Motion pictures and music ; Musical films History and criticism ; Popular music Social aspects ; History ; PERFORMING ARTS / Theater / Broadway & Musicals ; USA
    Kurzfassung: After Hollywood and Tin Pan Alley's iron grip on the movie musical began to slip in the face of pop's cultural dominance, many believed that the musical genre entered a terminal decline and finally wore itself out by the 1980s. Though the industrial model of the musical was disrupted by the emergence of pop, the Hollywood musical has not gone extinct. Many Hollywood productions from the 1960s to the present have revisited the forms and conventions of the classic musical-except instead of drawing from showtunes and jazz standards, they employ the styles and iconography of pop.Alberto Mira offers a new account of how pop music revolutionized the Hollywood musical. He shows that while the Hollywood system ceased producing large-scale traditional musicals, different pop strains-disco, rock 'n' roll, doo-wop, glam, and hip-hop-renewed the genre, giving it a new life. While the classical musical presented a world light on conflict, defined by theatricality and where effortless talent can shine through, the introduction of pop spurred musicals to address contemporary social and political conditions. Mira traces the emergence of a new set of themes-such as the painful hard work depicted in Dirty Dancing (1987); the double-edged fandom of Velvet Goldmine (1998); and the racial politics of Dreamgirls (2006)-to explore why the Hollywood musical has found renewed relevance.
    Anmerkung: Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 29. Nov 2021)
    URL: Cover
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  • 4
    Online-Ressource
    Online-Ressource
    Princeton, NJ : Princeton University Press | Berlin : Walter de Gruyter GmbH
    ISBN: 9780691205359
    Sprache: Englisch
    Seiten: 1 Online-Ressource (392 p.) , 17 b/w illus. 3 tables. 1 map
    Ausgabe: 2021
    Serie: America in the World 37
    DDC: 306.3620973
    Schlagwort(e): Geschichte ; Sklaverei ; Abolitionismus ; Kapitalismus ; Capitalism History ; Capitalism History ; Slavery Economic aspects ; History ; Slavery History ; Slavery History ; HISTORY / Latin America / South America ; USA ; Brasilien ; Agrarian Crossings ; Alabama in Africa ; Andrew Zimmerman ; Between Two Empires ; Brazilian liberals ; Civil War ; Eiichiro Azuma ; Empire of Cotton ; Gilded Age ; Hendrick Kraay ; John Greenleaf Whittier ; Julie Greene ; Louis Agassiz ; Oeste Paulista ; Paraguayan War ; Protestant missionaries ; Reconstruction ; Sven Beckert ; Teresa Cribelli ; The Canal Builders ; Tore Olsson ; United States ; agriculture ; anti-British ; anti-Confederate ; coffee ; expansionism ; foreign relations ; free labor ; modernization ; proslavery ; science ; slaveholders ; transnational history ; wage labor
    Kurzfassung: How slave emancipation transformed capitalism in the United States and BrazilIn the nineteenth century, the United States and Brazil were the largest slave societies in the Western world. The former enslaved approximately four million people, the latter nearly two million. Slavery was integral to the production of agricultural commodities for the global market, and governing elites feared the system’s demise would ruin their countries. Yet, when slavery ended in the United States and Brazil, in 1865 and 1888 respectively, what resulted was immediate and continuous economic progress. In American Mirror, Roberto Saba investigates how American and Brazilian reformers worked together to ensure that slave emancipation would advance the interests of capital.Saba explores the methods through which antislavery reformers fostered capitalist development in a transnational context. From the 1850s to the 1880s, this coalition of Americans and Brazilians—which included diplomats, engineers, entrepreneurs, journalists, merchants, missionaries, planters, politicians, scientists, and students, among others—consolidated wage labor as the dominant production system in their countries. These reformers were not romantic humanitarians, but cosmopolitan modernizers who worked together to promote labor-saving machinery, new transportation technology, scientific management, and technical education. They successfully used such innovations to improve production and increase trade.Challenging commonly held ideas about slavery and its demise in the Western Hemisphere, American Mirror illustrates the crucial role of slave emancipation in the making of capitalism.
    Anmerkung: Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 27. Okt 2021)
    URL: Cover
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  • 5
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    Princeton, NJ : Princeton University Press | Berlin : Walter de Gruyter GmbH
    ISBN: 9780691216560
    Sprache: Englisch
    Seiten: 1 Online-Ressource (288 p.)
    Ausgabe: 2021
    DDC: 306.20973
    Schlagwort(e): Administrative agencies Reorganization ; Executive power ; Law Political aspects 21st century ; History ; Political culture ; September 11 Terrorist Attacks, 2001 Influence ; Terrorism Prevention ; Political aspects ; Terrorism Prevention ; Political aspects ; United States Politics and government 2017- ; United States Politics and government 2017- ; War on Terrorism, 2001-2009 Politcal aspects ; POLITICAL SCIENCE / Security (National & International)
    Kurzfassung: How policies forged after September 11 were weaponized under Trump and turned on American democracy itselfIn the wake of the September 11 terror attacks, the American government implemented a wave of overt policies to fight the nation’s enemies. Unseen and undetected by the public, however, another set of tools were brought to bear on the domestic front. In this riveting book, one of today’s leading experts on the US security state shows how these “subtle tools” imperiled the very foundations of democracy, from the separation of powers and transparency in government to adherence to the Constitution.Taking readers from Ground Zero to the Capitol insurrection, Karen Greenberg describes the subtle tools that were forged under George W. Bush in the name of security: imprecise language, bureaucratic confusion, secrecy, and the bypassing of procedural and legal norms. While the power and legacy of these tools lasted into the Obama years, reliance on them increased exponentially in the Trump era, both in the fight against terrorism abroad and in battles closer to home. Greenberg discusses how the Trump administration weaponized these tools to separate families at the border, suppress Black Lives Matter protests, and attempt to overturn the 2020 presidential election.Revealing the deeper consequences of the war on terror, Subtle Tools paints a troubling portrait of an increasingly undemocratic America where disinformation, xenophobia, and disdain for the law became the new norm, and where the subtle tools of national security threatened democracy itself.
    Anmerkung: Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 24. Aug 2021)
    URL: Cover
    URL: Volltext  (URL des Erstveröffentlichers)
    URL: Volltext  (URL des Erstveröffentlichers)
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  • 6
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    Philadelphia : University of Pennsylvania Press | Berlin : Walter de Gruyter GmbH
    ISBN: 9780812299670
    Sprache: Englisch
    Seiten: 1 Online-Ressource (312 p.) , 1 table
    Ausgabe: 2021
    Serie: Intellectual History of the Modern Age
    DDC: 305.8001
    Schlagwort(e): Enlightenment ; Equality Philosophy 18th century ; History ; Race Philosophy 18th century ; History ; HISTORY / Modern / 18th Century ; American revolution ; Chambers Cyclopaedia ; Common humanity ; De Felice Encyclopédie d'Yverdon ; Diderot Encyclopédie ; Enlightenment ; Equality ; French revolution ; History of Race ; Human rights ; Natural history ; Scientific Racism ; Slavery
    Kurzfassung: The Enlightenment is often either praised as the wellspring of modern egalitarianism or condemned as the cradle of scientific racism. How should we make sense of this paradox? The Color of Equality is the first book to investigate both the inclusive language of common humanity and the hierarchical language of race in Enlightenment thought, seeking to understand how eighteenth-century thinkers themselves made sense of these tensions. Using three major Enlightenment encyclopedias from England, France, and Switzerland, the book provides a rich contextualization of the conflicting ideas of equality and race in eighteenth-century thought.Enlightenment thinkers used physical features to categorize humanity into novel "racial" groups in a discourse that was imbued with Eurocentric aesthetic and moral judgments. Simultaneously, however, these very same thinkers politicized equality by putting it to new uses, such as a vitriolic denunciation of slavery and inhumane treatment that was grounded in the nascent philosophy of human rights. Vartija contends that the tension between Enlightenment ideas of race and equality can best be explained by these thinkers' attempt to provide a naturalistic account of humanity, including both our physical and moral attributes. Enlightenment racial classification fits into the novel inclusion of humanity in histories of nature, while the search for the origins of morality in social experience alone lent equality a normative authority it had not previously possessed.Eschewing straightforward approbation or blame of the Enlightenment, The Color of Equality demonstrates that our present-day thinking about human physical and cultural diversity continues to be deeply informed by an eighteenth-century European intellectual revolution with global ramifications.
    Anmerkung: Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 24. Aug 2021)
    URL: Cover
    URL: Volltext  (URL des Erstveröffentlichers)
    URL: Cover
    URL: Cover
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  • 7
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    Princeton, NJ : Princeton University Press | Berlin : Walter de Gruyter GmbH
    ISBN: 9780691230672
    Sprache: Englisch
    Seiten: 1 Online-Ressource (320 p.) , 32 b/w illus. 1 map
    Ausgabe: 2021
    DDC: 394.1/20976251
    RVK:
    Schlagwort(e): Schwarze ; Ethnische Beziehungen ; Kochen ; Ess- und Trinksitte ; African Americans Race identity ; African Americans Social conditions ; African Americans Social life and customs ; Cooking, American Southern style ; History ; Ethnology ; Food habits History ; Food security ; Social classes ; SOCIAL SCIENCE / Race & Ethnic Relations ; USA ; Staat Mississippi ; Jackson, Miss. ; Amerika
    Kurzfassung: A vivid portrait of African American life in today’s urban South that uses food to explore the complex interactions of race and classGetting Something to Eat in Jackson uses food—what people eat and how—to explore the interaction of race and class in the lives of African Americans in the contemporary urban South. Joseph Ewoodzie Jr. examines how “foodways”—food availability, choice, and consumption—vary greatly between classes of African Americans in Jackson, Mississippi, and how this reflects and shapes their very different experiences of a shared racial identity.Ewoodzie spent more than a year following a group of socioeconomically diverse African Americans—from upper-middle-class patrons of the city’s fine-dining restaurants to men experiencing homelessness who must organize their days around the schedules of soup kitchens. Ewoodzie goes food shopping, cooks, and eats with a young mother living in poverty and a grandmother working two jobs. He works in a Black-owned BBQ restaurant, and he meets a man who decides to become a vegan for health reasons but who must drive across town to get tofu and quinoa. Ewoodzie also learns about how soul food is changing and why it is no longer a staple survival food. Throughout, he shows how food choices influence, and are influenced by, the racial and class identities of Black Jacksonians.By tracing these contemporary African American foodways, Getting Something to Eat in Jackson offers new insights into the lives of Black Southerners and helps challenge the persistent homogenization of blackness in American life.
    Anmerkung: Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 27. Okt 2021)
    URL: Cover
    URL: Volltext  (URL des Erstveröffentlichers)
    URL: Volltext  (URL des Erstveröffentlichers)
    URL: Cover
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  • 8
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    Ithaca, NY : Cornell University Press | Berlin : Walter de Gruyter GmbH
    ISBN: 9781501734670
    Sprache: Englisch
    Seiten: 1 Online-Ressource
    DDC: 306.81/09436/3
    Schlagwort(e): History
    Anmerkung: Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 15. Jun 2019)
    URL: Cover
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  • 9
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    Bielefeld : transcript-Verlag | Berlin : Walter de Gruyter GmbH
    ISBN: 9783839443583
    Sprache: Englisch
    Seiten: 1 Online-Ressource
    Serie: Studien zur Popularmusik
    DDC: 780
    RVK:
    Schlagwort(e): Geschichte ; Unterhaltungsmusik ; Public Diplomacy ; Cultural History ; Diplomacy ; History of the 20th Century ; History ; International Relations ; Music ; Musicology ; Politics ; Pop Music ; Popular Culture ; Unterhaltungsmusik ; Public Diplomacy ; MUSIC / History & Criticism ; Electronic books
    Kurzfassung: In the early years of the Cold War, Western nations increasingly adopted strategies of public diplomacy involving popular music. While the diplomatic use of popular music was initially limited to such genres as jazz, the second half of the 20th century saw a growing presence of various popular genres in diplomatic contexts, including rock, punk, reggae, and hip-hop.This volume illuminates the interrelation of popular music and public diplomacy from a transnational and transdisciplinary angle. The contributions argue that, as popular music has been a crucial factor in international relations, its diplomatic use has substantially impacted the global musical landscape of the 20th and 21st centuries.
    Anmerkung: Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 15. Jun 2019)
    URL: Cover
    URL: Volltext  (URL des Erstveröffentlichers)
    URL: Image
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  • 10
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    Amsterdam : Amsterdam University Press | Berlin : Walter de Gruyter GmbH
    ISBN: 9789048534982
    Sprache: Englisch
    Seiten: 1 Online-Ressource , 14 halftones
    Serie: Gendering the Late Medieval and Early Modern World
    DDC: 305.235
    Schlagwort(e): History
    Kurzfassung: Through fifteen essays that work from a rich array of primary sources, this collection makes the novel claim that early modern European women, like men, had a youth. European culture recognised that, between childhood and full adulthood, early modern women experienced distinctive physiological, social, and psychological transformations. Drawing on two mutually shaped layers of inquiry - cultural constructions of youth and lived experiences - these essays exploit a wide variety of sources, including literary and autobiographical works, conduct literature, judicial and asylum records, drawings, and material culture. The geographical and temporal ranges traverse England, Ireland, Italy, France, the Netherlands, Switzerland, Spain, and Mexico from the sixteenth to the eighteenth century. This volume brings fresh attention to representations of female youth, their own life writings, young women's training for adulthood, courtship, and the emergent sexual lives of young unmarried women.
    Anmerkung: Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 23. Jan 2019)
    URL: Cover
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  • 11
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    Berlin : Walter de Gruyter GmbH
    ISBN: 150151363X , 9781501513633
    Sprache: Englisch
    Seiten: 1 Online-Ressource (390 pages) , illustrations
    DDC: 610.9
    Schlagwort(e): Divination History To 1500 ; Exorcism History To 1500 ; Medicine, Assyro-Babylonian ; Exorcism ; History ; Medicine, Assyro-Babylonian ; Divination ; Electronic books
    Kurzfassung: Annotation, The reconstruction of ancient Mesopotamian medical, ritual and omen compendia and their complex history is still characterised by many difficulties, debates and gaps due to fragmentary or unpublished evidence. This book offers the first complete edition of the Assur Medical Catalogue, an 8th or 7th century BCE list of therapeutic texts, which forms a core witness for the serialisation of medical compendia in the 1st millennium BCE. The volume presents detailed analyses of this and several other related catalogues of omen series and rituals, constituting the corpora of divination and healing disciplines. The contributions discuss links between catalogues and textual sources, providing new insights into the development of compendia between serialization, standardization and diversity of local traditions. Though its a novel corpus-based approach, this volume revolutionizes the current understanding of Mesopotamian medical texts and the healing disciplines of "conjurer" and "physician." The research presented here allows one to identify core text corpora for these disciplines, as well as areas of exchange and borrowings between them
    Anmerkung: Zielgruppe - Audience: Scholarly & Professional , Zielgruppe - Interest grade level: 17-17
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  • 12
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    Online-Ressource
    Bielefeld : transcript-Verlag | Berlin : Walter de Gruyter GmbH
    ISBN: 9783839434185
    Sprache: Englisch
    Seiten: 1 Online-Ressource
    Serie: Edition Politik 32
    DDC: 324.241/0975
    RVK:
    RVK:
    Schlagwort(e): Geschichte 1989 ; Linksintellektueller ; Staatssozialismus ; Zusammenbruch ; Communism and intellectuals History ; Communism and intellectuals History ; Socialism History ; Socialism History ; American History ; Britain ; British History ; History ; Intellectuals ; North America ; Political Science ; Political Sociology ; Politics ; Sociology ; United States ; Großbritannien ; USA ; Ostblock ; Hochschulschrift ; Hochschulschrift ; History ; Electronic books ; Hochschulschrift ; Electronic books ; Hochschulschrift ; Electronic books ; Hochschulschrift
    Kurzfassung: Left-wing intellectuals in Britain and the US had long repudiated the Soviet regime. Why was the collapse of the Eastern Bloc experienced as a shock that destabilised their identities and political allegiances then? What happened to a collective project that had started out to formulate a socialist vision different from both really existing socialism and social democracy? This study endeavours to answer both questions, focusing on generational networks rather than individuals and investigating political academic journals after 1989 to paint the picture of a Left deeply troubled by the triumph of a capitalism unfettered by any counter-force.
    Anmerkung: Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed Feb. 24, 2017)
    URL: Cover
    URL: Volltext  (kostenfrei)
    URL: Volltext  (kostenfrei)
    URL: Volltext  (kostenfrei)
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  • 13
    ISBN: 9781477310922
    Sprache: Englisch
    Seiten: 1 Online-Ressource
    Ausgabe: 2021
    DDC: 305.69709221
    Schlagwort(e): Dissenters History 19th century ; Dissenters History 20th century ; Individualism - Social aspects - Mediterranean Region - History ; Individualism Social aspects ; History ; Muslims History ; Subversive activities History ; HISTORY / Middle East / General
    Kurzfassung: Subaltern studies, the study of non-elite or underrepresented people, have revolutionized the writing of Middle Eastern history. Subversives and Mavericks in the Muslim Mediterranean represents the next step in this transformation. The book explores the lives of eleven nonconformists who became agents of political and social change, actively organizing new forms of resistance—against either colonial European regimes or the traditional societies in which they lived—that disrupted the status quo, in some cases, with dramatic results. These case studies highlight cross-border connections in the Mediterranean world, exploring how these channels were navigated. Chapters in the book examine the lives of subversives and mavericks, such as Tawhida ben Shaykh, the first Arab woman to receive a medical degree; Mokhtar al-Ayari, a radical Tunisian labor leader; Nazli Hanem, Kmar Bayya, and Khiriya bin Ayyad, three aristocractic women who resisted the patriarchal structures of their societies by organizing and participating in intellectual salons for men and women and advocating social reform; Qaid Najim al-Akhsassi, an ex-slave and military officer, who fought against French and Spanish colonial expansion; and Boubeker al-Ghandjawi, a nearly illiterate trader who succeeded, though his diverse connections, in establishing important relations between the Moroccan sultan and the representative of the British government. Although based on individual and local perspectives, Subversives and Mavericks in the Muslim Mediterranean reveals new and unrecognized trans-local connections across the Muslim world, illuminating our understanding of these societies beyond narrow elite circles.
    Anmerkung: Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 27. Okt 2021)
    URL: Cover
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  • 14
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    Austin : University of Texas Press | Berlin : Walter de Gruyter GmbH
    ISBN: 9781477308813
    Sprache: Englisch
    Seiten: 1 Online-Ressource
    Ausgabe: 2021
    DDC: 305.898/720827
    RVK:
    Schlagwort(e): Mapuche Indians Rites and ceremonies ; History ; Mapuche Indians--Patagonia (Argentina and Chile)--Rites and ceremonies--History ; Shamans ; SOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / Cultural & Social
    Kurzfassung: As a “wild,” drumming thunder shaman, a warrior mounted on her spirit horse, Francisca Kolipi’s spirit traveled to other historical times and places, gaining the power and knowledge to conduct spiritual warfare against her community’s enemies, including forestry companies and settlers. As a “civilized” shaman, Francisca narrated the Mapuche people’s attachment to their local sacred landscapes, which are themselves imbued with shamanic power, and constructed nonlinear histories of intra- and interethnic relations that created a moral order in which Mapuche become history’s spiritual victors. Thunder Shaman represents an extraordinary collaboration between Francisca Kolipi and anthropologist Ana Mariella Bacigalupo, who became Kolipi’s “granddaughter,” trusted helper, and agent in a mission of historical (re)construction and myth-making. The book describes Francisca’s life, death, and expected rebirth, and shows how she remade history through multitemporal dreams, visions, and spirit possession, drawing on ancestral beings and forest spirits as historical agents to obliterate state ideologies and the colonialist usurpation of indigenous lands. Both an academic text and a powerful ritual object intended to be an agent in shamanic history, Thunder Shaman functions simultaneously as a shamanic “bible,” embodying Francisca’s power, will, and spirit long after her death in 1996, and an insightful study of shamanic historical consciousness, in which biography, spirituality, politics, ecology, and the past, present, and future are inextricably linked. It demonstrates how shamans are constituted by historical-political and ecological events, while they also actively create history itself through shamanic imaginaries and narrative forms.
    Anmerkung: Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 27. Okt 2021)
    URL: Cover
    URL: Volltext  (URL des Erstveröffentlichers)
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  • 15
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    University Park, PA : Penn State University Press | Berlin : Walter de Gruyter GmbH
    ISBN: 9780271073194
    Sprache: Englisch
    Seiten: 1 Online-Ressource (232 p.) , 29 illustrations
    Ausgabe: 2021
    DDC: 301.07482
    Schlagwort(e): Anthropological museums and collections Social aspects ; History ; 19th century ; Argentina ; Anthropological museums and collections Social aspects ; History ; 20th century ; Argentina ; Anthropological museums and collections Social aspects 19th century ; History ; Anthropological museums and collections Social aspects 20th century ; History ; Anthropology Social aspects ; History ; 19th century ; Argentina ; Anthropology Social aspects ; History ; 20th century ; Argentina ; Anthropology Social aspects 19th century ; History ; Anthropology Social aspects 20th century ; History ; Indians of South America Antiquities ; Argentina ; Argentina ; Indians of South America Antiquities ; National characteristics, Argentine History ; 19th century ; National characteristics, Argentine History ; 20th century ; National characteristics, Argentine History 19th century ; National characteristics, Argentine History 20th century ; HISTORY / Latin America / South America
    Kurzfassung: Our Indigenous Ancestors complicates the history of the erasure of native cultures and the perceived domination of white, European heritage in Argentina through a study of anthropology museums in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Carolyne Larson demonstrates how scientists, collectors, the press, and the public engaged with Argentina’s native American artifacts and remains (and sometimes living peoples) in the process of constructing an “authentic” national heritage. She explores the founding and functioning of three museums in Argentina, as well as the origins and consolidation of Argentine archaeology and the professional lives of a handful of dynamic curators and archaeologists, using these institutions and individuals as a window onto nation building, modernization, urban-rural tensions, and problems of race and ethnicity in turn-of-the-century Argentina. Museums and archaeology, she argues, allowed Argentine elites to build a modern national identity distinct from the country’s indigenous past, even as it rested on a celebrated, extinct version of that past. As Larson shows, contrary to widespread belief, elements of Argentina’s native American past were reshaped and integrated into the construction of Argentine national identity as white and European at the turn of the century. Our Indigenous Ancestors provides a unique look at the folklore movement, nation building, science, institutional change, and the divide between elite, scientific, and popular culture in Argentina and the Americas at a time of rapid, sweeping changes in Latin American culture and society.
    Anmerkung: Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 27. Okt 2021)
    URL: Cover
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  • 16
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    University Park, PA : Penn State University Press | Berlin : Walter de Gruyter GmbH
    ISBN: 9780271060224
    Sprache: Englisch
    Seiten: 1 Online-Ressource (248 p.)
    Ausgabe: 2021
    Serie: Rhetoric and Democratic Deliberation 5
    DDC: 306.0973/0904
    Schlagwort(e): Confession Psychology 20th century ; History ; LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES / Rhetoric
    Kurzfassung: Confessional Crises and Cultural Politics in Twentieth-Century America revolutionizes how we think about confession and its ubiquitous place in American culture. It argues that the sheer act of labeling a text a confession has become one of the most powerful, and most overlooked, forms of intervening in American cultural politics. In the twentieth century alone, the genre of confession has profoundly shaped (and been shaped by) six of America’s most intractable cultural issues: sexuality, class, race, violence, religion, and democracy.
    Anmerkung: Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 26. Mai 2021)
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  • 17
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    Austin : University of Texas Press | Berlin : Walter de Gruyter GmbH
    ISBN: 9780292743830
    Sprache: Englisch
    Seiten: 1 Online-Ressource
    Ausgabe: 2021
    DDC: 305.40983
    Schlagwort(e): Arpilleras ; Decorative arts Political aspects 20th century ; History ; Women Political activity 20th century ; History ; ART / Caribbean & Latin American
    Kurzfassung: Art can be a powerful avenue of resistance to oppressive governments. During the dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet in Chile, some of the country’s least powerful citizens—impoverished women living in Santiago’s shantytowns—spotlighted the government’s failings and use of violence by creating and selling arpilleras, appliquéd pictures in cloth that portrayed the unemployment, poverty, and repression that they endured, their work to make ends meet, and their varied forms of protest. Smuggled out of Chile by human rights organizations, the arpilleras raised international awareness of the Pinochet regime’s abuses while providing income for the arpillera makers and creating a network of solidarity between the people of Chile and sympathizers throughout the world. Using the Chilean arpilleras as a case study, this book explores how dissident art can be produced under dictatorship, when freedom of expression is absent and repression rife, and the consequences of its production for the resistance and for the artists. Taking a sociological approach based on interviews, participant observation, archival research, and analysis of a visual database, Jacqueline Adams examines the emergence of the arpilleras and then traces their journey from the workshops and homes in which they were made, to the human rights organizations that exported them, and on to sellers and buyers abroad, as well as in Chile. She then presents the perspectives of the arpillera makers and human rights organization staff, who discuss how the arpilleras strengthened the resistance and empowered the women who made them.
    Anmerkung: Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 27. Okt 2021)
    URL: Cover
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  • 18
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    University Park, PA : Penn State University Press | Berlin : Walter de Gruyter GmbH
    ISBN: 9780271050584
    Sprache: Englisch
    Seiten: 1 Online-Ressource (256 p.) , 16 illustrations
    Ausgabe: 2021
    DDC: 305.42097285
    Schlagwort(e): Feminism History ; Women Political activity ; History ; Nicaragua ; Women Political activity ; History ; Women Suffrage ; History ; Women's rights History ; POLITICAL SCIENCE / Civil Rights
    Kurzfassung: Those who survived the brutal dictatorship of the Somoza family have tended to portray the rise of the women’s movement and feminist activism as part of the overall story of the anti-Somoza resistance. But this depiction of heroic struggle obscures a much more complicated history. As Victoria González-Rivera reveals in this book, some Nicaraguan women expressed early interest in eliminating the tyranny of male domination, and this interest grew into full-fledged campaigns for female suffrage and access to education by the 1880s. By the 1920s a feminist movement had emerged among urban, middle-class women, and it lasted for two more decades until it was eclipsed in the 1950s by a nonfeminist movement of mainly Catholic, urban, middle-class and working-class women who supported the liberal, populist, patron-clientelistic regime of the Somozas in return for the right to vote and various economic, educational, and political opportunities. Counterintuitively, it was actually the Somozas who encouraged women's participation in the public sphere (as long as they remained loyal Somocistas). Their opponents, the Sandinistas and Conservatives, often appealed to women through their maternal identity. What emerges from this fine-grained analysis is a picture of a much more complex political landscape than that portrayed by the simplifying myths of current Nicaraguan historiography, and we can now see why and how the Somoza dictatorship did not endure by dint of fear and compulsion alone.
    Anmerkung: Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 26. Mai 2021)
    URL: Cover
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  • 19
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    University Park, PA : Penn State University Press | Berlin : Walter de Gruyter GmbH
    ISBN: 9780271058825
    Sprache: Englisch
    Seiten: 1 Online-Ressource (344 p.)
    Ausgabe: 2021
    DDC: 304.8097291
    Schlagwort(e): Cubans Migrations ; History ; Cubans History ; Migrations ; Immigrants History ; Cuba ; Immigrants History ; Immigrants History ; HISTORY / Caribbean & West Indies / Cuba
    Kurzfassung: Since the arrival of the Spanish conquerors at the beginning of the colonial period, Cuba has been hugely influenced by international migration. Between 1791 and 1810, for instance, many French people migrated to Cuba in the wake of the purchase of Louisiana by the United States and turmoil in Saint-Domingue. Between 1847 and 1874, Cuba was the main recipient of Chinese indentured laborers in Latin America. During the nineteenth century as a whole, more Spanish people migrated to Cuba than anywhere else in the Americas, and hundreds of thousands of slaves were taken to the island. The first decades of the twentieth century saw large numbers of immigrants and temporary workers from various societies arrive in Cuba. And since the revolution of 1959, a continuous outflow of Cubans toward many countries has taken place—with lasting consequences.In this book, the most comprehensive study of international migration in Cuba ever undertaken, Margarita Cervantes-Rodríguez aims to elucidate the forces that have shaped international migration and the involvement of the migrants in transnational social fields since the beginning of the colonial period. Drawing on Fernand Braudel’s concept of longue durée, transnational studies, perspectives on power, and other theoretical frameworks, the author places her analysis in a much wider historical and theoretical perspective than has previously been applied to the study of international migration in Cuba, making this a work of substantial interest to social scientists as well as historians.
    Anmerkung: Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 24. Aug 2021)
    URL: Cover
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  • 20
    ISBN: 9780271091112
    Sprache: Englisch
    Seiten: 1 Online-Ressource (256 p.)
    Ausgabe: 2021
    Serie: Sixteenth Century Essays & Studies 83
    DDC: 305.3109409/031
    Schlagwort(e): Masculinity Religious aspects ; Christianity ; History ; Masculinity History ; Reformation ; Social change ; RELIGION / Religion, Politics & State
    Kurzfassung: These essays add a unique perspective to studies that reconstruct the identity of manhood in early modern Europe, including France, Switzerland, Spain, and Germany. The authors examine the ways in which sixteenth- and seventeenth-century authorities, both secular and religious, labored to turn boys and men into the Christian males they desired. Topics include disparities among gender paradigms that early modern models prescribed and the tension between the patriarchal model and the civic duties that men were expected to fulfill. Essays about Martin Luther, a prolific self-witness, look into the marriage relationship with its expected and actual gender roles. Contributors to this volume are Scott H. Hendrix, Susan C. Karant-Nunn, Raymond A. Mentzer, Allyson M. Poska, Helmut Puff, Karen E. Spierling, Ulrike Strasser, B. Ann Tlusty, and Merry E. Wiesner-Hanks.
    Anmerkung: Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 21. Jun 2021)
    URL: Cover
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  • 21
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    Austin : University of Texas Press | Berlin : Walter de Gruyter GmbH
    ISBN: 9781477319666
    Sprache: Englisch
    Seiten: 1 Online-Ressource
    Ausgabe: Revised edition
    Ausgabe: 2021
    DDC: 305.800791
    Schlagwort(e): Ethnic barriers History ; Ethnicity History ; Indians of North America Ethnic identity ; History ; Mexican Americans Ethnic identity ; History ; Social structure History ; Whites Race identity ; History ; SOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / Cultural & Social
    Kurzfassung: In Border Citizens, historian Eric V. Meeks explores how the racial classification and identities of the diverse indigenous, mestizo, and Euro-American residents of Arizona's borderlands evolved as the region was politically and economically incorporated into the United States. First published in 2007, the book examines the complex relationship between racial subordination and resistance over the course of a century. On the one hand, Meeks links the construction of multiple racial categories to the process of nation-state building and capitalist integration. On the other, he explores how the region's diverse communities altered the blueprint drawn up by government officials and members of the Anglo majority for their assimilation or exclusion while redefining citizenship and national belonging. The revised edition of this highly praised and influential study features dozens of new images, an introductory essay by historian Patricia Nelson Limerick, and a chapter-length afterword by the author. In his afterword, Meeks details and contextualizes Arizona's aggressive response to undocumented immigration and ethnic studies in the decade after Border Citizens was first published, demonstrating that the broad-based movement against these measures had ramifications well beyond Arizona. He also revisits the Yaqui and Tohono O'odham nations on both sides of the Sonora-Arizona border, focusing on their efforts to retain, extend, and enrich their connections to one another in the face of increasingly stringent border enforcement.
    Anmerkung: Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 27. Sep 2021)
    URL: Cover
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  • 22
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    Cambridge, Massachusetts : Harvard University Press | Berlin : Walter de Gruyter GmbH
    ISBN: 9780674040793
    Sprache: Englisch
    Seiten: 1 Online-Ressource (322 Seiten) , Illustrationen
    Paralleltitel: Erscheint auch als
    DDC: 306.3620820973
    Schlagwort(e): Jemima ; Geschichte ; African American women in popular culture History 20th century ; African Americans in popular culture History 20th century ; Women slaves History ; Slavery History ; African American women History ; Racism in popular culture History 20th century ; Stereotypes (Social psychology) ; Stereotypes (Social psychology) in advertising ; Sozialpsychologie ; Rassismus ; Massenkultur ; Schwarze Frau ; United States Race relations 20th century ; History ; USA ; USA ; Weibliche Schwarze ; Rassismus ; Massenkultur ; Sozialpsychologie ; Geschichte ; USA ; Schwarze Frau ; Rassismus ; Massenkultur ; Sozialpsychologie ; Geschichte
    URL: Cover
    URL: Cover
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  • 23
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    Princeton, NJ : Princeton University Press | Berlin : Walter de Gruyter GmbH
    ISBN: 9780691215969
    Sprache: Englisch
    Seiten: 1 Online-Ressource (336 p.) , 24 halftones
    Ausgabe: 2021
    DDC: 305.4/09773/11
    Schlagwort(e): Women civic leaders History ; Women social reformers History ; Women Political activity ; History ; Women History ; HISTORY / United States / State & Local / General ; Abbott, Edith ; Addams, Jane ; Alpha Suffrage Club ; Bartelme, Mary ; Bemis, Annie ; Central Labor Union ; Children’s rights ; Deutsch, Sarah ; Drake, Marion ; Fairbank, Janet ; Goins, Irene ; Good Samaritan Society ; Haley, Margaret ; Henrotin, Ellen ; Herstein, Lillian ; Huling, Caroline ; Ida B. Wells Club ; Kelley, Florence ; Nestor, Agnes ; city vision ; compulsory education ; eight-hour day ; juvenile court ; lakefront ; legal rights for women ; maternalism ; municipal problems ; park districts ; realtors ; social welfare ; suffrage parades
    Kurzfassung: At the turn of the last century, as industrialists and workers made Chicago the hardworking City of Big Shoulders celebrated by Carl Sandburg, Chicago women articulated an alternative City of Homes in which the welfare of residents would be the municipal government's principal purpose. Seeing With Their Hearts traces the formation of this vision from the relief efforts following the Chicago fire of 1871 through the many political battles of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era. In the process, it presses a new understanding of the roles of women in public life and writes a new history of urban America. Heeding the call of activist Louise de Koven Bowen to become third-class passengers on the train of life, thousands of women "put their shoulders to the wheel and their whole hearts into the work" of fighting for better education, worker protections, clean air and water, building safety, health care, and women's suffrage. Though several well-known activists appeared frequently in these initiatives, Maureen Flanagan offers compelling evidence that women established a broad and durable solidarity that spanned differences of race, class, and political experience. She also shows that these women--emphasizing their common identity as women seeking a city amenable to the needs of women, children, families, and homes--pursued a vision and goals distinct from the reform agenda of Progressive male activists. They fought hard and sometimes successfully in a variety of public places and sites of power, winning victories from increased political clout and prenatal care to municipal garbage collection and pasteurized milk. While telling the fascinating and in some cases previously untold stories of women activists during Chicago's formative period, this book fundamentally recasts urban social and political history.
    Anmerkung: Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 24. Mrz 2021)
    URL: Cover
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  • 24
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    Cambridge, MA : Harvard University Press | Berlin : Walter de Gruyter GmbH
    ISBN: 9780674037854
    Sprache: Englisch
    Seiten: 1 Online-Ressource (270 p.)
    Ausgabe: 2021
    DDC: 306.3/62/097309033
    Schlagwort(e): Antislavery movements in literature ; Antislavery movements History ; 18th century ; Great Britain ; Antislavery movements History ; 18th century ; United States ; Antislavery movements History 18th century ; Antislavery movements History 18th century ; Capitalism Social aspects ; History ; 18th century ; Capitalism Social aspects 18th century ; History ; Slave trade in literature ; Slave trade History ; 18th century ; Africa ; Slave trade History ; 18th century ; Great Britain ; Slave trade History ; 18th century ; United States ; Slave trade History 18th century ; Slave trade History 18th century ; Slave trade History 18th century ; HISTORY / United States / Colonial Period (1600-1775)
    Kurzfassung: Eighteenth-century antislavery writers attacked the slave trade as "barbaric traffic"--a practice that would corrupt the mien and manners of Anglo-American culture to its core. Less concerned with slavery than with the slave trade in and of itself, these writings expressed a moral uncertainty about the nature of commercial capitalism. This is the argument Philip Gould advances in Barbaric Traffic. A major work of cultural criticism, the book constitutes a rethinking of the fundamental agenda of antislavery writing from pre-revolutionary America to the end of the British and American slave trades in 1808. Studying the rhetoric of various antislavery genres--from pamphlets, poetry, and novels to slave narratives and the literature of disease--Gould exposes the close relation between antislavery writings and commercial capitalism. By distinguishing between good commerce, or the importing of commodities that refined manners, and bad commerce, like the slave trade, the literature offered both a critique and an outline of acceptable forms of commercial capitalism. A challenge to the premise that objections to the slave trade were rooted in modern laissez-faire capitalism, Gould's work revises--and expands--our understanding of antislavery literature as a form of cultural criticism in its own right. Table of Contents: Introduction 1. The Commercial Jeremiad 2. The Poetics of Antislavery 3. American Slaves in North Africa 4. Liberty, Slavery, and Black Atlantic Autobiography 5. Yellow Fever and the Black Market Epilogue Notes Index This is a very important book which convincingly rethinks the fundamental agenda of Anglo-American anti-slavery literature from 1775 to 1808 (the end of the British slave trade). This is no small feat. Anti-slavery texts, Gould argues, offered less a critique of slavery than a critique of the slave trade. By distinguishing between good commerce (the importing of commodities that refined the manners) and bad commerce (the importation of slaves), these texts both critiqued commercial capitalism and outlined its acceptable and necessary forms. Thus anti-slavery texts endlessly deferred the issue of abolition in order to serve as a site of moral uncertainty about whether commercial capitalism would debase or civilize modern society. Sin is less feared than the depravity of manners which could corrupt Anglo-American culture at its core. Because virtuous and vicious commerce turned on the nature and regulation of passions, much was at stake. Closely attending to a vast number of transatlantic texts, Gould defines and demonstrates a "commercial aesthetic" that inflects the language of race and sentiments with issues of economic and social change. Gould's next move is to argue with reference to what he calls "the commercial jeremiad" that the very ideological discourse of civilization and savagery is rooted in trade. The concept of race is largely produced by this oppositional discourse rather than founded on its prior existence.--Jay Fliegelman, author of Prodigals and Pilgrims and Declaring IndependenceThis is a very important book with compelling and new insights throughout. It is the first book to examine such a wide range of both literary and historical sources on 18th century Anglo-American antislavery, and it does so with superb textual readings.--John Stauffer, author of The Black Hearts of Men and John Brown and the Coming of the Civil WarExtensively researched and carefully argued, Barbaric Traffic demonstrates an admirably sure-footed, clearsighted awareness of how transatlantic Enlightenment discourses of aesthetics, commerce, liberty, race, religion, and sentiment pursue distinct logics of their own yet cannot be pried apart.--Lawrence Buell, author of Emerson and Writing for an Endangered WorldBarbaric Traffic: Commerce and Antislavery in the 18th Century Atlantic World appears as a welcome addition to debates about slavery, sentimentality, and culture in American studies. Its readings are meticulous, historically grounded, and theoretically informed. The writing is clear and persuasive. Gould has an original and sometimes really stunning sense of the relation between ethics and manners in eighteenth century interpretations of capitalism and slavery exposed so trenchantly by earlier critics like Eric Williams. In particular, he is very good at deciphering what he calls "the ideological movement from theology to ethics" that appears through debates about slavery and commerce in the period. Gould presents excellent interpretations of the Christian sentiments of Phillis Wheatley, of the under-interpreted political context of Slaves of Algiers, of the expose of the slave ship by the Philadelphian Mathew Carey, and of the racialized ambivalence attached to the yellow fever panic of 1793 in Philadelphia. Few critics writing today show the range of concerns and depth of research that appears in Gould's work, which reminds me of the historical depth and clarity of David Brion Davis, and also of the commitment to paradigm shifts of Thomas Haskell. In short, Philip Gould is one of the most thoughtful and engaged critics working in American literature and culture today.--Shirley Samuels, author of Romances of the Republic...
    Anmerkung: Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 24. Mrz 2021)
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  • 25
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    New York, NY : New York University Press | Berlin : Walter de Gruyter GmbH
    ISBN: 9780814789988
    Sprache: Englisch
    Seiten: 1 Online-Ressource
    DDC: 305.9/08162/097309041
    RVK:
    Schlagwort(e): History
    Kurzfassung: Choice Outstanding Academic Title 2003 During the nineteenth century, American schools for deaf education regarded sign language as the "natural language" of Deaf people, using it as the principal mode of instruction and communication. These schools inadvertently became the seedbeds of an emerging Deaf community and culture. But beginning in the 1880s, an oralist movement developed that sought to suppress sign language, removing Deaf teachers and requiring deaf people to learn speech and lip reading. Historians have all assumed that in the early decades of the twentieth century oralism triumphed overwhelmingly. Susan Burch shows us that everyone has it wrong; not only did Deaf students continue to use sign language in schools, hearing teachers relied on it as well. In Signs of Resistance, Susan Burch persuasively reinterprets early twentieth century Deaf history: using community sources such as Deaf newspapers, memoirs, films, and oral (sign language) interviews, Burch shows how the Deaf community mobilized to defend sign language and Deaf teachers, in the process facilitating the formation of collective Deaf consciousness, identity and political organization.
    Anmerkung: Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 23. Jun 2020)
    URL: Cover
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    URL: Image
    URL: KCPL  (Kansas City Public Library cardholders click here)
    URL: Cover
    URL: Cover
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  • 26
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    Princeton, NJ : Princeton University Press | Berlin : Walter de Gruyter GmbH
    ISBN: 9780691234649
    Sprache: Englisch
    Seiten: 1 Online-Ressource (272 p.) , 75 halftones
    Ausgabe: 2021
    Serie: Princeton Studies in Culture/Power/History 13
    DDC: 305.8/0098
    Schlagwort(e): Indians of South America Pictorial works History ; Photography in ethnology History ; Race Pictorial works ; History ; Visual anthropology ; SOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / General
    Kurzfassung: Through an intensive examination of photographs and engravings from European, Peruvian, and U.S. archives, Deborah Poole explores the role visual images and technologies have played in shaping modern understandings of race. Vision, Race, and Modernity traces the subtle shifts that occurred in European and South American depictions of Andean Indians from the late eighteenth to the early twentieth centuries, and explains how these shifts led to the modern concept of "racial difference." While Andean peoples were always thought of as different by their European describers, it was not until the early nineteenth century that European artists and scientists became interested in developing a unique visual and typological language for describing their physical features. Poole suggests that this "scientific" or "biological" discourse of race cannot be understood outside a modern visual economy. Although the book specifically documents the depictions of Andean peoples, Poole's findings apply to the entire colonized world of the nineteenth century. Poole presents a wide range of images from operas, scientific expeditions, nationalist projects, and picturesque artists that both effectively elucidate her argument and contribute to an impressive history of photography. Vision, Race, and Modernity is a fascinating attempt to study the changing terrain of racial theory as part of a broader reorganization of vision in European society and culture.
    Anmerkung: Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 30. Aug 2021)
    URL: Cover
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  • 27
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    Princeton, NJ : Princeton University Press | Berlin : Walter de Gruyter GmbH
    ISBN: 9780691194509
    Sprache: Englisch
    Seiten: 1 Online-Ressource (320 p.) , 77 halftones
    Ausgabe: 2019
    Serie: Princeton Legacy Library 5247
    DDC: 305.9081620944
    Schlagwort(e): Art, French 19th century ; Deaf artists History 19th century ; Deaf Means of communication 19th century ; History ; Sign language History 19th century ; ART / History / General
    Kurzfassung: This book explores the dynamic interaction between art and the sign language of the deaf in France from the philsopheRs to the introduction of the sound motion picture. Nicholas Mirzoeff shows how the French Revolution transformed the ancienT regime metaphor of painting as silent poetry into a nineteenth-century school of over one hundred deaf artists. Painters, sculptors, photographers, and graphic artists all emanated from the Institute for the Deaf in Paris, playing a central role in the vibrant deaf culture of the period. With the rise of Darwinism, eugenics, and race science, however, the deaf found themselves categorized as "savages," excluded and ignored by the hearing. This book is concerned with the process and history of that marginalization, the constitution of a "center" from which the abnormal could be excluded, and the vital role of visual culture within this discourse.Based on groundbreaking archival and pictorial research, Mirzoeff's exciting and intertextual analysis of what he terms the "silent screen of deafness" produces an alternative hIstory of nineteenth-century art that challenges canonical view of the history of art, the inheritance of the Enlightenment, and the functions, status, and meanings of visual culture itself. Fusing methodologies from cultural studies, poststructuralism and art history, his study will be important for students and scholars of art history, cultural and deaf studies, and the history of medicine, and will interest a general audience concerned with the relationship of the deaf and the larger society.Nicholas Mirzoeff is Assistant Professor of Art History at the University of Wisconsin.Originally published in 1995.The Princeton Legacy Library uses the latest print-on-demand technology to again make available previously out-of-print books from the distinguished backlist of Princeton University Press. These editions preserve the original texts of these important books while presenting them in durable paperback and hardcover editions. The goal of the Princeton Legacy Library is to vastly increase access to the rich scholarly heritage found in the thousands of books published by Princeton University Press since its founding in 1905.
    Anmerkung: Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 29. Jul 2021)
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