Accelerating Academia

Accelerating Academia
Title Accelerating Academia PDF eBook
Author F. Vostal
Publisher Springer
Pages 254
Release 2016-04-29
Genre Education
ISBN 1137473606

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Filip Vostal examines the changing nature of academic time, and analyzes the 'will to accelerate' that has emerged as a significant cultural and structural force in knowledge production.

The Illustrated American

The Illustrated American
Title The Illustrated American PDF eBook
Author
Publisher
Pages 664
Release 1890
Genre American periodicals
ISBN

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Racial Theories in Social Science

Racial Theories in Social Science
Title Racial Theories in Social Science PDF eBook
Author Sean Elias
Publisher Routledge
Pages 226
Release 2016-04-14
Genre Social Science
ISBN 1317240561

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Racial Theories in Social Science: A Systemic Racism Critique provides a critique of the white racial framing and lack of systemic-racism analysis prevalent in past and present mainstream race theory. As this book demonstrates, mainstream racial analysis, and social analysis more generally, remain stunted and uncritical because of this unhealthy white framing of knowledge and evasion or downplaying of institutional, structural, and systemic racism. In response to ineffective social science analyses of racial matters, this book presents a counter-approach---systemic racism theory. The foundation of this theoretical perspective lies in the critical insights and perspectives of African Americans and other people of color who have long challenged biased white-framed perspectives and practices and the racially oppressive and exclusionary institutions and social systems created by whites over several centuries.

Dodo

Dodo
Title Dodo PDF eBook
Author Anna TC Feistner
Publisher Durrell Wildlife Conservation Trust
Pages 188
Release
Genre
ISBN 1900375036

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Scientific journal from Durrell Wildlife Conservation Trust

English Novel Hist 1895-1920

English Novel Hist 1895-1920
Title English Novel Hist 1895-1920 PDF eBook
Author David Trotter
Publisher Routledge
Pages 171
Release 2022-02-22
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 113609668X

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First Published in 1993. Written specifically for students and assuming no prior knowledge of the subject, David Trotter’s The English Novel in History 1895-1920 provides the first detailed and fully comprehensive analysis of early twentieth-century English fiction. Whereas all previous studies have been rigorously selective, Trotter looks at over 140 novelists across the whole spectrum of fiction: from the innovations of Joyce’s Ulysses through to popular mass-market genres such as detective stories and spy-thrillers. By examining the novels in both stylistic and historical terms, David Trotter looks at the ways in which writers responded to contemporary preoccupations such as the spectacle of consumption and the growth of suburbia, or to anxieties about the decline of Empire, racial ‘degeneration’ and ‘sexual anarchy’. He also challenges the view that literature of the period can be interpreted as a neat procession from realism to Modernism.

Dodo

Dodo
Title Dodo PDF eBook
Author
Publisher Durrell Wildlife Conservation Trust
Pages 76
Release
Genre
ISBN

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Living Law

Living Law
Title Living Law PDF eBook
Author Sandro Chignola
Publisher Taylor & Francis
Pages 153
Release 2027-07-12
Genre Law
ISBN 1040090478

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This book offers a radical new understanding of law, beyond the confines of its formalization by the state. The book takes off from the late work of Gilles Deleuze and Michel Foucault, for whom law and its institutions came to be liberated from an ideological perspective that had treated them as sterile instruments for the reproduction of domination. Engaging its continental history, it addresses the concept of law, not merely as a ‘command’, but as the result of a much more complex legal operation aimed at dynamically stabilizing the social relations of a community. The book thus sidesteps the usual legal-political focus on those – from Hobbes to Schmitt – who have contributed to the categorical scheme of the modern state, and with it questions of political representation, sovereignty, the rigid distinction between public law and private law, and so on, as it pursues an alternative theoretical trajectory through Ravaisson, Tarde, and Hauriou. Politics, the book maintains, can be no longer be treated simply through the state form. And, relatedly, the law must be seen as a living law: a law that cannot be treated exclusively in formal terms, but must be taken as a grammar capable of articulating a politics of process, relationality, and innovation. Reconceived as such, law can then circumvent the aporias that arise when society is viewed as a private company, and the state seen as the bearer of the only possible means of formalizing its relationships. At the intersection of law and political theory, this book will speak to scholars and others with interests in both these areas, and especially those concerned with the limits of both conventional and critical approaches to law.