Brieven van Jan Pieter Marie Laurens de Vries (1890-1964) aan Dirk de Jong (1910-1974)

Brieven van Jan Pieter Marie Laurens de Vries (1890-1964) aan Dirk de Jong (1910-1974)
Title Brieven van Jan Pieter Marie Laurens de Vries (1890-1964) aan Dirk de Jong (1910-1974) PDF eBook
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Publisher
Pages
Release 1932
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ISBN

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Baltic Connections

Baltic Connections
Title Baltic Connections PDF eBook
Author Lennart Bes
Publisher BRILL
Pages 2409
Release 2007
Genre Baltic Sea Region
ISBN 9004164294

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In the late Middle Ages and the Early Modern period, Northern Europe was a crucible of political, maritime and economic activity. Ships from ports all around the Baltic Sea as well as from the Low Countries plied the Baltic waters, triggering market integration, migration flows, nautical innovations and the dissemination of cultural values. This archival guide is an essential research tool for scholars studying these Baltic connections, providing descriptions of almost 1000 archival collections concerning trade, shipping, merchants, commodities, diplomacy, finances and migration in the years 1450-1800. These rich and varied sources kept at more than 100 repositories in Denmark, Estonia, Finland, Germany, Latvia, Lithuania, the Netherlands, Poland, Russia and Sweden are herewith collected for the first time.

Brief van Janos Berze Nagy aan Jan Pieter Marie Laurens de Vries (1890-1964)

Brief van Janos Berze Nagy aan Jan Pieter Marie Laurens de Vries (1890-1964)
Title Brief van Janos Berze Nagy aan Jan Pieter Marie Laurens de Vries (1890-1964) PDF eBook
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Release 1958
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Environment, Trade and Society in Southeast Asia

Environment, Trade and Society in Southeast Asia
Title Environment, Trade and Society in Southeast Asia PDF eBook
Author
Publisher BRILL
Pages 270
Release 2015-03-20
Genre History
ISBN 9004288058

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In Environment, Trade and Society in Southeast Asia: A Longue Durée Perspective, eleven historians bring their knowledge and insights to bear on the long Braudelian sweep of Southeast Asian history. In doing so they seek both to debunk simplistic assumptions about fragile traditions and transformational modernities, and to identify real repeating patterns in Southeast Asia's past: clientelistic political structures, periodic tectonic and climatic disasters, ethnic occupational specializations, long cycles of economic globalization and deglobalization. Their contributions range across many centuries: from the Austronesian expansion to the Aceh tsunami, and from the Sanskrit cosmopolis to the Asian financial crisis. The book is inspired by, and dedicated to, Peter Boomgaard, a scholar whose work has embodied the Braudelian spirit in Southeast Asian historiography. This title is available online in its entirety in Open Access.

In His Milieu

In His Milieu
Title In His Milieu PDF eBook
Author Amy Golahny
Publisher Amsterdam University Press
Pages 498
Release 2006
Genre Art
ISBN 9789053569337

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Gathered in honor of John Michael Montias (1928–2005), the foremost scholar on Johannes Vermeer and a pioneer in the study of the socioeconomic dimensions of art, the essays in In His Milieu are an essential contribution to the study of the social functions of making, collecting, displaying, and donating art. The nearly forty essays here by—all internationally recognized experts in the fields of art history and the economics of art—are especially revealing about the Renaissance and Baroque eras and present new material on such artists as Rembrandt, Van Eyck, Rubens, and da Vinci.

Nazi Germany and the Jews

Nazi Germany and the Jews
Title Nazi Germany and the Jews PDF eBook
Author Saul Friedländer
Publisher Harper Collins
Pages 374
Release 2009-10-06
Genre History
ISBN 0061979856

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A great historian crowns a lifetime of thought and research by answering a question that has haunted us for more than 50 years: How did one of the most industrially and culturally advanced nations in the world embark on and continue along the path leading to one of the most enormous criminal enterprises in history, the extermination of Europe's Jews? Giving considerable emphasis to a wealth of new archival findings, Saul Friedlander restores the voices of Jews who, after the 1933 Nazi accession to power, were engulfed in an increasingly horrifying reality. We hear from the persecutors themselves: the leaders of the Nazi party, the members of the Protestant and Catholic hierarchies, the university elites, and the heads of the business community. Most telling of all, perhaps, are the testimonies of ordinary German citizens, who in the main acquiesced to increasing waves of dismissals, segregation, humiliation, impoverishment, expulsion, and violence.

Citizen Subject

Citizen Subject
Title Citizen Subject PDF eBook
Author Étienne Balibar
Publisher Fordham Univ Press
Pages 488
Release 2016-11-01
Genre Philosophy
ISBN 0823273628

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What can the universals of political philosophy offer to those who experience "the living paradox of an inegalitarian construction of egalitarian citizenship"? Citizen Subject is the summation of Étienne Balibar’s career-long project to think the necessary and necessarily antagonistic relation between the categories of citizen and subject. In this magnum opus, the question of modernity is framed anew with special attention to the self-enunciation of the subject (in Descartes, Locke, Rousseau, and Derrida), the constitution of the community as “we” (in Hegel, Marx, and Tolstoy), and the aporia of the judgment of self and others (in Foucualt, Freud, Kelsen, and Blanchot). After the “humanist controversy” that preoccupied twentieth-century philosophy, Citizen Subject proposes foundations for philosophical anthropology today, in terms of two contrary movements: the becoming-citizen of the subject and the becoming-subject of the citizen. The citizen-subject who is constituted in the claim to a “right to have rights” (Arendt) cannot exist without an underside that contests and defies it. He—or she, because Balibar is concerned throughout this volume with questions of sexual difference—figures not only the social relation but also the discontent or the uneasiness at the heart of this relation. The human can be instituted only if it betrays itself by upholding “anthropological differences” that impose normality and identity as conditions of belonging to the community. The violence of “civil” bourgeois universality, Balibar argues, is greater (and less legitimate, therefore less stable) than that of theological or cosmological universality. Right is thus founded on insubordination, and emancipation derives its force from otherness. Ultimately, Citizen Subject offers a revolutionary rewriting of the dialectic of universality and differences in the bourgeois epoch, revealing in the relationship between the common and the universal a political gap at the heart of the universal itself.