Convivencia
Title | Convivencia PDF eBook |
Author | Martin Lundsteen |
Publisher | Rowman & Littlefield Publishers |
Pages | 250 |
Release | 2022-04-15 |
Genre | Social Science |
ISBN | 9781786614520 |
This book analyzes the local-global transformation of migration and societies in a small Catalan town through a multi-scalar ethnography, connecting the local processes of space- and place-making with the more extensive processes of migration, economic crisis and social transformation, and finally, the socio-political responses to these changes.
Kingdoms of Faith
Title | Kingdoms of Faith PDF eBook |
Author | Brian A. Catlos |
Publisher | Basic Books |
Pages | 536 |
Release | 2018-05-01 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 0465093167 |
A magisterial, myth-dispelling history of Islamic Spain spanning the millennium between the founding of Islam in the seventh century and the final expulsion of Spain's Muslims in the seventeenth In Kingdoms of Faith, award-winning historian Brian A. Catlos rewrites the history of Islamic Spain from the ground up, evoking the cultural splendor of al-Andalus, while offering an authoritative new interpretation of the forces that shaped it. Prior accounts have portrayed Islamic Spain as a paradise of enlightened tolerance or the site where civilizations clashed. Catlos taps a wide array of primary sources to paint a more complex portrait, showing how Muslims, Christians, and Jews together built a sophisticated civilization that transformed the Western world, even as they waged relentless war against each other and their coreligionists. Religion was often the language of conflict, but seldom its cause -- a lesson we would do well to learn in our own time.
The Ornament of the World
Title | The Ornament of the World PDF eBook |
Author | Maria Rosa Menocal |
Publisher | Back Bay Books |
Pages | 265 |
Release | 2009-11-29 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 0316092797 |
This classic bestseller — the inspiration for the PBS series — is an "illuminating and even inspiring" portrait of medieval Spain that explores the golden age when Muslims, Jews, and Christians lived together in an atmosphere of tolerance (Los Angeles Times). This enthralling history, widely hailed as a revelation of a "lost" golden age, brings to vivid life the rich and thriving culture of medieval Spain, where for more than seven centuries Muslims, Jews, and Christians lived together in an atmosphere of tolerance, and where literature, science, and the arts flourished. "It is no exaggeration to say that what we presumptuously call 'Western' culture is owed in large measure to the Andalusian enlightenment...This book partly restores a world we have lost." —Christopher Hitchens, The Nation
The Mosque Conflict in Catalonia
Title | The Mosque Conflict in Catalonia PDF eBook |
Author | Martin Lundsteen |
Publisher | Rowman & Littlefield |
Pages | 135 |
Release | 2022-10-03 |
Genre | Social Science |
ISBN | 1666908967 |
In The Mosque Conflict in Catalonia: Space, Culture, and Capitalism, Martin Lundsteen examines two paradigms around mosque conflicts—one of an analytical nature and the other of a political-technical nature. Lundsteen argues that both paradigms interpret conflicts culturally, as originating primarily in the symbolic realm. Though racism and xenophobia are certainly at the core of the issue, Lundsteen shows through the study of the conflict surrounding the mosque project in Premià de Mar (Barcelona) that other dimensions of utmost importance lurk behind these interpretations. This book constitutes an anthropological approach to the intersection of local-global processes of contemporary capitalism and emphasizes the understudied socio-spatial dimension of these conflicts.
Conflict and Coexistence
Title | Conflict and Coexistence PDF eBook |
Author | Lucy K. Pick |
Publisher | University of Michigan Press |
Pages | 272 |
Release | 2004 |
Genre | Christianity and other religions |
ISBN | 9780472113873 |
Publisher Description
Handbook on Human Security, Borders and Migration
Title | Handbook on Human Security, Borders and Migration PDF eBook |
Author | Natalia Ribas-Mateos |
Publisher | Edward Elgar Publishing |
Pages | 456 |
Release | 2021-02-26 |
Genre | Social Science |
ISBN | 1839108908 |
Drawing on the concept of the ‘politics of compassion’, this Handbook interrogates the political, geopolitical, social and anthropological processes which produce and govern borders and give rise to contemporary border violence.
Inclusion and Exclusion in Europe
Title | Inclusion and Exclusion in Europe PDF eBook |
Author | Olena Fedyuk |
Publisher | ECPR Press |
Pages | 248 |
Release | 2018-03-02 |
Genre | Political Science |
ISBN | 1786605406 |
Recent decades have seen the EU grappling with a major struggle between the securitization of its external borders and demand for exploitable and disposable cheap workforce in various sectors. As a result, the EU has multiplied its borders by pushing them both outwards and inwards, and the distinction between migrants' status as regular and irregular, legal and illegal, citizen and non-citizen, has been continuously portrayed as black and white. This produces and sustains an analytical, political and practical divide that often obscures commonalities in workers' dispossession and is an obstacle to unified struggles to secure workers' rights. This volume moves beyond a perspective of migrants' exclusion and inclusion as solely a product of migration processes. It contextualizes migration in the larger transformations of the local, national and transnational labour markets and relations that point to the ongoing precarization of working lives. These processes of inclusion are methodologically approached through exclusion at macro, micro and meso levels. This positions the ethnographically documented experiences of immigrant labourers in the challenges of contemporary labour and migratory regimes, and traces new forms of collective response and contestation emerging in these reconfiguring contexts.