97 results on '"PANCHASI, ROXANNE"'
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2. Future Tense : The Culture of Anticipation in France between the Wars
- Author
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Panchasi, Roxanne and Panchasi, Roxanne
- Published
- 2009
3. Through a Nuclear Lens : France, Japan, and Cinema From Hiroshima to Fukushima
- Author
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Hannah Holtzman and Hannah Holtzman
- Subjects
- Japonism, Nuclear warfare in motion pictures
- Abstract
The Franco-Japanese coproduction Hiroshima mon amour (1959) is one of the most important films for global art cinema and for the French New Wave. In Through a Nuclear Lens, Hannah Holtzman examines this film and the transnational cycle it has inspired, as well as its legacy after the 2011 nuclear disaster at Fukushima Daiichi. In a study that includes formal and theoretical analysis, archival research, and interviews, Holtzman shows the emergence of a new kind of nuclear film, one that attends to the everyday effects of nuclear disaster and its impact on our experience of space and time. The focus on Franco-Japanese exchange in cinema since the postwar period reveals a reorientation of the primarily aesthetic preoccupations in the tradition of Japonisme to center around technological and environmental concerns. The book demonstrates how French filmmakers, ever since Hiroshima mon amour, have looked to Japan in part to better understand nuclear uncertainty in France.
- Published
- 2024
4. Colonialism and Antarctica : Attitudes, Logics, and Practices
- Author
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Peder Roberts, Alejandra Mancilla, Peder Roberts, and Alejandra Mancilla
- Subjects
- Imperialism--History
- Abstract
This book explores how the concept of colonialism can help to understand the past and present of Antarctica, and how Antarctica may illuminate the limits of colonialism as an analytic concept. Despite lacking an indigenous population, the continent has been shaped by many of the same political and economic forces that have defined the rest of the world – notwithstanding its unique governance arrangement, the Antarctic Treaty System. The book provides a fresh and timely set of contributions that critically explore different practices, attitudes and logics that suggest that colonialism may have been and may still be present in Antarctica, ranging from religion to material culture to the treatment of animals. The chapters also explore the connection between colonialism and cognate terms like capitalism, socialism, nationalism, and environmentalism.
- Published
- 2024
5. Revolutionary Warfare : How the Algerian War Made Modern Counterinsurgency
- Author
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Terrence G. Peterson and Terrence G. Peterson
- Subjects
- Counterinsurgency--Algeria--History--20th century, French--Algeria--History--20th century, Decolonization--Algeria--History--20th century, Decolonization--France--History--20th century
- Abstract
Revolutionary Warfare investigates how efforts to counter a revolution could also be revolutionary. The Algerian War fractured the French Empire, destroyed the legitimacy of colonial rule, and helped launch the Third Worldist movement for the liberation of the Global South. By tracing how French generals, officers, and civil officials sought to counter Algerian independence with their own project of radical social transformation, Terrence G. Peterson reveals that the conflict also helped to transform the nature of modern warfare.The French war effort was never defined solely by repression. As Peterson details, it also sought to fashion new forms of surveillance and social control that could capture the loyalty of Algerians and transform Algerian society. Hygiene and medical aid efforts, youth sports and education programs, and psychological warfare campaigns all attempted to remake Algerian social structures and bind them more closely to the French state. In tracing the emergence of such programs, Peterson reframes the French war effort as a project of armed social reform that sought not to preserve colonial rule unchanged, but to revolutionize it in order to preserve it against the global challenges of decolonization. Revolutionary Warfare demonstrates how French officers'efforts to transform warfare into an exercise in social engineering not only shaped how the Algerian War unfolded from its earliest months, but also helped to forge a paradigm of warfare that dominated strategic thinking during the Cold War and after: counterinsurgency.
- Published
- 2024
6. The Gas Mask in Interwar Germany : Visions of Chemical Modernity
- Author
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Peter Thompson and Peter Thompson
- Subjects
- Gas masks--History--20th century.--Germany, Gases, Asphyxiating and poisonous--War use
- Abstract
Exploring the history of the gas mask in Germany from 1915 to the eve of the Second World War, Peter Thompson traces how chemical weapons and protective technologies like the gas mask produced new relationships to danger, risk, management and mastery in the modern age of mass destruction. Recounting the apocalyptic visions of chemical death that circulated in interwar Germany, he argues that while everyday encounters with the gas mask tended to exacerbate fears, the gas mask also came to symbolize debates about the development of military and chemical technologies in the Weimar Republic and the Third Reich. He underscores how the gas mask was tied into the creation of an exclusionary national community under the Nazis and the altered perception of environmental danger in the second half of the twentieth century. As this innovative new history shows, chemical warfare and protection technologies came to represent poignant visions of the German future.
- Published
- 2023
7. Crisis and Communitas : Performative Concepts of Commonality in Arts and Politics
- Author
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Dorota Sajewska, Małgorzata Sugiera, Dorota Sajewska, and Małgorzata Sugiera
- Subjects
- Arts--Political aspects--History--21st century, Arts--Political aspects--History--20th century, Arts and society--History--20th century, Communities, Arts and society--History--21st century
- Abstract
This book is a critical, transdisciplinary examination of a broad range of philosophical ideas, theoretical concepts, and artistic projects of community in the 20th and 21st century in the context of global/local social and political changes. This volume opens new vitas by focusing on carefully selected instances of multipronged crises in which existing concepts of commonality are questioned, reformulated, or even speculatively designed with a (better) future in view. As many authors of this volume argue, in the face of today's unprecedented global ecological and economic challenges speculative design is of utmost importance as it can foster alternative, unthought-of forms of connectivity that go far beyond progressivist narratives of nation, corporation, and nuclear family. Focusing on the situations of upheaval, both historical and fabulated, the collection not only examines how multipronged crises trigger antagonisms between egalitarian forms of communitas and the normative concept of the nation (and other normative forms of communities) as a community that separates and excludes. It also looks closely at philosophical and artistic projects that strive to go beyond the dichotomies and typically extrapolated utopias, envisaging new political economies, ways of living and alternative relational structures. It will be of great interest to students and scholars in performance studies, cultural studies, political studies, media studies, postcolonial and decolonial studies, critical anthropology.
- Published
- 2023
8. Time and Radical Politics in France : From the Dreyfus Affair to the First World War
- Author
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Alexandra Paulin-Booth and Alexandra Paulin-Booth
- Abstract
This book investigates how people have thought about and experienced time, and how their ideas about time have shaped their political views and actions. Using French thinkers and activists of the radical left and right between the Dreyfus Affair and the First World War as a case study, it argues that time provides an important means of exploring how concepts such as nationalism, revolution and social change were understood at the turn of the century. Attending to different experiences of time – the speed at which it was perceived to move, the extent to which the future was near and graspable, the ways in which the past was seen to impinge on the present – opens up exciting new possibilities for analysing politics, ideologies and worldviews.
- Published
- 2023
9. France in the World : The Career of André Siegfried
- Author
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Sean M. Kennedy and Sean M. Kennedy
- Subjects
- Intellectuals--France--Biography, Political scientists--France--Biography
- Abstract
André Siegfried (1875–1959) was a leading figure in French academic and cultural life for over five decades. A world traveller who trained as a geographer, Siegfried became a leading political scientist and prominent newspaper columnist. As a long-time professor at Sciences Po, he shaped generations of his country's elite. France in the World explores the life and career of André Siegfried. An innovator in the field of political science, he established himself as France's leading interpreter of the English-speaking world. Often likened to Alexis de Tocqueville, Siegfried published influential studies of the United States, Canada, Great Britain, and New Zealand, striving to understand France's place in a changing global context. Siegfried was a cosmopolitan promoter of liberalism and individual freedom. But at the same time he perceived France to be the core of a Western civilization whose leadership and values were threatened by Americanization, anti-imperial nationalism, and non-white immigration. By following Siegfried's long career and examining the breadth of his writings, Sean Kennedy shows how his racial and ethnic essentialism was a unifying aspect of his life's work. That these ideas were considered unremarkable for most of his lifetime offers a powerful illustration of how racist thinking permeated mainstream French republicanism.Exploring the many facets of Siegfried's career, France in the World examines the entanglement of liberal and racist thinking during an era that witnessed political extremism and a rapidly changing international order.
- Published
- 2023
10. Mind the Ghost : Thinking Memory and the Untimely Through Contemporary Fiction in French
- Author
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Sonja Stojanovic and Sonja Stojanovic
- Subjects
- French fiction--21st century--History and criticism, French fiction--20th century--History and criticism, Memory in literature
- Abstract
Spectrality disrupts and fissures our conceptions of time, unmaking and complicating binaries such as life and death, presence and absence, the visible and the invisible, and literality and metaphor. A contribution to current conversations in memory studies and spectrality studies, Mind the Ghost is an experiment in reading ghosts otherwise. It explores, through contemporary fiction in French, sites of textual haunting that take the form of names, lists, objects, photographs, and stains. The book turns to Jacques Derrida and Hélène Cixous to rethink what constitutes and functions as a ghost, proposing that this figure solicits readers'investment in mnemonic practices. Considering the memories and legacies of violence that have marked the greater part of the twentieth-century – in Algeria, Bosnia, Croatia, France, and Rwanda – this book traces absences, disappearances and reappearances, textual omissions and untimely irruptions to posit literature's power to both remember and communicate beyond the bounds of chronological time. Through close readings of recent fiction by Kaouther Adimi, Jakuta Alikavazovic, Gaël Faye, Jérôme Ferrari, Patrick Modiano, Lydie Salvayre, Leïla Sebbar, and Cécile Wajsbrot, Mind the Ghost articulates the mechanisms through which readers themselves become haunted.
- Published
- 2023
11. The Routledge Handbook of French History
- Author
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David Andress and David Andress
- Subjects
- DC33
- Abstract
Aimed firmly at the student reader, this handbook offers an overview of the full range of the history of France, from the origins of the concept of post-Roman'Francia,'through the emergence of a consolidated French monarchy and the development of both nation-state and global empire into the modern era, forward to the current complexities of a modern republic integrated into the European Union and struggling with the global legacies of its past.Short, incisive contributions by a wide range of expert scholars offer both a spine of chronological overviews and a diverse spectrum of up-to-date insights into areas of key interest to historians today. From the ravages of the Vikings to the role of gastronomy in the definition of French culture, from Caribbean slavery to the place of Algerians in present-day France, from the role of French queens in medieval diplomacy to the youth-culture explosion of the 1960s and the explosions of France's nuclear weapons program, this handbook provides accessible summaries and selected further reading to explore any and all of these issues further, in the classroom and beyond.
- Published
- 2023
12. The Future Is Feminist : Women and Social Change in Interwar Algeria
- Author
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Sara Rahnama and Sara Rahnama
- Subjects
- Women's rights--Algeria--History--20th century, Muslim women--Algeria--Social conditions--20th century, Feminism--Algeria--History--20th century, Social change--Algeria--History--20th century, Feminism--Religious aspects--Islam
- Abstract
Winner of the Alf Andrew Heggoy Book Prize of the French Colonial Historical SocietyThe Future Is Feminist by Sara Rahnama offers a closer look at a pivotal moment in Algerian history when Algerians looked to feminism as a path out of the stifling realities of French colonial rule. Algerian people focused outward to developments in the Middle East, looking critically at their own society and with new eyes to Islamic tradition. In doing so, they reordered the world on their own terms—pushing back against French colonial claims about Islam's inherent misogyny. Rahnama describes how Algerians took inspiration from Middle Eastern developments in women's rights. Empowered by the Muslim reform movement sweeping the region, they read Islamic knowledge with new eyes, even calling Muhammad'the first Arab feminist.'They compared the blossoming women's rights movements across the Middle East and this history of Islam's feminist potential to the stifled position of Algerian women, who suffered from limited access to education and respectable work. Local dynamics also shaped these discussions, including the recent entry of thousands of Algerian women into the workforce as domestic workers in European settler homes. While Algerian people disagreed about whether Algeria's future should be colonial or independent, they agreed that women's advancement would offer a path forward for Muslim society toward a more prosperous future. Through its use of Arabic-language sources alongside French ones, The Future Is Feminist moves beyond Algeria's colonial relationship to France to illuminate its relationship to the Middle East.
- Published
- 2023
13. Photography in the Great War : The Ethics of Emerging Medical Collections From the Great War
- Author
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Jason Bate and Jason Bate
- Subjects
- World War, 1914-1918--Veterans--Care--Great Britain, Disabled veterans--Great Britain--History--20th century, World War, 1914-1918--Veterans--Great Britain, Disfigured persons--Great Britain, Post-traumatic stress disorder, War and families--Great Britain, Medical photography--Great Britain, World War, 1914-1918--Social aspects
- Abstract
This book draws on a rich set of materials to examine postwar experiences of ex-servicemen who were facially-disfigured during the First World War. Weaving together medical, institutional, amateur and family photographic albums under a social history framework, Jason Bate underscores overlooked aspects of these men's continued hardships after returning home from the front. In particular, a focus is on the private sphere of the family and the complicated world of employment that disfigured veterans navigated on their return. Little attention has hitherto been paid to the aftercare of disfigured veterans once discharged from the army, or the long-term impact on individuals, and the sense of burden felt by families and local communities. In addressing this neglected area, the chapters here illuminate different practices of photography by doctors, nurses, press agencies, and families across the generations to challenge our perceptions of the personal traumas of soldiers and civilians.
- Published
- 2022
14. Drugging France : Mind-Altering Medicine in the Long Nineteenth Century
- Author
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Sara E. Black and Sara E. Black
- Subjects
- Drugs of abuse--France--History--19th century, Psychopharmacology--France--History--19th century, Psychotropic drugs--France--History--19th century, Narcotics--France--History--19th century
- Abstract
In the nineteenth century, drug consumption permeated French society to produce a new norm: the chemical enhancement of modern life. French citizens empowered themselves by seeking pharmaceutical relief for their suffering and engaging in self-medication. Doctors and pharmacists, meanwhile, fashioned themselves as gatekeepers to these potent drugs, claiming that their expertise could shield the public from accidental harm. Despite these efforts, the unanticipated phenomenon of addiction laid bare both the embodied nature of the modern self and the inherent instability of the notions of individual free will and responsibility.Drugging France explores the history of mind-altering drugs in medical practice between 1840 and 1920, highlighting the intricate medical histories of opium, morphine, ether, chloroform, cocaine, and hashish. While most drug histories focus on how drugs became regulated and criminalized as dangerous addictive substances, Sara Black instead traces the spread of these drugs through French society, demonstrating how new therapeutic norms and practices of drug consumption transformed the lives of French citizens as they came to expect and even demand pharmaceutical solutions to their pain. Through self-experimentation, doctors developed new knowledge about these drugs, transforming exotic botanical substances and unpredictable chemicals into reliable pharmaceutical commodities that would act on the mind and body to modify pain, sensation, and consciousness.From the pharmacy counter to the boudoir, from the courtroom to the operating theatre, from the battlefield to the birthing chamber, Drugging France explores how everyday encounters with drugs reconfigured how people experienced their own minds and bodies.
- Published
- 2022
15. Yiddish Paris : Staging Nation and Community in Interwar France
- Author
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Nick Underwood and Nick Underwood
- Subjects
- Yiddishists--France--Paris--Intellectual life, Jews, Polish--France--Paris--Intellectual life, Jews--France--Paris--History--20th century, Yiddish language--France--Paris
- Abstract
Yiddish Paris explores how Yiddish-speaking emigrants from Eastern Europe in Paris in the 1920s and 1930s created a Yiddish diaspora nation in Western Europe and how they presented that nation to themselves and to others in France. In this meticulously researched and first full-length study of interwar Yiddish culture in France, author Nicholas Underwood argues that the emergence of a Yiddish Paris was depended on'culture makers,'mostly left-wing Jews from Socialist and Communist backgrounds who created cultural and scholarly organizations and institutions, including the French branch of YIVO (a research institution focused on East European Jews), theater troupes, choruses, and a pavilion at the Paris World's Fair of 1937.Yiddish Paris examines how these left-wing Yiddish-speaking Jews insisted that even in France, a country known for demanding the assimilation of immigrant and minority groups, they could remain a distinct group, part of a transnational Yiddish-speaking Jewish nation. Yet, in the process, they in fact created a French-inflected version of Jewish diaspora nationalism, finding allies among French intellectuals, largely on the left.
- Published
- 2022
16. Erträumte Geschichte(n) : Zur Historizität von Träumen, Visionen und Utopien
- Author
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Jens Elberfeld, Kristoffer Klammer, Sandra Maß, Benno Nietzel, Jens Elberfeld, Kristoffer Klammer, Sandra Maß, and Benno Nietzel
- Abstract
Menschen träumen – mutmaßlich schon immer – nachts, tagsüber und in politischen Visionen und Utopien. Aber wovon sie träumen, wie sie träumen, wie Träume wahrgenommen werden und welche Bedeutung man ihnen individuell, gesellschaftlich, politisch und wissenschaftlich beimisst, unterliegt historischem Wandel. Im Mittelpunkt dieses Bandes stehen Fragen nach den Inhalten des Geträumten, Imaginierten oder Ersonnenen sowie Betrachtungen zu den Träumenden, Visionären oder Utopisten der Geschichte. Die Beiträge thematisieren zudem sowohl theoretische und methodische Aspekte einer Traumgeschichte als auch Überlegungen zu den Begriffen, Semantiken und Diskursen des Traums und zu seinen visuellen Repräsentationen.
- Published
- 2022
17. L'espéranto, langue dangereuse : Une histoire des persécutions sous Hitler et sous Staline
- Author
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Ulrich Lins, Pierre Dieumegard, Ulrich Lins, and Pierre Dieumegard
- Abstract
Aux yeux des dictatures et des idéologies fanatiques, l'espéranto est une langue dangereuse qui doit être combattue. C'est notamment le sort qu'elle a connu dans l'Allemagne nazie et dans l'Union soviétique sous Staline. L'historien allemand Ulrich Lins montre les conséquences tant de la condamnation hitlérienne de l'espéranto comme outil de la domination mondiale des Juifs, que de la liquidation par Staline du mouvement espérantiste ouvrier soviétique et de ses pratiques transnationales. La première édition de ce livre a été publiée en Allemagne en 1988 (réimpression à Moscou en 1990) et a été traduite en sept langues. La traduction française se fonde sur la nouvelle version parue en 2016, profondément révisée et enrichie grâce aux sources devenues accessibles après la chute du mur de Berlin.
- Published
- 2022
18. Person und Form : Eine Medien- und Wissensgeschichte der Persönlichkeitsdiagnostik
- Author
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David Keller and David Keller
- Subjects
- Personality tests, Personality
- Abstract
Was ist Persönlichkeit? Und wie kann sie wissenschaftlich erschlossen und diagnostiziert werden? Vor allem in der ersten Hälfte des 20. Jahrhunderts entfaltete die kulturell voraussetzungsreiche Idee der Persönlichkeit innerhalb der psychologischen Wissenschaften große produktive Kraft. David Keller stellt eine Vielfalt von Medien und Techniken in den Mittelpunkt seiner systematischen Untersuchung, die mobilisiert wurden, um'Persönlichkeit'anhand experimenteller Suchprozesse als ein stabiles Konzept der Humanwissenschaften zu legitimieren. Dabei verdeutlicht seine Rekonstruktion einschlägiger Forschungs- und Diagnosepraktiken sowie die Betrachtung popularisierender Diskurse, wie die Suche nach der Persönlichkeit nicht allein eine wissensstiftende Funktion besaß, sondern zuletzt immer neue Fragen aufwarf. Auf diese Weise wurde sie zu einer fortgesetzten Herausforderung für die Wissenschaften vom Menschen.
- Published
- 2021
19. The Edinburgh Companion to Irish Modernism
- Author
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Maud Ellmann, Sian White, Vicki Mahaffey, Maud Ellmann, Sian White, and Vicki Mahaffey
- Subjects
- Modernism (Literature)--Ireland, Modernism (Art)--Ireland, English literature--Irish authors--20th century--History and criticism, Modernism (Christian theology)--Ireland
- Abstract
The Edinburgh Companion to Irish Modernism presents a fresh perspective on received understandings of Irish modernism.
- Published
- 2021
20. Esperanto and Languages of Internationalism in Revolutionary Russia
- Author
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Brigid O'Keeffe and Brigid O'Keeffe
- Subjects
- Esperanto--History, Esperanto--Social aspects
- Abstract
Winner of the 2022 Ab Imperio Award Hoping to unite all of humankind and revolutionize the world, Ludwik Zamenhof launched a new international language called Esperanto from late imperial Russia in 1887. Ordinary men and women in Russia and all over the world soon transformed Esperanto into a global movement. Esperanto and Languages of Internationalism in Revolutionary Russia traces the history and legacy of this effort: from Esperanto's roots in the social turmoil of the pre-revolutionary Pale of Settlement; to its links to socialist internationalism and Comintern bids for world revolution; and, finally, to the demise of the Soviet Esperanto movement in the increasingly xenophobic Stalinist 1930s. In doing so, this book reveals how Esperanto – and global language politics more broadly – shaped revolutionary and early Soviet Russia. Based on extensive archival materials, Brigid O'Keeffe's book provides the first in-depth exploration of Esperanto at grassroots level and sheds new light on a hitherto overlooked area of Russian history. As such, Esperanto and Languages of Internationalism in Revolutionary Russia will be of immense value to both historians of modern Russia and scholars of internationalism, transnational networks, and sociolinguistics.
- Published
- 2021
21. Rahmensprenger : Mediale (Ent-)Rahmungen in den historischen Filmen von Peter Watkins
- Author
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Eva-Kristin Winter and Eva-Kristin Winter
- Abstract
Der britische Filmemacher Peter Watkins (geb. 1935) ist vermutlich einer der meist übersehenen zeitgenössischen Regisseure Europas. Watkins'Filme fordern einerseits ein vor allem politisches Engagement ihrer Rezipient_innen, was durch das schriftliche Werk des Künstlers angetrieben und verstärkt wird. Zum anderen bewegen sich Watkins'Werke auf und über Grenzen: Der Gewinn des Oscars für den besten Dokumentarfilm 1966 (»The War Game«, 1965) verwundert zunächst und steht doch exemplarisch für ein Gesamtwerk, dessen Filme sich weder klar als dokumentarisch oder fiktional noch als Kino- oder Fernsehfilm einordnen lassen. Der Filmemacher, der sich kritisch mit gesellschaftlichen und sozialen Missständen befasst, bindet in seinen Filmen Historie und Gegenwart eng aneinander. Auf diese Weise sind seine Filme wie seine Texte zukunftsweisend und behalten auch nach Jahrzehnten ihre Aktualität. Eva-Kristin Winter liefert die erste umfassende deutschsprachige Auseinandersetzung mit Peter Watkins'Werk und Schaffen. Ihr Fokus liegt auf dem Umgang mit unterschiedlichen Medien (Wort – Bild – Interaktion), die seine Filme rahmen und strukturieren. Winter untersucht anhand der historischen Filme »Edvard Munch« (1974), »The Freethinker« (1994) sowie »La Commune (Paris, 1871)« (2000), wie der Filmemacher diese selbst gewählten Rahmungen – frames – bedient, jedoch auch untergräbt.
- Published
- 2021
22. Decolonizing Memory : Algeria and the Politics of Testimony
- Author
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Jill Jarvis and Jill Jarvis
- Subjects
- Literature and history--Algeria, Collective memory--Political aspects--Algeria, Collective memory and literature--Algeria, Politics and literature--Algeria, Imperialism in literature, French literature--Algeria--History and criticism, African literature (French)--History and criticism
- Abstract
The magnitude of the legal violence exercised by the French to colonize and occupy Algeria (1830–1962) is such that only aesthetic works have been able to register its enduring effects. In Decolonizing Memory Jill Jarvis examines the power of literature to provide what demographic data, historical facts, and legal trials have not in terms of attesting to and accounting for this destruction. Taking up the unfinished work of decolonization since 1962, Algerian writers have played a crucial role in forging historical memory and nurturing political resistance—their work helps to make possible what state violence has rendered almost unthinkable. Drawing together readings of multilingual texts by Yamina Mechakra, Waciny Laredj, Zahia Rahmani, Fadhma Aïth Mansour Amrouche, Assia Djebar, and Samira Negrouche alongside theoretical, juridical, visual, and activist texts from both Algeria's national liberation war (1954–1962) and war on civilians (1988–1999), this book challenges temporal and geographical frameworks that have implicitly organized studies of cultural memory around Euro-American reference points. Jarvis shows how this literature rewrites history, disputes state authority to arbitrate justice, and cultivates a multilingual archive for imagining decolonized futures.
- Published
- 2021
23. Magician of Sound : Ravel and the Aesthetics of Illusion
- Author
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Jessie Fillerup and Jessie Fillerup
- Subjects
- Music and magic
- Abstract
French composer Maurice Ravel was described by critics as a magician, conjurer, and illusionist. Scholars have been aware of this historical curiosity, but none so far have explained why Ravel attracted such critiques or what they might tell us about how to interpret his music. Magician of Sound examines Ravel's music through the lens of illusory experience, considering how timbre, orchestral effects, figure/ground relationships, and impressions of motion and stasis might be experienced as if they were conjuring tricks. Applying concepts from music theory, psychology, philosophy, and the history of magic, Jessie Fillerup develops an approach to musical illusion that newly illuminates Ravel's fascination with machines and creates compelling links between his music and other forms of aesthetic illusion, from painting and poetry to fiction and phantasmagoria. Fillerup analyzes scenes of enchantment and illusory effects in Ravel's most popular works, including Boléro, La Valse, Daphnis et Chloé, and Rapsodie espagnole, relating his methods and musical effects to the practice of theatrical conjurers. Drawing on a rich well of primary sources, Magician of Sound provides a new interdisciplinary framework for interpreting this enigmatic composer, linking magic and music.
- Published
- 2021
24. Ordnung durch Sprache : Francophonie zwischen Nationalstaat, Imperium und internationaler Politik, 1860–1960
- Author
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Silke Mende and Silke Mende
- Subjects
- French language--Political aspects
- Abstract
Mit dem Begriff „Francophonie“ wird meist die Sprachpolitik Frankreichs ab den 1960er Jahren assoziiert. Ihre eigentliche Prägekraft als politisches Projekt entfaltete sie jedoch vom letzten Drittel des 19. Jahrhunderts bis zur Dekolonisierung. Sprache und Sprachpolitik waren zum einen ein sensibler Seismograph französischen Selbstverständnisses. Zum anderen wurden sie zu einem politisch-kulturellen Ordnungsinstrument, das auf die Etablierung und Verbreitung von Normen und Vorstellungen sowie die Herstellung gesellschaftlicher Integration und politischer Kohäsion zielte. Von Beginn an war es in gleichem Maße nach innen wie nach außen gerichtet.Das Buch untersucht die Genese und Weiterentwicklung der Francophonie, nimmt ihre zentralen Akteure, Ideen und Praktiken in den Blick und untersucht ihre konkrete Ausgestaltung. Im Zentrum steht das komplexe Wechselspiel zwischen dem französischem Nationalstaat, seinem Imperium und der internationalen Politik. Damit werden diese häufig getrennt voneinander behandelten Dimensionen französischer Geschichte konsequent aufeinander bezogen. Zugleich wird der anglophone Schwerpunkt der Imperial- und Globalgeschichte um einen zentralen Aspekt des „French Imperial Nation-State“ ergänzt.
- Published
- 2020
25. Modernist Magazines and the Social Ideal
- Author
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Tim Satterthwaite and Tim Satterthwaite
- Subjects
- Modernism (Aesthetics)--Europe--History--20th century, Photojournalism--Europe--History--20th century, Illustrated periodicals--Europe--History--20th century
- Abstract
The new photo-illustrated magazines of the 1920s traded in images of an ideal modernity, promising motorised leisure, scientific progress, and social and sexual emancipation. Modernist Magazines and the Social Ideal is a pioneering history of these periodicals, focusing on two of the leading European titles: the German monthly UHU, and the French news weekly VU, taken as representative of the broad class of popular titles launched in the 1920s.The book is the first major study of UHU, and the first scholarly work on VU in English. Modernist Magazines explores, in particular, the striking use of regularity and repetition in photographs of modernity, reading these repetitious images as symbolic of modernist ideals of social order in the aftermath of the First World War. Introducing a novel methodology, pattern theory, the book argues for a critical return to the Gestalt tradition in visual studies.Alongside the UHU and VU case studies, Modernist Magazines offers an essential primer to interwar magazine culture in Europe. Accounts of rival titles are woven into the book's thematic chapters, which trace the evolution of the two magazines'photography and graphic design in the tumultuous years up to 1933.
- Published
- 2020
26. Europe in the Contemporary World: 1900 to the Present : A Narrative History with Documents
- Author
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Bonnie G. Smith and Bonnie G. Smith
- Abstract
This newly updated and improved edition of Bonnie G. Smith's classic textbook provides the most authoritative history available of Europe in a global context during the 20th and 21st centuries. It cleverly incorporates elements of political, social, cultural, economic and intellectual history and presents an integrated history with detailed coverage right across the continent.Including 131 images and 23 maps, Europe in the Contemporary World: 1900 to the Present is organized around key themes within a chronological chapter structure that is easy to follow. Smith's balanced treatment of the subject allows for a comprehensive assessment of the positive and negative developments in European history over the period, as well as the wider impact of this in the world at large. The book also includes picture essays and document sections, which provide variety and foreground the importance of primary sources, and useful end-of-chapter further readings for students who wish to investigate specific topics in greater depth.The enhanced 2nd edition contains:• A new chapter on the 21st-century issues that have challenged and continue to challenge Europe• More material on globalization, the end of the Cold War, European countercultures and various other topics• Historiographic updates throughoutEurope in the Contemporary World: 1900 to the Present is the definitive guide to Europe and its place in the world since 1900 for students and scholars alike.
- Published
- 2020
27. Imagining Personal Data : Experiences of Self-Tracking
- Author
-
Vaike Fors, Sarah Pink, Martin Berg, Tom O'Dell, Vaike Fors, Sarah Pink, Martin Berg, and Tom O'Dell
- Subjects
- Information technology--Social aspects, Self-monitoring--Social aspects
- Abstract
Digital self-tracking devices and data have become normal elements of everyday life. Imagining Personal Data examines the implications of the rise of body monitoring and digital self-tracking for how we inhabit, experience and imagine our everyday worlds and futures. Through a focus on how it feels to live in environments where data is emergent, present and characterized by a sense of uncertainty, the authors argue for a new interdisciplinary approach to understanding the implications of self-tracking, which attends to its past, present and possible future. Building on social science approaches, the book accounts for the concerns of scholars working in design, philosophy and human-computer interaction. It problematizes the body and senses in relation to data and tracking devices, presents an accessible analytical account of the sensory and affective experiences of self-tracking, and questions the status of big data. In doing so it proposes an agenda for future research and design that puts people at its centre.
- Published
- 2020
28. AI, robotar och föreställningar om morgondagens arbetsliv
- Author
-
Daniel Bodén & Michael Godhe (eds.) and Daniel Bodén & Michael Godhe (eds.)
- Subjects
- Artificial intelligence, Automation, Employees--Effect of technological innovations o
- Published
- 2020
29. The Fall of France in the Second World War : History and Memory
- Author
-
Richard Carswell and Richard Carswell
- Subjects
- History, Modern--20th century, World War, 1939-1945--Campaigns--France
- Abstract
This book examines how the fall of France in the Second World War has been recorded by historians and remembered within society. It argues that explanations of the fall have usually revolved around the four main themes of decadence, failure, constraint and contingency. It shows that the dominant explanation claimed for many years that the fall was the inevitable consequence of a society grown rotten in the inter-war period. This view has been largely replaced among academic historians by a consensus which distinguishes between the military defeat and the political demise of the Third Republic. It emphasizes the contingent factors that led to the military defeat. At the same time it seeks to understand the constraints within which France's policy-makers were required to act and the reasons for their policy-making failures in economics, defence and diplomacy.
- Published
- 2019
30. Modernism and Food Studies : Politics, Aesthetics, and the Avant-Garde
- Author
-
Jessica Martell, Adam Fajardo, Philip Keel Geheber, Jessica Martell, Adam Fajardo, and Philip Keel Geheber
- Subjects
- Food habits in literature, Food in literature, Food--Research, Modernism (Literature)
- Abstract
Transnational in scope, this much-needed volume explores how modernist writers and artists address and critique the dramatic changes to food systems that took place in the early twentieth century. During this period, small farms were being replaced with industrial agriculture, political upheavals exacerbated food scarcity in many countries, and globalization opened up new modes of distributing culinary commodities. Looking at a unique variety of art forms by authors, painters, filmmakers, and chefs from Ireland, Italy, France, the United States, India, the former Soviet Union, and New Zealand, contributors draw attention to modernist representations of food, from production to distribution and consumption. They consider Oscar Wilde's aestheticization of food, Katherine Mansfield's use of eggs as a feminist symbol, Langston Hughes's use of chocolate as a redemptive metaphor for blackness, hospitality in William Faulkner's Sanctuary, Ernest Hemingway's struggles with gender and sexuality as expressed through food and culinary objects, Futurist cuisine, avant-garde cookbooks, and the impact of national famines on the work of James Joyce, Viktor Shklovsky, and Tarashankar Bandyopadhyay. Less celebrated topics of putrefaction and waste are analyzed in discussions of food as both a technology of control and a tool for resistance. The diverse themes and methodologies assembled here underscore the importance of food studies not only for the literary and visual arts but also for social transformation. The cultural work around food, the editors argue, determines what is produced, who has access to it, and what can or will change. A milestone volume, this collection uncovers new links between seemingly disparate spaces, cultures, and artistic media and demystifies the connection between modernist aesthetics and the emerging food cultures of a globalizing world. Contributors: Giles Whiteley | Aimee Gasston | Randall Wilhelm | Bradford Taylor | Sean Mark | Céline Mansanti | Shannon Finck
- Published
- 2019
31. Fabricating Modern Societies: Education, Bodies, and Minds in the Age of Steel
- Author
-
Karin Priem, Frederik Herman, Karin Priem, and Frederik Herman
- Abstract
Fabricating Modern Societies: Education, Bodies, and Minds in the Age of Steel, edited by Karin Priem and Frederik Herman, offers new interdisciplinary and transnational perspectives on the history of industrialization and societal transformation in early twentieth-century Luxembourg. The individual chapters focus on how industrialists addressed a large array of challenges related to industrialization, borrowing and mixing ideas originating in domains such as corporate identity formation, mediatization, scientification, technological innovation, mechanization, capitalism, mass production, medicalization, educationalization, artistic production, and social utopia, while competing with other interest groups who pursued their own goals. The book looks at different focus areas of modernity, and analyzes how humans created, mediated, and interacted with the technospheres of modern societies. Contributors: Klaus Dittrich, Irma Hadzalic, Frederik Herman, Enric Novella, Ira Plein, Françoise Poos, Karin Priem, and Angelo Van Gorp.
- Published
- 2019
32. Mapping Beyond Measure : Art, Cartography, and the Space of Global Modernity
- Author
-
Simon Ferdinand and Simon Ferdinand
- Subjects
- Maps in art, Cartography in art, Cultural geography
- Abstract
Over the last century a growing number of visual artists have been captivated by the entwinements of beauty and power, truth and artifice, and the fantasy and functionality they perceive in geographical mapmaking. This field of “map art” has moved into increasing prominence in recent years yet critical writing on the topic has been largely confined to general overviews of the field. In Mapping Beyond Measure Simon Ferdinand analyzes diverse map-based works of painting, collage, film, walking performance, and digital drawing made in Britain, Japan, the Netherlands, Ukraine, the United States, and the former Soviet Union, arguing that together they challenge the dominant modern view of the world as a measurable and malleable geometrical space. This challenge has strong political ramifications, for it is on the basis of modernity's geometrical worldview that states have legislated over social space; that capital has coordinated global markets and exploited distant environments; and that powerful cartographic institutions have claimed exclusive authority in mapmaking.Mapping Beyond Measure breaks fresh ground in undertaking a series of close readings of significant map artworks in sustained dialogue with spatial theorists, including Peter Sloterdijk, Zygmunt Bauman, and Michel de Certeau. In so doing Ferdinand reveals how map art calls into question some of the central myths and narratives of rupture through which modern space has traditionally been imagined and establishes map art's distinct value amid broader contemporary shifts toward digital mapping.
- Published
- 2019
33. Untotenstädte : Gespenster des Ersten Weltkriegs in der literarischen Moderne
- Author
-
Vera Kaulbarsch and Vera Kaulbarsch
- Abstract
Der Erste Weltkrieg stellte nicht nur eine traumatische Zäsur dar, welche das Fortschrittsnarrativ der Industrialisierung brutal unterbrach. Er hinterließ auch eine gespenstische Leerstelle in den europäischen Gesellschaften der Nachkriegszeit. Vera Kaulbarsch geht den Spuren nach, die Millionen Kriegstote, Verwundete und Vermisste in der Kultur und Literatur zwischen den Kriegen hinterlassen haben. Die diskursiven Einflusslinien des Krieges werden zunächst über eine Aufarbeitung von zeitgenössischen Dokumenten aufgezeigt, um die historische Situation in Deutschland, Frankreich und Großbritannien zu rekonstruieren. Die Lektüre von Großstadttexten, die Berlin, Paris und London ins Zentrum rücken, zeigt schließlich, wie die Schlachtfelder der Westfront in die Räume der Metropolen einbrechen. In Werken von Alfred Döblin, André Breton, Louis Aragon und H.D. (Hilda Doolittle) werden die Gespenster des Krieges auf Berliner Friedhöfe, in Pariser Passagen und Londoner Kinos verfolgt.
- Published
- 2018
34. Paris and the Cliché of History : The City and Photographs, 1860-1970
- Author
-
Catherine E. Clark and Catherine E. Clark
- Subjects
- Art and history
- Abstract
This book turns a compelling new lens on thinking about the history of Paris and photography. The invention of photography changed how history could be written. But the now commonplace assumptions--that photographs capture fragments of lost time or present emotional gateways to the past--that structure today's understandings did not emerge whole cloth in 1839. Focusing on one of photography's birthplaces, Paris and the Cliché of History tells the story of how photographs came to be imagined as documents of the past. Author Catherine E. Clark analyzes photography's effects on historical interpretation by examining the formation of Paris's first photo archives at the Musée Carnavalet and the city's municipal library, their use in illustrated history books and historical exhibitions and reconstructions such as the 1951 celebration of Paris's 2000th birthday, and the public's contribution to the historical record in amateur photo contests. Despite the photograph's growing importance in these forums, it did not simply replace older forms of illustration, visual documentation, or written text. Photos worked in complex and shifting relation to other types of pictures as photographers, popular historians, and publishers built on the traditions and iconography of painting and engraving in order to both document the past scientifically and objectively and to reconstruct it romantically. In doing so, they not only influenced how Parisians thought about the city's past and how they pictured it; they also ensured that these images shaped how Parisians lived their own lives--especially in deeply charged moments such as the Liberation after World War II. This history of picturing Paris does not simply reflect the city's history: it is Parisian history.
- Published
- 2018
35. Colonial Suspects : Suspicion, Imperial Rule, and Colonial Society in Interwar French West Africa
- Author
-
Kathleen Keller and Kathleen Keller
- Subjects
- Police patrol--France--Colonies--History, Police patrol--Africa, French-speaking West--Surveillance operations--History--20th century, Dissenters--Africa, French-speaking West--History--20th century, Anti-imperialist movements--Africa, French-speaking West--History--20th century, Dissenters--France--Colonies--History, Intelligence service--France--Colonies--History, Anti-imperialist movements--France--Colonies--History, Intelligence service--Africa, French-speaking West--History--20th century
- Abstract
A Vietnamese cook, a German journalist, and a Senegalese student—what did they have in common? They were all suspicious persons kept under surveillance by French colonial authorities in West Africa in the 1920s and 1930s. Colonial Suspects looks at the web of surveillance set up by the French government during the twentieth century as France's empire slipped into crisis. As French West Africa and the French Empire more generally underwent fundamental transformations during the interwar years, French colonial authorities pivoted from a stated policy of “assimilation” to that of “association.” Surveillance of both colonial subjects and visitors traveling through the colonies increased in scope. The effect of this change in policy was profound: a “culture of suspicion” became deeply ingrained in French West African society. Kathleen Keller notes that the surveillance techniques developed over time by the French included “shadowing, postal control, port police, informants, denunciations, home searches, and gossip.” This ad hoc approach to colonial surveillance mostly proved ineffectual, however, and French colonies became transitory spaces where a global cast of characters intermixed and French power remained precarious. Increasingly, French officials—in the colonies and at home—reacted in short-sighted ways as both perceived and real backlash occurred with respect to communism, pan-Africanism, anticolonialism, black radicalism, and pan-Islamism. Focusing primarily on the port city of Dakar (Senegal), Keller unravels the threads of intrigue, rumor, and misdirection that informed this chaotic period of French colonial history.
- Published
- 2018
36. Countersexual Manifesto
- Author
-
Paul B. Preciado and Paul B. Preciado
- Subjects
- Sex--Philosophy, Gender identity
- Abstract
Countersexual Manifesto is an outrageous yet rigorous work of trans theory, a performative literary text, and an insistent call to action. Seeking to overthrow all constraints on what can be done with and to the body, Paul B. Preciado offers a provocative challenge to even the most radical claims about gender, sexuality, and desire.Preciado lays out mock constitutional principles for a countersexual revolution that will recognize genitalia as technological objects and offers step-by-step illustrated instructions for dismantling the heterocentric social contract. He calls theorists such as Derrida, Foucault, Butler, and Haraway to task for not going nearly far enough in their attempts to deconstruct the naturalization of normative identities and behaviors. Preciado's claim that the dildo precedes the penis—that artifice, not nature, comes first in the history of sexuality—forms the basis of his demand for new practices of sexual emancipation. He calls for a world of sexual plasticity and fabrication, of bio-printers and “dildonics,” and he invokes countersexuality's roots in the history of sex toys, pornography, and drag in order to rupture the supposedly biological foundations of the heterocentric regime. His claims are extreme, but supported through meticulous readings of philosophy and theory, as well as popular culture. The Manifesto is now available in English translation for its twentieth anniversary, with a new introduction by Preciado. Countersexual Manifesto will disrupt feminism and queer theory and scandalize us all with its hyperbolic but deadly serious defiance of everything we've been told about sex.
- Published
- 2018
37. Disability Media Studies
- Author
-
Elizabeth Ellcessor, Bill Kirkpatrick, Elizabeth Ellcessor, and Bill Kirkpatrick
- Abstract
Introduces key ideas and offers a sense of the new frontiers and questions in the emerging field of disability media studies Disability Media Studies articulates the formation of a new field of study, based in the rich traditions of media, cultural, and disability studies. Necessarily interdisciplinary and diverse, this collection weaves together work from scholars from a variety of disciplinary homes, into a broader conversation about exploring media artifacts in relation to disability. The book provides a comprehensive overview for anyone interested in the study of disability and media today. Case studies include familiar contemporary examples—such as Iron Man 3, Lady Gaga, and Oscar Pistorius—as well as historical media, independent disability media, reality television, and media technologies. The contributors consider disability representation, the role of media in forming cultural assumptions about ability, the construction of disability via media technologies, and how disabled audiences respond to particular media artifacts. The volume concludes with afterwords from two different perspectives on the field—one by disability scholar Rachel Adams, the other by media scholars Mara Mills and Jonathan Sterne—that reflect upon the collection, the ongoing conversations, and the future of disability media studies. Disability Media Studies is a crucial text for those interested in this flourishing field, and will pave the way for a greater understanding of disability media studies and its critical concepts and conversations.
- Published
- 2017
38. Backpack Ambassadors : How Youth Travel Integrated Europe
- Author
-
Richard Ivan Jobs and Richard Ivan Jobs
- Subjects
- International travel--Europe--History--20th century, Youth--Travel--Europe--History
- Abstract
Even today, in an era of cheap travel and constant connection, the image of young people backpacking across Europe remains seductively romantic. In Backpack Ambassadors, Richard Ivan Jobs tells the story of backpacking in Europe in its heyday, the decades after World War II, revealing that these footloose young people were doing more than just exploring for themselves. Rather, with each step, each border crossing, each friendship, they were quietly helping knit the continent together. From the Berlin Wall to the beaches of Spain, the Spanish Steps in Rome to the Pudding Shop in Istanbul, Jobs tells the stories of backpackers whose personal desire for freedom of movement brought the people and places of Europe into ever-closer contact. As greater and greater numbers of young people trekked around the continent, and a truly international youth culture began to emerge, the result was a Europe that, even in the midst of Cold War tensions, found its people more and more connected, their lives more and more integrated. Drawing on archival work in eight countries and five languages, and featuring trenchant commentary on the relevance of this period for contemporary concerns about borders and migration, Backpack Ambassadors brilliantly recreates a movement that was far more influential and important than its footsore travelers could ever have realized.
- Published
- 2017
39. Dangerous Language — Esperanto and the Decline of Stalinism
- Author
-
Ulrich Lins and Ulrich Lins
- Subjects
- Applied linguistics, Sociolinguistics, Language and languages, Russia—History, Europe, Eastern—History, Soviet Union—History, Europe, Central—History
- Abstract
This is Volume 2 of Dangerous Language. This book examines the rise of the international language Esperanto, launched in 1887 as a proposed a solution to national conflicts and a path to a more tolerant world. The chapters in this volume examine the position of Esperanto in Eastern Europe during the Cold War; in particular it explores Stalin's final years and the gradual re-emergence of the Esperanto movement. At first, its revival was limited to the satellite countries, especially Bulgaria and Poland, but, with Stalinism's gradual retreat, Esperanto organizations reappeared in most East European countries and eventually in the Soviet Union itself. The progress was uneven, and its details reveal the stresses and strains that became apparent as the solidarity of the Soviet bloc declined. This book will appeal to a wide readership, including linguists, historians, political scientists and others interested in the history of the twentieth century from the unusual perspective of language. This volume is complemented by the sister volume Dangerous Language — Esperanto under Hitler and Stalin which offers a concentration on the creation and early emergence of Esperanto as an international language.
- Published
- 2017
40. Gothic Dissections in Film and Literature : The Body in Parts
- Author
-
Ian Conrich, Laura Sedgwick, Ian Conrich, and Laura Sedgwick
- Subjects
- Gothic fiction (Literary genre)--History and criticism, Goth culture (Subculture), Horror films--History and criticism
- Abstract
This is the first book-length study to systematically and theoretically analyse the use and representation of individual body parts in Gothic fiction. Moving between filmic and literary texts and across the body—from the brain, hair and teeth, to hands, skin and the stomach—this book engages in unique readings by foregrounding a diversity of global representations. Building on scholarly work on the ‘Gothic body'and ‘body horror', Gothic Dissections in Film and Literature dissects the individual features that comprise the physical human corporeal form in its different functions. This very original and accessible study, which will appeal to a broad range of readers interested in the Gothic, centralises the use (and abuse) of limbs, organs, bones and appendages. It presents a set of unique global examinations; from Brazil, France and South Korea to name a few; that address the materiality of the Gothic body in depth in texts ranging from the nineteenth century to the present; fromNikolai Gogol, Edgar Allan Poe, Roald Dahl and Chuck Palahniuk, to David Cronenberg, Freddy Krueger and The Greasy Strangler.
- Published
- 2017
41. Bridge of Words : Esperanto and the Dream of a Universal Language
- Author
-
Esther Schor and Esther Schor
- Abstract
A rich and passionate biography of a language and the dream of world harmony it sought to realize.In 1887, Ludwig Lazarus Zamenhof, a Polish Jew, had the idea of putting an end to tribalism by creating a universal language, one that would be equally accessible to everyone in the world. The result was Esperanto, a utopian scheme full of the brilliance, craziness, and grandiosity that characterize all such messianic visions.In this first full history of a constructed language, poet and scholar Esther Schor traces the life of Esperanto. She follows the path from its invention by Zamenhof, through its turn-of-the-century golden age as the great hope of embattled cosmopolites, to its suppression by nationalist regimes and its resurgence as a bridge across the Cold War. She plunges into the mechanics of creating a language from scratch, one based on rational systems that would be easy to learn, politically neutral, and allow all to speak to all. Rooted in the dark soil of Europe, Esperanto failed to stem the continent's bloodletting, of course, but as Schor shows, the ideal continues draw a following of modern universalists dedicated to its visionary goal.Rich and subtle, Bridge of Words is at once a biography of an idea, an original history of Europe, and a spirited exploration of the only language charged with saving the world from itself.
- Published
- 2016
42. French Cinema and the Great War : Remembrance and Representation
- Author
-
Marcelline Block, Barry Nevin, Marcelline Block, and Barry Nevin
- Subjects
- Motion pictures--France--History--20th century, War films--France--History and criticism, World War, 1914-1918--Motion pictures and the war, Collective memory--France, Culture in motion pictures, Psychic trauma in motion pictures
- Abstract
Even a century after its conclusion, the devastation of the Great War still echoes in the work of artists who try to make sense of the political, moral, ideological, and economic changes and challenges it spawned. France, the military major power of the Western Front, carries the legacy of battles on its own soil, and countless French lives lost defending the nation from the Central Powers. It is no surprise that the impact of the First World War can still be seen in French films into the present day.French Cinema and the Great War: Remembrance and Representation provides the first book-length study of World War I as it is featured in French cinema, from the silent era to contemporary films. Presented in three thematic sections—Recording and Remembering the Great War, Women at the Front, and Interrogating Commemoration—the essays in this volume explore the ways in which French film contributes to the restoration and modification of memories of the war. Films such as La Grande Illusion,King of Hearts, A Very Long Engagement, and Joyeux Noel are among those discussed in the volume's examination of the various ways in which film mediates personal and collective memories of this critical historical event.This volume will be an invaluable resource, not only to those interested in French Cinema or the cinema of the Great War, but also to those interested in the impacts of war, more generally, on the cultural output of nations torn by the violence, death, and destruction of military conflict.
- Published
- 2016
43. Financial Crimes: Psychological, Technological, and Ethical Issues
- Author
-
Michel Dion, David Weisstub, Jean-Loup Richet, Michel Dion, David Weisstub, and Jean-Loup Richet
- Subjects
- Commercial crimes
- Abstract
This book on the psychology of white collar criminals discusses various cases of financial crime, while also attempting to delve into the minds of the criminals in question. The literature on this topic is growing as it gains momentum in the scientific field, as a result of the extremely negative impact white collar crime has on its victims. Because there is considerable damage and vulnerability from these crimes, it is important to begin to classify them, and to understand the minds of those that commit these offenses. While the current literature is not extensive, this work provides a closer look into the various ethical and legal facets of financial crime, and helps to uncover the social, psychological and neurobiological factors that intersect in the minds of those criminals.
- Published
- 2016
44. Dangerous Language — Esperanto Under Hitler and Stalin
- Author
-
Ulrich Lins and Ulrich Lins
- Subjects
- Historical linguistics, Sociolinguistics, Discrimination in language--History--20th century, Esperanto--Germany--History--20th century, Esperanto--Soviet Union--History
- Abstract
This is Volume 1 of Dangerous Language. This book examines the rise of the international language Esperanto, launched in 1887 as a proposed solution to national conflicts and a path to a more tolerant world. The chapters in this volume chart the emergence of Esperanto as an answer to a widespread democratic desire for direct person-to-person international communication regardless of political boundaries. Its early success was limited, mostly because of the Czarist regime's suspicion of direct communication with foreigners, and, later, similar suspicion by dictatorial regimes generally. As speakers of a'dangerous language,'its adepts were harassed and persecuted, especially in Germany and the Soviet Union. This book argues that the fate of Esperanto over the 130 years of its existence serves as a barometer to measure the degree to which regimes tolerate spontaneous personal contact with other countries and allow the pursuit of self-education outside prescribed national or ideological constraints. This book will appeal to a wide readership, including linguists, historians, political scientists and others interested in the history of the twentieth century from the unusual perspective of language. This volume is complemented by the sister volume Dangerous Language - Esperanto and the Decline of Stalinism which offers a concentration on the Cold War history of Esperanto in Eastern Europe.
- Published
- 2016
45. Radio and the Politics of Sound in Interwar France, 1921–1939
- Author
-
Rebecca P. Scales and Rebecca P. Scales
- Subjects
- Politics and culture--France--History--20th century, Mass media--Social aspects--France--History--20th century, Mass media--Political aspects--France--History--20th century, Radio broadcasting--Social aspects--France--History--20th century, Radio broadcasting--Political aspects--France--History--20th century, Sound--Political aspects--France--History--20th century, Sound--Social aspects--France--History--20th century
- Abstract
In December 1921, France broadcast its first public radio program from a transmitter on the Eiffel Tower. In the decade that followed, radio evolved into a mass media capable of reaching millions. Crowds flocked to loudspeakers on city streets to listen to propaganda, children clustered around classroom radios, and families tuned in from their living rooms. Radio and the Politics of Sound in Interwar France, 1921–1939 examines the impact of this auditory culture on French society and politics, revealing how broadcasting became a new platform for political engagement, transforming the act of listening into an important, if highly contested, practice of citizenship. Rejecting models of broadcasting as the weapon of totalitarian regimes or a tool for forging democracy from above, the book offers a more nuanced picture of the politics of radio by uncovering competing interpretations of listening and diverse uses of broadcast sound that flourished between the world wars.
- Published
- 2016
46. Mobilizing Nature : The Environmental History of War and Militarization in Modern France
- Author
-
Chris Pearson and Chris Pearson
- Subjects
- War--Environmental aspects--France--History
- Abstract
Mobilizing nature traces the environmental history of war and militarisation in France, from the creation of Châlons Camp in 1857 to military environmentalist policies in the twentieth century. It offers a fresh perspective on the well-known histories of the Franco-Prussian War, Western Front (1914-18), Second World War, Cold War and the anti-base campaign at Larzac, whilst uncovering the largely'hidden'history of the numerous military bases and other installations that pepper the French countryside. Mobilising nature argues that the history of war and militarisation can only be fully understood if human and environmental histories are considered in tandem. Preparing for and conducting wars were only made possible through the active manipulation and mobilisation of topographies, climatic conditions, vegetation and animals. But the military has not monopolised the mobilisation of nature. Protesters against militarisation have consistently drawn on images of peaceful and productive civilian environments as the preferable alternative to destructive tanks and bombs. Written in an accessible style, Mobilizing nature will appeal to readers interested in modern France, environmental history, military geographies and histories, anti-military protests, and environmentalism.
- Published
- 2016
47. Postmodern/Postwar and After : Rethinking American Literature
- Author
-
Jason Gladstone, Andrew Hoberek, Daniel Worden, Jason Gladstone, Andrew Hoberek, and Daniel Worden
- Subjects
- American fiction--21st century--History and criticism, Postmodernism (Literature)--United States, American fiction--20th century--History and criticism
- Abstract
Within the past ten years, the field of contemporary American literary studies has changed significantly. Following the turn of the twenty-first century and mounting doubts about the continued explanatory power of the category of “postmodernism,” new organizations have emerged, book series have been launched, journals have been created, and new methodologies, periodizations, and thematics have redefined the field. Postmodern/Postwar—and After aims to be a field-defining book—a sourcebook for the new and emerging critical terrain—that explores the postmodern/postwar period and what comes after. The first section of essays returns to the category of the “post-modern” and argues for the usefulness of key concepts and themes from postmodernism to the study of contemporary literature, or reevaluates postmodernism in light of recent developments in the field and historical and economic changes in the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries. These essays take the contemporary abandonments of postmodernism as an occasion to assess the current states of postmodernity. After that, the essays move to address the critical shift away from postmodernism as a description of the present, and toward a new sense of postmodernism as just one category among many that scholars can use to describe the recent past. The final section looks forward and explores the question of what comes after the postwar/postmodern. Taken together, these essays from leading and emerging scholars on the state of twenty-first-century literary studies provide a number of frameworks for approaching contemporary literature as influenced by, yet distinct from, postmodernism. The result is an indispensable guide that seeks to represent and understand the major overhauling of postwar American literary studies that is currently underway.
- Published
- 2016
48. Tense Future : Modernism, Total War, Encyclopedic Form
- Author
-
Paul K. Saint-Amour and Paul K. Saint-Amour
- Subjects
- Modernism (Literature), War and literature, War in literature
- Abstract
We know that trauma can leave syndromes in its wake. But can the anticipation of violence be a form of violence as well? Tense Future argues that it can-that twentieth-century war technologies and practices, particularly the aerial bombing of population centers, introduced non-combatants to a coercive and traumatizing expectation. During wartime, civilians braced for the next raid; during peacetime they braced for the next war. The pre-traumatic stress they experienced permeates the century's public debates and cultural works. In a series of groundbreaking readings, Saint-Amour illustrates how air war prophets theorized the wounding power of anticipation, how archive theory changed course in war's shadow, and how speculative fiction conjured visions of a civilizational collapse that would end literacy itself. And in this book's central chapters, he shows us how Ford Madox Ford, Robert Musil, James Joyce, Virginia Woolf, and other interwar modernist writers faced the memory of one war and the prospect of another, some by pitting their fictions'encyclopedic scale and formal turbulence against total war, others by conceding war's inevitability while refusing to long for a politically regressive peace. Total war: a conflict that exempts no one, disregarding any difference between soldier and civilian. Tense Future forever alters our understanding of the concept of total war by tracing its emergence during the First World War, its incubation in air power theory between the wars, and above all its profound partiality. For total war, during most of the twentieth century, meant conflict between imperial nation states; it did not include the violence those states routinely visited on colonial subjects during peacetime. Tacking back and forth between metropole and colony, between world war and police action, Saint-Amour describes the interwar refashioning of a world system of violence-production, one that remains largely intact in our own moment of perpetual interwar.
- Published
- 2015
49. World's Fairs on the Eve of War : Science, Technology, and Modernity, 1937–1942
- Author
-
Robert H. Kargon, Karen Fiss, Morris Fraser Low, Arthur P. Molella, Robert H. Kargon, Karen Fiss, Morris Fraser Low, and Arthur P. Molella
- Subjects
- World War, 1939-1945--Technology, World War, 1939-1945--Science, World War, 1939-1945--Propaganda, World politics--History--20th century, Exhibitions--Political aspects--History--20th century, Technology--Political aspects--History--20th century, Science--Political aspects--History--20th century
- Abstract
Since the first world's fair in London in 1851, at the dawn of the era of industrialization, international expositions served as ideal platforms for rival nations to showcase their advancements in design, architecture, science and technology, industry, and politics. Before the outbreak of World War II, countries competing for leadership on the world stage waged a different kind of war—with cultural achievements and propaganda—appealing to their own national strengths and versions of modernity in the struggle for power. World's Fairs on the Eve of War examines five fairs and expositions from across the globe—including three that were staged (Paris, 1937; Dusseldorf, 1937; and New York, 1939-40), and two that were in development before the war began but never executed (Tokyo, 1940; and Rome, 1942). This coauthored work considers representations of science and technology at world's fairs as influential cultural forces and at a critical moment in history, when tensions and ideological divisions between political regimes would soon lead to war.
- Published
- 2015
50. Keywords for Disability Studies
- Author
-
Rachel Adams, Benjamin Reiss, David Serlin, Rachel Adams, Benjamin Reiss, and David Serlin
- Subjects
- Sociology of disability, Disability studies
- Abstract
Introduces key terms, concepts, debates, and histories for Disability StudiesKeywords for Disability Studies aims to broaden and define the conceptual framework of disability studies for readers and practitioners in the field and beyond. The volume engages some of the most pressing debates of our time, such as prenatal testing, euthanasia, accessibility in public transportation and the workplace, post-traumatic stress, and questions about the beginning and end of life.Each of the 60 essays in Keywords for Disability Studies focuses on a distinct critical concept, including “ethics,” “medicalization,” “performance,” “reproduction,” “identity,” and “stigma,” among others. Although the essays recognize that “disability” is often used as an umbrella term, the contributors to the volume avoid treating individual disabilities as keywords, and instead interrogate concepts that encompass different components of the social and bodily experience of disability. The essays approach disability as an embodied condition, a mutable historical phenomenon, and a social, political, and cultural identity.An invaluable resource for students and scholars alike, Keywords for Disability Studies brings the debates that have often remained internal to disability studies into a wider field of critical discourse, providing opportunities for fresh theoretical considerations of the field's core presuppositions through a variety of disciplinary perspectives.Visit keywords.nyupress.org for online essays, teaching resources, and more.
- Published
- 2015
Catalog
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