Concrete Revolutio Vol. 1

Concrete Revolutio Vol. 1
Author: BONES • Sho Aikawa
Publisher: Seven Seas Entertainment
Total Pages: 166
Release: 2019-08-01
Genre: Comics & Graphic Novels
ISBN: 1642758108

In a strange, alternate version of Tokyo, superhumans walk the streets: aliens, mutants, paranormals, and other impossible creatures. Jiro Hitoyoshi, a human agent in Tokyo's Superhuman Bureau, has dedicated his life to upholding peace and order for all of the city's denizens. Tokyo's got its fair share of villains--and when the bad guys get to be too much to handle for even the heroes, you can be sure Jiro Hitoyoshi will be on the case!

Concrete Revolutio Vol. 2

Concrete Revolutio Vol. 2
Author: BONES • Sho Aikawa
Publisher: Seven Seas Entertainment
Total Pages: 212
Release: 2019-08-01
Genre: Comics & Graphic Novels
ISBN: 1642758116

In a strange, alternate version of Tokyo, superhumans walk the streets: aliens, mutants, paranormals, and other impossible creatures. Jiro Hitoyoshi, a human agent in Tokyo's Superhuman Bureau, has dedicated his life to upholding peace and order for all of the city's denizens. Tokyo's got its fair share of villains--and when the bad guys get to be too much to handle for even the heroes, you can be sure Jiro Hitoyoshi will be on the case!

Concrete Revolution

Concrete Revolution
Author: Christopher Sneddon
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Total Pages: 283
Release: 2015-09-25
Genre: History
ISBN: 022628445X

Water may seem innocuous, but as a universal necessity, it inevitably intersects with politics when it comes to acquisition, control, and associated technologies. While we know a great deal about the socioecological costs and benefits of modern dams, we know far less about their political origins and ramifications. In Concrete Revolution, Christopher Sneddon offers a corrective: a compelling historical account of the US Bureau of Reclamation’s contributions to dam technology, Cold War politics, and the social and environmental adversity perpetuated by the US government in its pursuit of economic growth and geopolitical power. Founded in 1902, the Bureau became enmeshed in the US State Department’s push for geopolitical power following World War II, a response to the Soviet Union’s increasing global sway. By offering technical and water resource management advice to the world’s underdeveloped regions, the Bureau found that it could not only provide them with economic assistance and the United States with investment opportunities, but also forge alliances and shore up a country’s global standing in the face of burgeoning communist influence. Drawing on a number of international case studies—from the Bureau’s early forays into overseas development and the launch of its Foreign Activities Office in 1950 to the Blue Nile investigation in Ethiopia—Concrete Revolution offers insights into this historic damming boom, with vital implications for the present. If, Sneddon argues, we can understand dams as both technical and political objects rather than instruments of impartial science, we can better participate in current debates about large dams and river basin planning.

Marx’s Philosophy of Revolution in Permanence for Our Day

Marx’s Philosophy of Revolution in Permanence for Our Day
Author: Raya Dunayevskaya
Publisher: BRILL
Total Pages: 395
Release: 2018-10-02
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9004383670

Marx’s Philosophy of Revolution in Permanence for Our Day, a selection of writings by the Marxist-Humanist philosopher and revolutionary Raya Dunayevskaya, brings out the contemporary urgency of Marx’s work as a philosophy of revolution in permanence. That dialectic permeates the totality of Marx’s body of ideas and activities. Major themes include Marx’s transformation of the Hegelian dialectic; the inseparability of Marx’s economics, humanism, and dialectic; the battle of ideas with post-Marx Marxism, beginning with Engels; Black liberation, internationalism, and women’s liberation; today’s burning question of the relationship between spontaneity, organization, and philosophy; the emergence of counter-revolution from within the revolution; and the problem of what happens after the revolution.

Capital, Race and Space, Volume I

Capital, Race and Space, Volume I
Author: Richard Saull
Publisher: BRILL
Total Pages: 410
Release: 2023-05-15
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9004535179

In this first volume of Capital, Race and Space, Richard Saull offers an international historical sociology of the European far-right from its origins in the 1848 revolutions to fascism. Providing a distinct and original explanation of the evolution and mutations of the far-right Saull emphasizes its international causal dimensions through the prism of uneven and combined development. Focusing on the twin (political and economic) transformations that dominated the second half of the nineteenth century the book discusses the connections between class, race, and geography in the evolution of far-right movements and how the crises in the development of a liberal world order were central to the advance of the far-right ultimately helping to produce fascism.

Technology, War and Fascism

Technology, War and Fascism
Author: Herbert Marcuse
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 297
Release: 2004-01-14
Genre: Philosophy
ISBN: 1134774664

PUBLICITY TITLE Marcuse's most famous book (One Dimensional Man) has sold over 100,000 copies worldwide Kellner and Marcuse - both big names in their own rights First in a "series" of six - a must for libraries to have whole sets Revival of HERBERT MARCUSE LEGACY Marcuse's philosophy was so ahead of its time that its almost more appropriate now than it was in the 1960s

Modern Korea and Its Others

Modern Korea and Its Others
Author: Vladimir Tikhonov
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 276
Release: 2015-11-19
Genre: History
ISBN: 1317518616

The period spanning the 1880s to 1945 was a crucially important formative time for Korea, during which understandings of modernity were largely shaped by the images of Korea’s neighbours to the east, west and north. China, Japan and Russia represented at some moments modern threats, but also denoted a range of alternative modernity possibilities, and ultimately provided a model for Korea’s pre-colonial and colonial modernity. This book explores the way in which modern Korea perceived its geographic neighbours from the 1890s until 1945. It shows that Korea's modern nationalism was at the same time internationalist in its orientation, as the vision of Korea’s ideal place in the world and brighter national future was often linked to the examples (positive and negative), threats (perceived and real) and allies abroad. Exploring the importance of the international knowledge and experience for the formation of the Korean nationalist paradigms, it offers nuance to the existing picture of the international connections and environment of the Korean national movements. It shows that the picture of Japan inside the anti-Japanese independence movement of the colonial period was more complicated than simple hatred of the invaders: modern achievements of Japan were admired even by anti-colonial nationalists as a possible model for Korea. The book also demonstrates the extent to which Chinese and Soviet revolutions influenced the thinking of modern Korean intellectuals across the whole ideological spectrum. Introducing new sources presented in English for the first time, and including themes such as race and ethnicity, global revolution, and gender, this book will be of great interest to students and scholars of Korean, East Asian and Russian history, as well as historians of the colonial/modern era more generally.

Border of Water and Ice

Border of Water and Ice
Author: Joseph A. Seeley
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Total Pages: 141
Release: 2024-10-15
Genre: History
ISBN: 1501777408

Border of Water and Ice explores the significance of the Yalu River as a strategic border between Korea and Manchuria (Northeast China) during a period of Japanese imperial expansion into the region. The Yalu's seasonal patterns of freezing, thawing, and flooding shaped colonial efforts to control who and what could cross the border. Joseph A. Seeley shows how the unpredictable movements of water, ice, timber-cutters, anti-Japanese guerrillas, smugglers, and other borderland actors also spilled outside the bounds set by Japanese colonizers, even as imperial border-making reinforced Japan's wider political and economic power. Drawing on archival sources in Japanese, Korean, Chinese, and English, Seeley tells the story of the river and the imperial border haphazardly imposed on its surface from 1905 to 1945 to show how rivers and other nonhuman actors play an active role in border creation and maintenance. Emphasizing the tenuous, environmentally contingent nature of imperial border governance, Border of Water and Ice argues for the importance of understanding history across the different seasons.

Karl Marx’s Theory of Revolution Vol. II

Karl Marx’s Theory of Revolution Vol. II
Author: Hal Draper
Publisher: NYU Press
Total Pages: 768
Release: 1978
Genre: History
ISBN: 0853454396

This is the second installment of Hal Draper’s incomparable treatment of Marx’s political theory, policy, and practice. In forceful and readable language, Draper ranges through the development of the thought of Marx and Engels on the role of classes in society. This series, Karl Marx’s Theory of Revolution, represents an exhaustive and definitive treatment of Marx’s political theory, policy, and practice. Marx and Engels paid continuing attention to a host of problems of revolution, in addition to constructing their “grand theory.” All these political and social analyses are brought together in these volumes, as the author draws not only on the original writings of Marx and Engels but also on the sources that they used in formulating their ideas and the many commentaries on their published work. Draper’s series is a massive and immensely valuable scholarly undertaking. The bibliography alone will stand as a rich resource for years to come. Yet despite the scholarly treatment, the writing is direct, forceful, and unpedantic throughout, and will appeal to the beginning student as much as the advanced reader.

Disturbing Development in the Jim Crow South

Disturbing Development in the Jim Crow South
Author: Mona Domosh
Publisher: University of Georgia Press
Total Pages: 177
Release: 2023-03
Genre: History
ISBN: 0820363553

Disturbing Development in the Jim Crow South documents how Black employees of the cooperative extension service of the USDA practiced rural improvement in ways that sustained southern Black farmers' lives and livelihoods in the early decades of the twentieth century, resisting the white supremacy that characterized the Jim Crow South. Mona Domosh details the various mechanisms-the transformation of home demonstration projects, the development of a movable school, and the establishment of Black landowning communities-through which these employees were able to alter USDA's mandates and redirect its funds. These tweakings and translations of USDA directives enabled these employees to support poor Black farmers by promoting food production, health care, and land and home ownership, thus disturbing a system of plantation agriculture that relied on the devaluing of Black lives. Through the documentation of these efforts, Domosh uncovers an important and previously unknown episode in the long history of international development that highlights the roots of liberal development schemes in the anti-Black racism that constituted plantation agriculture and illustrates how racist systems can be quietly and subtly resisted by everyday people working within the confines of white supremacy.