Highway Robbery
Author | : Robert Doyle Bullard |
Publisher | : South End Press |
Total Pages | : 256 |
Release | : 2004 |
Genre | : Local transit |
ISBN | : 9780896087040 |
Publisher Description
Download New Routes full books in PDF, epub, and Kindle. Read online free New Routes ebook anywhere anytime directly on your device. Fast Download speed and no annoying ads. We cannot guarantee that every ebooks is available!
Author | : Robert Doyle Bullard |
Publisher | : South End Press |
Total Pages | : 256 |
Release | : 2004 |
Genre | : Local transit |
ISBN | : 9780896087040 |
Publisher Description
Author | : |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 276 |
Release | : 2005 |
Genre | : Conflict management |
ISBN | : |
A journal of peace research and action.
Author | : Pamela Fox |
Publisher | : University of Michigan Press |
Total Pages | : 298 |
Release | : 2008 |
Genre | : Music |
ISBN | : 0472050532 |
An in-depth look at the influences, meaning, and identity of this contemporary music form
Author | : Ananta Kumar Giri |
Publisher | : Springer Nature |
Total Pages | : 402 |
Release | : 2021-03-01 |
Genre | : Philosophy |
ISBN | : 9811571228 |
This book seeks to find creative and transformative relationship among roots and routes and create a new dynamics of awakening so that we can overcome the problems of closed and xenopbhobic roots and rootless cosmopolitanism. The book draws upon multiple philosophical and spiritual traditions of the world such as Siva Tantra, Buddhist phenomenology and Peircean Semiotics and discusses the works of Ibn-Arabi, Thoreau, Tolstoy, Gandhi and Raimon Panikkar,among others.The book is transdiscipinary building on creative thinking from philosophy, anthropology, political studies and literature. It is a unique contribution for forging a new relationship between roots and routes in our contemporary fragile and complex world.
Author | : James Clifford |
Publisher | : Harvard University Press |
Total Pages | : 424 |
Release | : 1997-04-21 |
Genre | : Language Arts & Disciplines |
ISBN | : 9780674779600 |
When culture makes itself at home in motion, where does an anthropologist stand? In a follow-up to The Predicament of Culture, one of the defining books for anthropology in the last decade, James Clifford takes the proper measure: a moving picture of a world that doesn't stand still, that reveals itself en route, in the airport lounge and the parking lot as much as in the marketplace and the museum. In this collage of essays, meditations, poems, and travel reports, Clifford takes travel and its difficult companion, translation, as openings into a complex modernity. He contemplates a world ever more connected yet not homogeneous, a global history proceeding from the fraught legacies of exploration, colonization, capitalist expansion, immigration, labor mobility, and tourism. Ranging from Highland New Guinea to northern California, from Vancouver to London, he probes current approaches to the interpretation and display of non-Western arts and cultures. Wherever people and things cross paths and where institutional forces work to discipline unruly encounters, Clifford's concern is with struggles to displace stereotypes, to recognize divergent histories, to sustain "postcolonial" and "tribal" identities in contexts of domination and globalization. Travel, diaspora, border crossing, self-location, the making of homes away from home: these are transcultural predicaments for the late twentieth century. The map that might account for them, the history of an entangled modernity, emerges here as an unfinished series of paths and negotiations, leading in many directions while returning again and again to the struggles and arts of cultural encounter, the impossible, inescapable tasks of translation.
Author | : United States. Congress. House |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 992 |
Release | : 1880 |
Genre | : United States |
ISBN | : |