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Guardian of the Wall - J. David Holcomb - Bog - Lexington Books - Plusbog.dk

Foundation for a Natural Morality - Edmund Wall - Bog - Lexington Books - Plusbog.dk

Breaking the Iron Wall - Habiba Zaman - Bog - Lexington Books - Plusbog.dk

The Philosophical Contexts of Sartre’s The Wall and Other Stories - Kevin W. Sweeney - Bog - Lexington Books - Plusbog.dk

The Philosophical Contexts of Sartre’s The Wall and Other Stories - Kevin W. Sweeney - Bog - Lexington Books - Plusbog.dk

The Philosophical Contexts of Sartre’s The Wall and Other Stories: Stories of Bad Faith presents a philosophical analysis of all five stories in Sartre’s short-story collection. Kevin W. Sweeney argues that each of the five stories has its own philosophical idea or problem that serves as the context for the narrative. Sartre constructs each story as a reply to the philosophical issue in the context and as support for his position on that issue. In the opening story, “The Wall,” Sartre uses the Constant-Kant debate to support his view that the story’s protagonist is responsible for his ally’s death. “The Room” presents in narrative form Sartre’s criticism that the Freudian Censor is acting in bad faith. In “Erostratus,” Sartre opposes Descartes’s claim in his “hats and coats” example that we recognize the humanity of others by using our reason. In “Intimacy,” Sartre again opposes a Cartesian position, this time the view that our feelings reveal our emotions. Sartre counters that Cartesian view by showing that the two women in the story act in bad faith because they do not distinguish their feelings from their emotions. The last story, “The Childhood of a Leader,” shows how the protagonist acts in bad faith in trying to resolve the question of who he is by appealing to the view that one’s roots in nature can provide one with a substantial identity. The stories are unified by showing the characters in all five narratives engaged in different acts of bad faith. The Philosophical Contexts of Sartre’s The Wall and Other Stories is written for scholars interested in Jean-Paul Sartre’s early literary and philosophical work, as well as for students interested in Sartre and twentieth-century French literature.

DKK 742.00
1

Understanding Occupy from Wall Street to Portland - - Bog - Lexington Books - Plusbog.dk

DKK 476.00
1

Balance - David Wall Rice - Bog - Lexington Books - Plusbog.dk

Israeli Feminism Liberating Judaism - Bonna Devora Haberman - Bog - Lexington Books - Plusbog.dk

Building Walls - Ernesto Castaneda - Bog - Lexington Books - Plusbog.dk

Building Walls - Ernesto Castaneda - Bog - Lexington Books - Plusbog.dk

The election of Donald Trump has called attention to the border wall and anti-Mexican discourses and policies, yet these issues are not new. Building Walls puts the recent calls to build a border wall along the US-Mexico border into a larger social and historical context. This book describes the building of walls, symbolic and physical, between Americans and Mexicans, as well as the consequences that these walls have in the lives of immigrants and Latin communities in the United States. The book is divided into three parts: categorical thinking, anti-immigrant speech, and immigration as an experience. The sections discuss how the idea of nation state constructs border, how political strategy and racist ideologies construct the idea of irreconcilable differences between whites and Latinos, and how immigrants and their families overcome their struggles to continue living in America. They analyze historical precedents, normative frameworks, divisive discourses, and contemporary daily interactions between whites and Latin individuals. It discusses the debates on how to name people of Latin American origin and the framing of immigrants as a threat and contrasts them to the experiences of migrants and border residents. Building Walls makes a theoretical contribution by showing how different dimensions work together to create durable inequalities between U.S. native whites, Latinos, and newcomers. It provides a sophisticated analysis and empirical description of racializing and exclusionary processes.

DKK 848.00
1

History as Prelude - - Bog - Lexington Books - Plusbog.dk

Handbook of Canadian Foreign Policy - - Bog - Lexington Books - Plusbog.dk

Playing Offstage - - Bog - Lexington Books - Plusbog.dk

Playing Offstage - - Bog - Lexington Books - Plusbog.dk

Fourteen scholars who work on campus or in the theater address this issue of what it means to play offstage. With their individual definition of what “offstage” could mean, the results were, predictably, varied. They employed a variety of critical approaches to the question of what happens when the play moves into the audience or beyond the physical playhouse itself? What are the social, cultural, and political ramifications? Questions of “how” and “why” actors play offstage admit the larger “role” their production has for the world outside the theater, and hence this collection’s sub-title: “The Theater As a Presence or Factor in the Real World.” Among the various topics, the essays include: breaking the “fourth wall” and thereby making the audience part of the performance; the theater of political protest (one contributor staged Waiting for Godot in Zuccotti Park as part of the Occupy Wall Street protests); “landscape” or “town” theater using citizens as actors or trekking theater where the production moves among various locations in the community; the way principles of the theater can inform corporate management; the genre of semi-scripted comedy and quasi-impromptu spectacle (such as reality TV or flash mobs); digitalized performances of Shakespeare; the role of Greek Theater in the midst of the country’s current economic and political crisis; how the area outside the theater became part of the performance inside Shakespeare’s Globe; Timothy Leary’s Psychedelic Celebrations designed to reproduce the offstage experience of LSD; WilliamVollmann’s use of Noh theater to fashion a personal model and process of life-transformation; liminal theater which erases the line between onstage and off. The collection thus complements through actual performance criticism those studies that see the theater as a commentary on issues—social, political, economic; and it reverses the Editor’s own earlier collection The Audience As Player, which examined interactive theater where the spectator comes onstage.

DKK 397.00
1

The Fantasy of Globalism - John V. Waldron - Bog - Lexington Books - Plusbog.dk

United City, Divided Memories? - Dirk Verheyen - Bog - Lexington Books - Plusbog.dk

Historical Sociology and Eastern European Development - Arne Kommisrud - Bog - Lexington Books - Plusbog.dk

Exploring Capitalist Fiction - Edward W. Younkins - Bog - Lexington Books - Plusbog.dk

Searching for Marx in the Occupy Movement - John Leveille - Bog - Lexington Books - Plusbog.dk

Searching for Marx in the Occupy Movement - John Leveille - Bog - Lexington Books - Plusbog.dk

Searching for Marx in the Occupy Movement is a critical, participant observation study of the Philadelphia branch of the Occupy Wall Street movement. John Leveille spent over nine months with Occupy Philadelphia as the members organized and carried out their protests. This book describes and analyzes the rise, the organization, and the demise of this group. The important events and activities of Occupy Philadelphia are discussed and dissected, with specific attention given to the confusions and chaos that permeated this group, and Occupy Wall Street more generally, which contributed to its rather rapid decline. A revisionist Marxism, informed loosely by the critical theory of the Frankfurt school, is used here to understand and explain the happenings of this protest group. The theory provides an epistemological and methodological framework for this study, and it is also used to account for the observed behaviors. Leveille argues that an essential conflict between humanism and the forces of rational capitalism lies at the heart of this protest movement. This conflict contributed both to the rise of Occupy and to its operations. It was manifested in two intersecting ways. One of these concerns the destabilization of the self in contemporary capitalism, which provided fuel for the movement. The second revolves around the limited abilities of existing institutional arrangements to manage or channel the essential conflicts related to values that are produced by rational capitalism. Ultimately, Searching for Marx in the Occupy Movement makes a controversial claim that the movement was as much, if not more, about democracy, morality, and the organization and experience of the self and of social life as it was about economic matters. The argument is made that Occupy was as much an expressive movement as it was an instrumental one. It was expressing contradictions produced by capitalism through extra-institutional means because the existing institutional arrangements have been and continue to be unable to manage or contain them.

DKK 980.00
1

Rock Music Icons - - Bog - Lexington Books - Plusbog.dk

Cuban Health Care - Mary Helen Spooner - Bog - Lexington Books - Plusbog.dk

Political Graffiti and Global Human Rights - Philip Hopper - Bog - Lexington Books - Plusbog.dk

Exploring Christian Song - - Bog - Lexington Books - Plusbog.dk

Exploring Christian Song - - Bog - Lexington Books - Plusbog.dk

This essay collection celebrates the richness of Christian musical tradition across its two thousand year history and across the globe. Opening with a consideration of the fourth-century lamp-lighting hymn Phos hilaron and closing with reflections on contemporary efforts of Ghanaian composers to create Christian worship music in African idioms, the ten contributors engage with a broad ecumenical array of sacred music. Topics encompass Roman Catholic sacred music in medieval and Renaissance Europe, German Lutheran song in the eighteenth century, English hymnody in colonial America, Methodist hymnody adopted by Southern Baptists in the nineteenth century, and Genevan psalmody adapted to respond to the post-war tribulations of the Hungarian Reformed Church. The scope of the volume is further diversified by the inclusion of contemporary Christian topics that address the evangelical methods of a unique Orthodox Christian composer’s language, the shared aims and methods of African-American preaching and gospel music, and the affective didactic power of American evangelical “praise and worship” music. New material on several key composers, including Jacob Obrecht, J.S. Bach, George Philipp Telemann, C.P.E. Bach, Zoltan Kodály, and Arvo Pärt, appears within the book. Taken together, these essays embrace a stimulating variety of interdisciplinary analytical and methodological approaches, drawing on cultural, literary critical, theological, ritual, ethnographical, and media studies. The collection contributes to discussions of spirituality in music and, in particular, to the unifying aspects of Christian sacred music across time, space, and faith traditions.This collection celebrates the fifteenth anniversary of the Society for Christian Scholarship in Music.

DKK 1009.00
1

Exploring Christian Song - - Bog - Lexington Books - Plusbog.dk

Exploring Christian Song - - Bog - Lexington Books - Plusbog.dk

This essay collection celebrates the richness of Christian musical tradition across its two thousand year history and across the globe. Opening with a consideration of the fourth-century lamp-lighting hymn Phos hilaron and closing with reflections on contemporary efforts of Ghanaian composers to create Christian worship music in African idioms, the ten contributors engage with a broad ecumenical array of sacred music. Topics encompass Roman Catholic sacred music in medieval and Renaissance Europe, German Lutheran song in the eighteenth century, English hymnody in colonial America, Methodist hymnody adopted by Southern Baptists in the nineteenth century, and Genevan psalmody adapted to respond to the post-war tribulations of the Hungarian Reformed Church. The scope of the volume is further diversified by the inclusion of contemporary Christian topics that address the evangelical methods of a unique Orthodox Christian composer’s language, the shared aims and methods of African-American preaching and gospel music, and the affective didactic power of American evangelical “praise and worship” music. New material on several key composers, including Jacob Obrecht, J.S. Bach, George Philipp Telemann, C.P.E. Bach, Zoltan Kodály, and Arvo Pärt, appears within the book. Taken together, these essays embrace a stimulating variety of interdisciplinary analytical and methodological approaches, drawing on cultural, literary critical, theological, ritual, ethnographical, and media studies. The collection contributes to discussions of spirituality in music and, in particular, to the unifying aspects of Christian sacred music across time, space, and faith traditions.This collection celebrates the fifteenth anniversary of the Society for Christian Scholarship in Music.

DKK 397.00
1

First Steps toward Detente - Richard D. Williamson - Bog - Lexington Books - Plusbog.dk

The Stalin Cult in East Germany and the Making of the Postwar Soviet Empire, 1945–1961 - Alexey Tikhomirov - Bog - Lexington Books - Plusbog.dk

The Vienna Summit and Its Importance in International History - - Bog - Lexington Books - Plusbog.dk

The Stalin Cult in East Germany and the Making of the Postwar Soviet Empire, 1945–1961 - Alexey Tikhomirov - Bog - Lexington Books - Plusbog.dk