Welcome to our book review site www.go-pdf.online!

You may have to Search all our reviewed books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.

Sign up

Cultures of Fear
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 454

Cultures of Fear

  • Type: Book
  • -
  • Published: 2009-10-09
  • -
  • Publisher: Pluto Books

This collection of essays explores the formation and normalisation of fear in the context of war and terrorism. Freedom from fear is a universal right and fundamental for human well-being. People often look to governments, humanitarian agencies, and other institutions to further this aim. However, this book shows that these organisations often use the same logic of fear to monitor, control, and contain human beings in zones of violence. This is an excellent interdisciplinary reader for students of anthropology, sociology and politics. Contributors include Noam Chomsky, Slavoj Zizek, Jean Baudrillard, Catharine MacKinnon, Neil Smith, Cynthia Enloe, David L. Altheide, Cynthia Cockburn and Carolyn Nordstrum.

Post-Millennial Cultures of Fear in Literature
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 295

Post-Millennial Cultures of Fear in Literature

The words fear, risk and safety have come to define our contemporary age and have been construed as a dynamic background in the human sciences against which most risk narratives, imaginative or otherwise, can be read. This volume brings together original articles to investigate “cultures of fear” in post-millennial works and covers a wide variety of topics ranging from post-millennial political fictions, post-humanist and postcolonial rewritings to trauma narratives, risk narratives, literary disaster discourses and apocalyptic scenarios. Featuring theoretical and analytical approaches with insights borrowed from multiple disciplines, this book will be of interest for scholars and researchers working in the fields of literary and cultural studies, as well as the general reader.

Invisible Atrocities
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 313

Invisible Atrocities

  • Categories: Law

This book assesses the role aesthetic factors play in shaping what forms of mass violence are viewed as international crimes.

The New Normal
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 241

The New Normal

The New Normal explores the relation between the subject and the state after the events of 9/11 that left the world stunned. It looks at this relation through the lens of trauma for the mind, biopolitics for the body and visuality for the body politic. This interpretive frame helps examine how the 9/11 violence created a moment where the mind, body and body politic could be redefined after 9/11. In an important theoretical intervention into 21st-century American Studies, it asks what the relation between the state and those it expels from its citizenry is. It makes a special mention of sites of incarceration such as Guantanamo Bay and Abu Ghraib as 9/11 phenomena. While referring to sources as diverse as 9/11 poetry, political and presidential speeches, journalistic accounts, atrocity photographs, and theories of trauma, biopolitics and visuality, the book argues for the presence of a new normal.

The Oxford Handbook of Shakespearean Comedy
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 593

The Oxford Handbook of Shakespearean Comedy

The Oxford Handbook of Shakespearean Comedy offers critical and contemporary resources for studying Shakespeare's comic enterprises. It engages with perennial, yet still urgent questions raised by the comedies and looks at them from a range of new perspectives that represent the most recent methodological approaches to Shakespeare, genre, and early modern drama. Several chapters take up firmly established topics of inquiry such Shakespeare's source materials, gender and sexuality, hetero- and homoerotic desire, race, and religion, and they reformulate these topics in the materialist, formalist, phenomenological, or revisionist terms of current scholarship and critical debate. Others explore ...

Pandemic Protagonists
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 309

Pandemic Protagonists

During the first mandatory lockdowns of the Covid-19 pandemic, citizens worldwide turned to »pandemic fictions« or started to produce their own »Corona Fictions« across different media. These accounts of (previously) experienced or imagined health crises feature a great variety of protagonists and their (re)actions in response to the exceptional circumstances. The contributors to this volume take a closer look at different pandemic protagonists in fictional narratives relating to the Covid-19 pandemic as well as in existing pandemic fictions. Thereby they provide new insights into pandemic narratives from a cultural, literary, and media studies perspective from antiquity to today.

Development and Society
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 136

Development and Society

  • Type: Book
  • -
  • Published: 2006
  • -
  • Publisher: Unknown

None

Confronting the Odds
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 282

Confronting the Odds

  • Type: Book
  • -
  • Published: 2009
  • -
  • Publisher: Unknown

The history of African American entrepreneurship has produced a number of studies of economic development on the national level, but few at the local level. This book was written to bridge that gap, and it provides a historical analysis of African American entrepreneurship in Cleveland, Ohio from the early 1800s to the present.

The Will of the Many
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 300

The Will of the Many

Lively account of how people power has shaped British history -- from Peterloo to the Poll tax and beyond.

A World of Insecurity
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 318

A World of Insecurity

A pioneering contribution to the emergent anthropology of human security that brings classic concerns of the field into the 21st century.