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Interrogates the explosive potential of revolutionary anti-colonial 'afterlives' in contemporary Indian politics and society.
Drawing on a global history of politicized writing, this book explores literature's utility as a mode of activism and aesthetic engagement with the political challenges of the current moment. The question of literature's 'uses' has recently become a key topic of academic and public debate. Paradoxically, however, these conversations often tend to bypass the rich history of engagements with literature's distinctly political uses that form such a powerful current of 20th- and 21st-century artistic production and critical-theoretical reflection. The Political Uses of Literature reopens discussion of literature's political and activist genealogies along several interrelated lines: As a foundatio...
This book is an exploration of the rich, variegated, and intimate history of revolution as praxis.
A new global history perspective on the relationship between convict mobility and governance, nation building, imperial expansion, and knowledge formation.
The history of the modern riot parallels the development of the modern novel, and writers have collectively shaped perceptions of the riot as a form of political and social expression. The essays in this volume analyse literature's dialogue with the histories of violence bound up in the riot as an inherently volatile form of collective action.
John Wooldridge was born in about 1678. He married Martha and they had six children. He died in 1757. Descendants and relatives lived mainly in Virginia, West Virginia, Kentucky, Tennessee, Georgia, Missouri, Kansas, Mississippi, Arkansas, Louisiana, Oklahoma, Texas and Oregon.