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Salvage Archaeology in Painted Rocks Reservoir, Western Arizona: William W. Wasley and Alfred E. Johnson - University of Arizona Press on BibliOpen
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Salvage Archaeology in Painted Rocks Reservoir, Western Arizona
Salvage Archaeology in Painted Rocks Reservoir, Western Arizona

by William W. Wasley and Alfred E. Johnson

University of Arizona Press, 1965

ISBNs

Paper: 978-0-8165-0273-8

eISBN: 978-0-8165-5204-7 (OA)

About the Book
Salvage operations in Hohokam sites of the Colonial, Sedentary and Classic periods. Includes appendices on prehistoric maize and textiles.
Tags
Anthropological Papers, History
Open Access Information

License: CC BY-NC-ND 4.0

Meaning, Decision, and Norms: Themes from the Work of Allan Gibbard: Billy Dunaway, Billy Dunaway and David Plunkett - Michigan Publishing Services on BibliOpen
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Meaning, Decision, and Norms: Themes from the Work of Allan Gibbard
Meaning, Decision, and Norms: Themes from the Work of Allan Gibbard

edited by Billy Dunaway and David Plunkett
by Billy Dunaway

Michigan Publishing Services, 2021

ISBNs

Paper: 978-1-60785-464-7

eISBN: 978-1-60785-707-5 (OA)

eISBN: 978-1-60785-465-4 (standard)

About the Book
It is not an exaggeration to say that Allan Gibbard is one of the most significant contributors to philosophy over the last five decades. Gibbard’s work covers an impressive number of subfields within philosophy, including ethics, philosophy of language, decision theory, epistemology, and metaphysics. It also engages with, and makes significant contributions to, work from the natural and social sciences.

This volume is not a collection of artifacts from past decades of philosophy. Instead, it is a collection of essays that each make a significant contribution to contemporary work in philosophy. This reflects the fact that Gibbard’s work has not only had a massive influence on past discussion in philosophy but also continues to influence new directions of philosophical research.

With contributions from:
Sara Aronowitz, Simon Blackburn, Paul Boghossian, David Braddon-Mitchell, Nate Charlow, Stephen Darwall, Jamie Dreier, Billy Dunaway, Melissa Fusco, Sona Ghosh, Allan Gibbard, Bill Harper, Paul Horwich, Zoë Johnson King, Tristram McPherson, Howard Nye, Lauren Olin, Caleb Perl, David Plunkett, Peter Railton, Connie Rosati, Mark Schroeder, Alex Silk, Daniel J. Singer, Brian Skyrms, and Seth Yalcin.

Tags
Norms, Work, Ethics & Moral Philosophy, Essays, Philosophy
Open Access Information

License: CC BY-NC-ND

Shipping Out: Race, Performance, and Labor at Sea: Anita Gonzalez - University of Michigan Press on BibliOpen
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Shipping Out: Race, Performance, and Labor at Sea
Shipping Out: Race, Performance, and Labor at Sea

by Anita Gonzalez

University of Michigan Press, 2025

ISBNs

Cloth: 978-0-472-07724-3

Paper: 978-0-472-05724-5

eISBN: 978-0-472-90486-0 (OA)

About the Book
Shipping Out: Race, Performance, and Labor at Sea provides a rare perspective on performance by staff above and below deck on Caribbean cruise ships, as viewed through the lenses of race, class, and gender.  Drawing on her experiences as a destination lecturer on Caribbean cruise lines for twenty years, Anita Gonzalez offers a unique viewpoint as she examines contemporary Caribbean cruise culture as an ethnographically complex site where North American and European travelers are exposed to other cultures through the orchestrated experiences on ship, and via excursions to ports. Gonzales argues that the cruise ship experience is deliberately crafted to deliver the best immersive performance by its workers. However, the workers never leave the theater, they merely move below deck—and like ships’ stewards and cooks from previous centuries, they work within an imaginary where Global Majority people are envisioned as servants. By utilizing ethnography and archival materials to illustrate ship workers’ experiences on contemporary cruise ships, and then contrasting those circumstances with the personal accounts of workers on historical merchant ships, Shipping Out illuminates how workers’ presence on ships complicates notions of freedom and enslavement, home and journey, place and space.
About the Author
Anita Gonzalez is Professor of Performing Arts and Black Studies, and co-founder of the Racial Justice Institute at Georgetown University.
Reviews
Shipping Out is a compelling book that demonstrates how the experiences and lives of Black and Brown people in the cruise industry have been shaped by racialized dynamics of power and capital going back centuries. It is an eye-opening look into the world of individuals who serve as unpaid on-board entertainers that make up the cruise experience for paying travelers.”— Scott Magelssen, University of Washington

“Anita Gonzalez's Shipping Out is a brilliant contribution to performance studies and its ever-expanding repertoires of Black and Brown people in movement. She takes her reader on a riveting journey across oceans and time to understand how ships are sites for rich ethnographic, historical and cultural performance as well as exchange. Meticulously researched and accessibly written, this vibrant and nuanced study weaves together personal stories with historical accounts to complicate maritime pasts and contemporary cruise ship pleasures.”— Melissa Blanco Borelli, Northwestern University

Shipping Out is a compelling book that demonstrates how the experiences and lives of Black and Brown people in the cruise industry have been shaped by racialized dynamics of power and capital going back centuries. It is an eye-opening look into the world of individuals who serve as unpaid on-board entertainers that make up the cruise experience for paying travelers.”— Scott Magelssen, University of Washington

“Anita Gonzalez's Shipping Out is a brilliant contribution to performance studies and its ever-expanding repertoires of Black and Brown people in movement. She takes her reader on a riveting journey across oceans and time to understand how ships are sites for rich ethnographic, historical and cultural performance as well as exchange. Meticulously researched and accessibly written, this vibrant and nuanced study weaves together personal stories with historical accounts to complicate maritime pasts and contemporary cruise ship pleasures.”— Melissa Blanco Borelli, Northwestern University

Tags
Entertainers, Performance artists, Cruise ships, Minorities in the theater, Performance, Race, African American & Black, Performing Arts, Social aspects, Biography & Autobiography
Open Access Information

Label: The Herbert A. and Bessie W. Kenyon Dramatic Library

License: CC BY-NC

Shipwrecked: Disaster and Transformation in Homer, Shakespeare, Defoe, and the Modern World: James Morrison - University of Michigan Press on BibliOpen
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Shipwrecked: Disaster and Transformation in Homer, Shakespeare, Defoe, and the Modern World
Shipwrecked: Disaster and Transformation in Homer, Shakespeare, Defoe, and the Modern World

by James Morrison

University of Michigan Press, 2014

ISBNs

Cloth: 978-0-472-11920-2

eISBN: 978-0-472-90210-1 (OA)

eISBN: 978-0-472-12006-2 (standard)

About the Book
 
Shipwrecked: Disaster and Transformation in Homer, Shakespeare, Defoe, and the Modern World presents the first comparative study of notable literary shipwrecks from the past four thousand years, focusing on Homer’s Odyssey, Shakespeare’s The Tempest, and Defoe’s Robinson Crusoe. James V. Morrison considers the historical context as well as the “triggers” (such as the 1609 Bermuda shipwreck) that inspired some of these works, and modern responses such as novels (Golding’s Lord of the Flies, Coetzee’s Foe, and Gordon’s First on Mars, a science fiction version of the Crusoe story), movies, television (Forbidden PlanetCast Away, and Lost), and the poetry and plays of Caribbean poets Derek Walcott and Aimé Césaire.

The recurrent treatment of shipwrecks in the creative arts demonstrates an enduring fascination with this archetypal scene: a shipwreck survivor confronting the elements. It is remarkable, for example, that the characters in the 2004 television show Lost share so many features with those from Homer’s Odyssey and Shakespeare’s The Tempest.

For survivors who are stranded on an island for some period of time, shipwrecks often present the possibility of a change in political and social status—as well as romance and even paradise. In each of the major shipwreck narratives examined, the poet or novelist links the castaways’ arrival on a new shore with the possibility of a new sort of life. Readers will come to appreciate the shift in attitude toward the opportunities offered by shipwreck: older texts such as the Odyssey reveals a trajectory of returning to the previous order. In spite of enticing new temptations, Odysseus—and some of the survivors in The Tempest—revert to their previous lives, rejecting what many might consider paradise. Odysseus is reestablished as king; Prospero travels back to Milan. In such situations, we may more properly speak of potential transformations. In contrast, many recent shipwreck narratives instead embrace the possibility of a new sort of existence. That even now the shipwreck theme continues to be treated, in multiple media, testifies to its long-lasting appeal to a very wide audience.

 
About the Author

James V. Morrison has taught at Georgetown University and Davidson College and is currently Stodghill Professor of Classical Studies and Humanities at Centre College.

Reviews
"Centering his work on the Odyssey, Shakespeare's The Tempest, and Defoe's Robinson Crusoe--but also delving into epic poetry, drama, novels, sci fi, movies, and even television--the author demonstrates that humankind has had a continuing fascination with the idea of shipwrecked and stranded individuals confronting nature and the elements ... Recommended."
--Choice
— M.J. Smith, Choice

"Shipwrecked lives up to its promise and delivers a thorough treatment of this fascinating theme in literature and other forms of narrative art. ... Morrison’s book (impeccably produced, with several illustrations) guides the reader through four thousand years of literary and cultural history with erudition and ease. Critics and scholars specializing in one of the many authors and artists discussed may find individual chapters informative, but the non-specialist reader also will enjoy this account of how humans have experienced, imagined, and represented the catastrophe of shipwreck."
---Bryn Mawr Classical Review
— Miklós Péti, Károli Gáspár University, Bryn Mawr Classical Review

Tags
Modern World, Disaster, Disasters in literature, Shipwrecks in literature, Shipwreck survival in literature, Television, English Irish Scottish Welsh, Ancient & Classical, History & Criticism, European, Performing Arts, Literary Criticism
Open Access Information

Label: Knowledge Unlatched

License: CC BY-NC-ND

Forgotten Friendships: Yugoslavia and the Anticolonial Francophone World: Alexandra Perišic - Amherst College Press on BibliOpen
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Forgotten Friendships: Yugoslavia and the Anticolonial Francophone World
Forgotten Friendships: Yugoslavia and the Anticolonial Francophone World

by Alexandra Perišic

Amherst College Press, 2025

ISBNs

Cloth: 979-8-89506-018-6

Paper: 979-8-89506-016-2

eISBN: 979-8-89506-017-9

About the Book
Forgotten Friendships: Yugoslavia and the Anticolonial Francophone World examines transnational friendships and alliances between intellectuals from Yugoslavia and the Francophone African and Caribbean world during the mid-twentieth century. The book argues that transnational political friendships helped shape major intellectual movements like Négritude, African socialism, and global socialist feminisms, which surged beyond national, regional, and even diasporic spaces. Blending archival research, literary analysis, and biography, the book fills a significant gap in our understanding of how intellectuals from the Global South and the socialist world collaborated on shared goals of decolonization, anti-racism, and socialist worldmaking.

Forgotten Friendships emphasizes the ways in which writers, intellectuals, and activists envisioned alternative futures rooted in collaboration across peripheries. Personal bonds of friendship were not mere footnotes to the anti-colonial struggle, but vital political tools for rethinking global solidarity.
About the Author
Alexandra Perišić teaches at the Faculty of Media and Communications in Belgrade, Serbia, where she is also the vice-dean for academic affairs. She is the author of Precarious Crossings: Immigration, Neoliberalism, and the Atlantic (Ohio State University Press, 2019).
Tags
Literary Criticism
Open Access Information

License: CC BY-NC

Turning over a New Leaf: Change and Development in the Medieval Book: Erik Kwakkel, Rosamond McKitterick and Rodney Thomson - Amsterdam University Press on BibliOpen
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Turning over a New Leaf: Change and Development in the Medieval Book
Turning over a New Leaf: Change and Development in the Medieval Book

edited by Erik Kwakkel, Rosamond McKitterick and Rodney Thomson

Amsterdam University Press, 2012

ISBNs

eISBN: 978-94-006-0074-4 (PDF)

About the Book
Books before print – manuscripts – were modified continuously throughout the medieval period. Focusing on the ninth and twelfth centuries, this volume explores such material changes as well as the varying circumstances under which handwritten books were produced, used and collected. An important theme is the relationship between the physical book and its users. Can we reflect on reading practices through an examination of the layout of a text? To what extent can we use the contents of libraries to understand the culture of the book? The volume explores such issues by focusing on a broad palette of texts and through a detailed analysis of manuscripts from all corners of Europe.
About the Author
Erik Kwakkel teaches at Leiden University, where he directs the research project ‘Turning over a New Leaf: Manuscript Innovation in the Twelfth-Century Renaissance’.Rosamond McKitterick is Professor of Medieval History at the University of Cambridge.Rodney Thomson is Emeritus Professor at the School of History and Classics at the University of Tasmania (Hobart, Australia).
Reviews
"an outstanding contribution to the field of medieval codicology" -- Steven Vanderputten, professor Medieval History, University Ghent |"these essays do indeed ‘turn over a new leaf’ in the development of the history of the book" -- Marco Mostert, professor Medieval Literacy, University Utrecht)
Tags
Studies in Medieval and Renaissance Book Culture, Civilization Medieval, Manuscripts Medieval, Middle Ages (449-1066), 400-1450, 12th century, Medieval Book, Development, Medieval, Great Britain, Europe, History
Open Access Information

License: OA CC BY-NC-ND

A Dossier of Texts Relating to Gerosimos Avlonites: Ted A. Campbell - Bridwell Press on BibliOpen
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A Dossier of Texts Relating to Gerosimos Avlonites
A Dossier of Texts Relating to Gerosimos Avlonites

edited by Ted A. Campbell

Bridwell Press, 2025

ISBNs

Paper: 978-1-957946-34-4

eISBN: 978-1-957946-35-1 (OA)

About the Book
GERASIMOS AVLONITES (fl. 1752-1773) was a Greek Christian leader who consistently identified himself as the Greek Orthodox Bishop of Arcadia in Crete. A native of Corfu, then dominated by Venice, he worked in Crete during the period of Ottoman domination there. He traveled throughout Europe, visiting Holland, England, Sweden and Switzerland and leaving a trail of letters and other writings in mixed Greek and Latin in each place. His interactions with John Wesley and his ordinations of Evangelical ministers in the 1760s first prompted awareness of him. This volume gathers all known sources for Gerasimos with images of original manuscripts, transcriptions of manuscript materials, and translations.
About the Author
TED A. CAMPBELL is the Albert C. Outler Professor of Wesley Studies at Perkins School of Theology, Southern Methodist University, in Dallas, Texas. He is an elected Fellow of the Royal Historical Society of the United Kingdom (FRHistS).
Tags
Texts Relating, Dossier, Christianity, Europe, Religion, History
Open Access Information
Make It Rain: State Control of the Atmosphere in Twentieth-Century America: Kristine C. Harper - University of Chicago Press on BibliOpen
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Make It Rain: State Control of the Atmosphere in Twentieth-Century America
Make It Rain: State Control of the Atmosphere in Twentieth-Century America

by Kristine C. Harper

University of Chicago Press, 2017

ISBNs

Cloth: 978-0-226-43723-1

Paper: 978-0-226-59792-8

eISBN: 978-0-226-43737-8

About the Book
Weather control. Juxtaposing those two words is enough to raise eyebrows in a world where even the best weather models still fail to nail every forecast, and when the effects of climate change on sea level height, seasonal averages of weather phenomena, and biological behavior are being watched with interest by all, regardless of political or scientific persuasion. But between the late nineteenth century—when the United States first funded an attempt to “shock” rain out of clouds—and the late 1940s, rainmaking (as it had been known) became weather control. And then things got out of control.

In Make It Rain, Kristine C. Harper tells the long and somewhat ludicrous history of state-funded attempts to manage, manipulate, and deploy the weather in America. Harper shows that governments from the federal to the local became helplessly captivated by the idea that weather control could promote agriculture, health, industrial output, and economic growth at home, or even be used as a military weapon and diplomatic tool abroad. Clear fog for landing aircraft? There’s a project for that. Gentle rain for strawberries? Let’s do it! Enhanced snowpacks for hydroelectric utilities? Check. The heyday of these weather control programs came during the Cold War, as the atmosphere came to be seen as something to be defended, weaponized, and manipulated. Yet Harper demonstrates that today there are clear implications for our attempts to solve the problems of climate change.
About the Author
Kristine C. Harper is associate professor of history at Florida State University. She is the author of Weather by the Numbers: The Genesis of Modern Meteorology.
Reviews
“Few technological projects have been as bold and as bizarre as the mid-twentieth century attempts to control weather. Harper’s study—meticulously researched and clearly written—describes and analyzes all the multifarious projects in a compact text. This history of controversy and ignominious failure offers valuable lessons about how government in America behaves when it tries to impose its will, even upon nature itself.”
— Spencer Weart, author of The Discovery of Global Warming

Make it Rain is a comprehensive history of American efforts to control the weather and the hubris of those who promised to tame hurricanes and conquer drought. Harper’s account not only tells this fascinating story, it offers valuable historical context for those who are grappling with the challenges of climate change today.”
— Brian Balogh, cohost of Backstory with the American History Guys

“Harper’s detailed history of weather control in the United States, reminds us that clouds have been objects of desire and frustration for some time. Her story of the messy interface between science and government policy unfolds across the twentieth century, but it reaches its emotional crest in the 1950s. In that decade, fears of Soviet domination and dreams of drought-busting rain catalyzed government weather control projects motivated by utopian, if not Promethean, desires to use science and technology to benefit the American people.”
— Science

“In Make It Rain, historian Kristine Harper treats weather control as a political agent in the hands of the American state. Politicians at local, state and national levels issued edicts in pursuit of their political ends to bring enhanced 'sky water' to their thirsty districts, or to mobilize the clouds for diplomatic or military ends; ‘entrepreneurial scientists’ took their money and produced technical reports. But in the long run, the weather did what the weather does.”
— Nature

“Harper provides a detailed analysis of government involvement in attempts to force or prevent rain, disperse fog, increase snowpack, etc., from the late 19th century through the 1980s. These attempts were regarded by many as ‘fringe’ science at best, engaged by crackpots or con artists. However, serious problems with foggy airfields, drought, flooding, and hurricanes led to interest and funding from some mainstream scientists, governmental agencies, and legislators. Harper divides her work into three sections, beginning with the development of serious scientific attention to the issue, continuing with efforts to develop and regulate weather control by federal and state agencies, and ending with efforts to use weather control as a weapon and diplomatic ‘tool.’ Recommended.”
— Choice

Winner of the 2017 ASLI Choice Award for History
— Atmospheric Science Librarians International

“Delivers a compelling history of weather control. . .[Harper] provides an excellent treatment of the literature on science and the state and their evolving relationship.”
— Isis

"...well-researched and fascinating...Harper has written a book that will appeal to many different constituencies, particularly those interested in new work on the role of technology in governance, the role of the government in controlling nature, and particularly the relationship between experts and governments."
— James Bergman, Technology and Culture

Tags
Atmosphere, State Control, Weather control, Earth Sciences, Technology & Engineering, 20th Century, Public Policy, Science, Political Science, United States, History
Open Access Information

License: CC BY-NC-ND

Islam, Humanity and the Indonesian Identity: Reflections on History: Ahmad Syafii Maarif, Herman Beck and George Fowler - Leiden University Press on BibliOpen
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Islam, Humanity and the Indonesian Identity: Reflections on History
Islam, Humanity and the Indonesian Identity: Reflections on History

by Ahmad Syafii Maarif and Herman Beck
translated by George Fowler

Leiden University Press, 2018

ISBNs

Paper: 978-90-8728-301-8

eISBN: 978-94-006-0308-0 (PDF)

About the Book
"Islam exists in global history with its richly variegated cultural and social realities. When these specific cultural contexts are marginalized, Islam is reduced to an ahistorical religion without the ability to contribute to humanity. This limited understanding of Islam has been a contributing factor in many of the violent conflicts in the present day. Reflecting on Islam in Indonesia, the world’s third largest democracy, supporting the largest Muslim population, Ahmad Syafii Maarif argues for an understanding that is both faithful to Islam’s essential teachings and open to constantly changing social and cultural contexts. Building on this, he then addresses critical contemporary issues such as democracy, human rights, religious freedom, the status of women, and the future of Islam. Through this book the breadth and depth of the ideas of one of Indonesia’s foremost Muslim scholars are made accessible for English language readership."
About the Author
Ahmad Syafii Maarif is professor emeritus at Yogyakarta State University and founder of MAARIF Institute for Culture and Humanity. He was the chairman of Muhammadiyah from 1998 to 2005.
Reviews

“The force and sincerity of Buya Syafii’s thoughts are fully communicated.”


 
— SOJOURN: Journal of Social Issues in Southeast Asia

“It is good to have this book in English and thus accessible for students and readers more familiar with other parts of the Muslim world.”
— Journal of Southeast Asian Studies

“This book is valuable for its exposition of a characteristically modernist Muslim perspective on Indonesia’s future…. [it] has value for observers of modern Indonesian Islam as a reminder of a distinctively Indonesian conception of Islam and politics that is rather overlooked at present, and as an illustration of the difficulties attaching to the intellectual dimensions of that project.”
 
— Southeast Asian Studies

Tags
Debates on Islam and Society, Humanity, Islam and state, Islam and social problems, Southeast Asia, Islam, Democracy, Political Ideologies, Asia, Religion, Political Science, History
Open Access Information

License: OA CC BY-NC-ND

The Blind Masseuse: A Traveler's Memoir from Costa Rica to Cambodia: Alden Jones - University of Wisconsin Press on BibliOpen
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The Blind Masseuse: A Traveler's Memoir from Costa Rica to Cambodia
The Blind Masseuse: A Traveler's Memoir from Costa Rica to Cambodia

by Alden Jones

University of Wisconsin Press, 2013

ISBNs

Cloth: 978-0-299-29570-7

eISBN: 978-0-299-29573-8 (all)

About the Book
Through personal journeys both interior and across the globe, Alden Jones investigates what motivates us to travel abroad in search of the unfamiliar.
            By way of explorations to Costa Rica, Bolivia, Nicaragua, Cuba, Burma, Cambodia, Egypt, and around the world on a ship, Jones chronicles her experience as a young American traveler while pondering her role as an outsider in the cultures she temporarily inhabits. Her wanderlust fuels a strong, high-adventure story and, much in the vein of classic travel literature, Jones's picaresque tale of personal evolution informs her own transitions, rites of passage, and understandings of her place as a citizen of the world. With sharp insight and stylish prose, Jones asks: Is there a right or wrong way to travel? The Blind Masseuse concludes that there is, but that it's not always black and white.

Gold Winner for Travel Essays, Foreword Books of the Year

Gold Medal for Travel Essays, Independent Publisher Book Awards

Winner, Bisexual Book Awards, Bisexual Biography/Memoir Category

Finalist, Housatonic Book Awards

Longlist of eight, PEN/Diamonstein Spielvogel Award for the Art of the Essay

Finalist, Travel Book or Guide Award, North American Travel Journalists Association

About the Author
Alden Jones has lived, worked, and traveled in over forty countries, including as a WorldTeach volunteer in Costa Rica, a program director in Cuba, and a professor on Semester at Sea. Her work has appeared in AGNI, Time Out New York, Post Road, The Barcelona Review, The Iowa Review, Prairie Schooner, Gulf Coast, and The Best American Travel Writing. She lives in Boston.
Reviews
"Alden Jones is something of a 'Prodigal Daughter,' and she has come home from her long travels to tell us the stories from her own life and education. We both delight and learn from her wisdom and her tales of nine places in the world."—Brian Bouldrey, author of Honorable Bandit: A Walk across Corsica

"Wise, witty, and well traveled, Alden Jones has given us a beautifully written book that honors the wandering spirit in all of us. Take this journey with her and return newly alive to the pleasure of moving through the world."—Ana Menéndez, author of Adios, Happy Homeland!

“Jones celebrates the impulse to wander and recognizes the value in savoring vagabondage for the gift it ultimately is. An engaging travel memoir. ”—Kirkus Reviews

Tags
Costa Rica, Cambodia, Voyages and travels, Blind Masseuse, Traveler's Memoir, Memoirs, Travel, Biography & Autobiography
Open Access Information

License: CC BY-SA 4.0

Anglo-Saxon Literary Landscapes: Ecotheory and the Environmental Imagination: Heide Estes - Amsterdam University Press on BibliOpen
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Anglo-Saxon Literary Landscapes: Ecotheory and the Environmental Imagination
Anglo-Saxon Literary Landscapes: Ecotheory and the Environmental Imagination

by Heide Estes

Amsterdam University Press, 2017

ISBNs

Cloth: 978-90-8964-944-7

eISBN: 978-90-485-2838-7 (PDF)

About the Book
Literary scholars have traditionally understood landscapes, whether natural or manmade, as metaphors for humanity instead of concrete settings for people's actions. This book accepts the natural world as such by investigating how Anglo-Saxons interacted with and conceived of their lived environments. Examining Old English poems, such as Beowulf and Judith, as well as descriptions of natural events from the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle and other documentary texts, Heide Estes shows that Anglo-Saxon ideologies which view nature as diametrically opposed to humans, and the natural world as designed for human use, have become deeply embedded in our cultural heritage, language, and more.
About the Author
Heide Estes is Professor of English at Monmouth University. She has published Old and Middle English language and literature, focusing on sexuality and gender, the reception of Jews, and disability. She is editor with Haruko Momma of Old English Across the Curriculum: Contexts and Pedagogies, a special issue of Studies in Medieval and Renaissance Teaching forthcoming in 2016. She is founder of the scholarly group Medieval Ecocriticisms.
Reviews
"Anglo-Saxon Literary Landscapes makes a compelling case for the medieval world as a profitable site for further exploration by ecocritical and ecofeminist theorists." - Renée R. Trilling, Medieval Feminist Forum Society for Medieval Feminist Scholarship, Volume 54, Number 2, 2019 "This book is one of the most important to come out this year, as it is not only one which articulates interesting and important nuances about Old English literature, but it is also an activist-minded piece which raises significant questions about our present anthropocentric lives and the state of the medieval field. Thus, in her analysis of the sea in Beowulf, saints’ lives, and biblical epics, Estes draws parallels between Anglo-Saxon notions of the sea as a limitless resource with presentday hyperconsumerist treatment of the environment, and her discussion of Guthlac’s appropriation of the fenland wilderness compares it with colonialist ideologies which justified invasion and enslavement as processes civilizing wilderness regions." - Eric Lacey and Simon Thomson, The Year's Work in English Studies, Volume 98, Issue 1, 2019
Tags
Environmental humanities in pre-modern cultures, Old English ca. 450-1100, Landscapes in literature, Environmental Imagination, English literature, Environmental Conservation & Protection, Medieval, Nature, History and criticism, Literary Criticism
Open Access Information

License: OA CC BY-NC-ND

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Transcontinental Dialogues: Activist Alliances with Indigenous Peoples of Canada, Mexico, and Australia: R. Aída Hernández Castillo, Suzi Hutchings and Brian Noble - University of Arizona Press on BibliOpen
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Transcontinental Dialogues: Activist Alliances with Indigenous Peoples of Canada, Mexico, and Australia
Transcontinental Dialogues: Activist Alliances with Indigenous Peoples of Canada, Mexico, and Australia

edited by R. Aída Hernández Castillo, Suzi Hutchings and Brian Noble

University of Arizona Press, 2019

ISBNs

Paper: 978-0-8165-3857-7

eISBN: 978-0-8165-4343-4 (OA)

eISBN: 978-0-8165-3984-0 (standard)

About the Book
Transcontinental Dialogues brings together Indigenous and non-Indigenous anthropologists from Mexico, Canada, and Australia who work at the intersections of Indigenous rights, advocacy, and action research. These engaged anthropologists explore how obligations manifest in differently situated alliances, how they respond to such obligations, and the consequences for anthropological practice and action.

This volume presents a set of pieces that do not take the usual political or geographic paradigms as their starting point; instead, the particular dialogues from the margins presented in this book arise from a rejection of the geographic hierarchization of knowledge in which the Global South continues to be the space for fieldwork while the Global North is the place for its systematization and theorization. Instead, contributors in Transcontinental Dialogues delve into the interactions between anthropologists and the people they work with in Canada, Australia, and Mexico. This framework allows the contributors to explore the often unintended but sometimes devastating impacts of government policies (such as land rights legislation or justice initiatives for women) on Indigenous people’s lives.

Each chapter’s author reflects critically on their own work as activist-­scholars. They offer examples of the efforts and challenges that anthropologists—Indigenous and non-Indigenous—confront when producing ­knowledge in alliances with Indigenous peoples. Mi’kmaq land rights, pan-Maya social movements, and Aboriginal title claims in rural and urban areas are just some of the cases that provide useful ground for reflection on and critique of challenges and opportunities for scholars, policy-makers, activists, allies, and community members.

This volume is timely and innovative for using the disparate anthropological traditions of three regions to explore how the interactions between anthropologists and Indigenous peoples in supporting Indigenous activism have the potential to transform the production of knowledge within the historical colonial traditions of anthropology.
 
About the Author
R. Aída Hernández Castillo is a social anthropologist and feminist activist. She is a professor and senior researcher at the Center for Research and Advanced Studies in Social Anthropology (CIESAS) in Mexico City.

Suzi Hutchings is a social anthropologist working with Indigenous peoples in Australia in native title, social justice, and identity politics. She is a member of the Central Arrernte peoples.

Brian Noble is an associate professor in Dalhousie University’s Department of Sociology and Social Anthropology. His research concerns anthropology of science, techniques and expertise, earth conciliations, and anticolonial resolution of relations between Indigenous peoples and settler Canada.
Tags
Critical Issues in Indigenous Studies, Communication in anthropology, Indigenous Studies, Canada, Research, Mexico, Cultural & Social, Anthropology, Social Science
Open Access Information

License: CC BY-NC-ND 4.0

BiblioVault - Books about Charles Sanders Peirce
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Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce
Charles Sanders Peirce
Harvard University Press

The first six volumes of the Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce included Peirce’s main writings in general philosophy, logic (deductive, inductive, and symbolic), pragmatism, and metaphysics. Volumes VII and VIII are a continuation of this series. Originally published as two separate volumes, they now appear in one book as part of the Belknap Press edition. Volume VII contains papers on experimental science, scientific method, and philosophy of mind. Volume VIII contains selections from Peirce’s reviews and correspondence and a bibliography of his published works, speeches and correspondence, and works by other authors which quote or describe manuscripts by Peirce which are not included in Volumes I–VIII of Collected Papers.

As is true of the series as a whole, the material in these volumes is not readily accessible elsewhere. Many of the manuscripts have never been published before, and the previously published material which is included is widely scattered in a number of journals.

Peirce’s work in experimental science played an important role in his life and in the formation of his philosophy, and Volume VII is designed to show how the principal focus of his attention shifted from this sphere to the methods of science and finally to speculative metaphysics. Thus it includes his only published article in experimental psychology and two short pieces on gravity as well as the most important part of “The Logic of 1873” (in which pragmatism was first formulated in writing); “The Logic of Drawing History from Ancient Documents,” discussion of the historical method; “Economy of Research” (1879), containing many pertinent reflections on scientific methodology of interest to research directors today; and much more.

America’s first original philosopher and logician, and the founder of the philosophy of pragmatism, Peirce was also influential in shaping the thinking of such figures as William James and John Dewey. The reviews and correspondence contained in Volume VIII show his attitude toward these philosophies and illustrate the nature of his relationships with the great thinkers of his day.

The bibliography in Volume VIII lists chronologically all of Peirce’s known published works, giving a clear picture of the development of his thought from 1860 through 1911. It is more complete than any published so far in that many new items are included and items previously listed in different sources are here brought together.

These volumes will be of great value to all persons interested in philosophy, scientific method, psychology, the methodology of history, and American studies in general.

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Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce
Charles Sanders Peirce
Harvard University Press
With the present volume, the presentation of Peirce’s philosophical thought reaches its metaphysical culmination. It embodies the effort of the founder of Pragmatism to develop a metaphysics which will conform to the canons of scientific method, and at the same time provide for real novelty, objective universal laws of nature, cosmical and biological evolution, feeling, and mind. To his previously published papers on chance, continuity, God, and other metaphysical themes, the editors have added a considerable number of unpublished manuscripts which clarify and develop the implications of Peirce’s fundamental world-view. The volume contains those speculative views of Peirce which so deeply influenced his contemporaries, including his discussions of tychism and synechism and of the religious aspects of metaphysics.
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Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce
Charles Sanders Peirce
Harvard University Press

This volume contains the published contributions of one of the founders of modern logic and America’s greatest logical genius. It is not only of historical but of contemporary interest because of its many acute discussions of fundamental logical problems. To assist the general reader, the editors have prefixed to the text a selected list of important topics and have provided many footnotes and an exhaustive index.

The present, the longest volume of the series of Peirce’s Collected Papers, reveals most clearly his stature as a logician and a student of the foundations of mathematics. It includes not only some striking anticipations of recent work in logic and the foundations of mathematics but also a number of vital contributions to these subjects as now understood. In addition there is an entirely original treatment of logical diagrams which makes possible a detailed analysis of the process of reasoning and provides the link between modern logic and Peirce’s conception of pragmatism. It is the most advanced and important of the volumes on exact logic.

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Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce
Charles Sanders Peirce
Harvard University Press
Charles Sanders Peirce has been characterized as the greatest American philosophic genius. He is the creator of pragmatism and one of the founders of modern logic. James, Royce, Schroder, and Dewey have acknowledged their great indebtedness to him. A laboratory scientist, he made notable contributions to geodesy, astronomy, psychology, induction, probability, and scientific method. He introduced into modern philosophy the doctrine of scholastic realism, developed the concepts of chance, continuity, and objective law, and showed the philosophical significance of the theory of signs and mathematical logic. The present series is the first published edition of his systematic works.
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Studies in the Philosophy of Charles Sanders Peirce
Philip Paul Wiener
Harvard University Press


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