Your Search Results(showing 11)

    • Trusted Partner
      Literature & Literary Studies
      August 2022

      Our real life in tombs

      by Angela Blumberg, Andrew Smith, Anna Barton

    • Trusted Partner
      Humanities & Social Sciences
      April 2020

      Anarchism, 1914–18

      Internationalism, anti-militarism and war

      by Ruth Kinna, Matthew S. Adams

      Anarchism 1914-18 is the first systematic analysis of anarchist responses to the First World War. It examines the interventionist debate between Peter Kropotkin and Errico Malatesta which split the anarchist movement in 1914 and provides a historical and conceptual analysis of debates conducted in European and American movements about class, nationalism, internationalism, militarism, pacifism and cultural resistance. Contributions discuss the justness of war, non-violence and pacifism, anti-colonialism, pro-feminist perspectives on war and the potency of myths about the war and revolution for the reframing of radical politics in the 1920s and beyond. Divisions about the war and the experience of being caught on the wrong side of the Bolshevik Revolution encouraged anarchists to reaffirm their deeply-held rejection of vanguard socialism and develop new strategies that drew on a plethora of anti-war activities.

    • Photographic reportage
      January 2015

      Aestheticizing Public Space

      by Pan, Lu

    • October 2010

      Choreographing Asian America

      by Yutian Wong

      A critical study of Asian American performance and creative process

    • May 2011

      The Jewel-Hinged Jaw

      Notes on the Language of Science Fiction

      by Samuel R. Delany, other Matthew Cheney

      An indispensable work of science fiction criticism revised and expanded

    • History of art & design styles: from c 1900 -
      January 2017

      Hungarian Art

      Confrontation and Revival in the Modern Movement

      by Éva Forgács

      “I was unable to put down [this book]; one that will be used by those interested in the field for a long time to come.”– Dr. Oliver Botar, Hungarian Cultural Studies Insightful essays, monographic texts, and rarely-seen images trace from birth to maturation several generations of Hungarian Modernism, from the avant-garde to neo-avant-garde. Éva Forgács corrects long-standing misconceptions about Hungarian art while examining the work and social milieu of dozens of important Hungarian artists. The book also paints a fascinating image of twentieth-century Budapest as a microcosm of the social and political turmoil raging across Europe up to and beyond the collapse of the Soviet Era.

    • Social & cultural anthropology
      May 2011

      Breathless

      Sound Recording, Disembodiment, and the Transformation of Lyrical Nostalgia

      by Allen S. Weiss

      Explores how early radio and sound recording influenced modernist literature.

    • November 2011

      On the Outskirts of Form

      Practicing Cultural Poetics

      by Michael Davidson

      Essays on modern and contemporary poetry from a cultural studies perspective

    • October 2013

      A Guide to Poetics Journal

      Writing in the Expanded Field, 1982–1998

      by Edited by Lyn Hejinian, edited by Barrett Watten

      An anthology of key texts in the development of contemporary poetics

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