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Rita Singer deposited “Everything Remains the Same”: Julio Camba Travelling Spain in the group
Global & Transnational Studies on Humanities Commons 2 years, 6 months agoIn the first decades of the twentieth century, the Madrid-based Galician journalist Julio Camba (1882–1962) acquired long-lasting fame as a travel writer thanks to his foreign chronicles published in the Spanish press and subsequently compiled in a series of volumes. La rana viajera [The Travelling Frog] (1920), however, gathers some of the p…[Read more]
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Rita Singer deposited Money Matters: Encounter and Economic Disparity in Irish-language Travel Narratives in the group
Global & Transnational Studies on Humanities Commons 2 years, 6 months agoTravel has always been an extremely important theme in Irish-language literature, but often this travel was motivated by financial hardship and, up until the late twentieth century, Irish-language accounts of travel largely documented the emigrant experience. In more recent years, however, Irish-language literature has witnessed a transition from…[Read more]
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Rita Singer deposited A “Devolved Minority”: Contemporary German and French Guidebook Perspectives of Wales in the group
Global & Transnational Studies on Humanities Commons 2 years, 6 months agoGuidebooks play an important role in increasing the visibility of a nation, as they introduce the country to potential visitors and create images prior to travelling. However, they also tend to reinforce stereotypes and create “romantic fictions” (Mahn 2008). This article examines the representation of Wales in French and German guidebooks and con…[Read more]
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Rita Singer deposited “A language of wet stones and mists”: The Caribbean Poet as a Traveller in Wales and England in the group
Global & Transnational Studies on Humanities Commons 2 years, 6 months agoThis article examines Derek Walcott’s “travel poems” about Wales and England from the collections The Fortunate Traveller (1981) and Midsummer (1984) through the prism of Deleuze and Guattari’s concept of littérature mineure. As a Caribbean poet, Walcott is placed both outside the centre of “majority”, post-imperial civilisation and within the s…[Read more]
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Rita Singer deposited The Picturesque and the Beastly: Wales and the Absence of Welsh in the Journals of Lady’s Companions Eliza and Millicent Bant (1806, 1808) in the group
Women also Know Literature on Humanities Commons 2 years, 6 months agoIn spite of a burgeoning recognition of the Welsh language as part of a wider appreciation of Welsh culture at the beginning of the nineteenth century (see Constantine 2014: 124), Home Tour writing about Wales remained largely Anglocentric (Borm, quoted in Colbert 2012: 85). The journals written by lady’s companions, Eliza and Millicent Bant, in 1…[Read more]
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Rita Singer deposited The Picturesque and the Beastly: Wales and the Absence of Welsh in the Journals of Lady’s Companions Eliza and Millicent Bant (1806, 1808) in the group
Global & Transnational Studies on Humanities Commons 2 years, 6 months agoIn spite of a burgeoning recognition of the Welsh language as part of a wider appreciation of Welsh culture at the beginning of the nineteenth century (see Constantine 2014: 124), Home Tour writing about Wales remained largely Anglocentric (Borm, quoted in Colbert 2012: 85). The journals written by lady’s companions, Eliza and Millicent Bant, in 1…[Read more]
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Rita Singer deposited Introduction [‘Minoritised Languages and Travel’ special collection] in the group
Women also Know Literature on Humanities Commons 2 years, 6 months agoThis introduction to the MLO special issue “Minoritised Languages and Travel” provides an overview of the pieces in this collection in context with historical travel accounts in German about nineteenth-century Wales.
The contributions in this collection lay bare frictions between traveller and travelee as well as the inherent instability of soc…[Read more]
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Rita Singer deposited Introduction [‘Minoritised Languages and Travel’ special collection] in the group
Global & Transnational Studies on Humanities Commons 2 years, 6 months agoThis introduction to the MLO special issue “Minoritised Languages and Travel” provides an overview of the pieces in this collection in context with historical travel accounts in German about nineteenth-century Wales.
The contributions in this collection lay bare frictions between traveller and travelee as well as the inherent instability of soc…[Read more]
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Samuel Rosado-Zaidi deposited Presentación “Ludwig Feuerbach y el fin de la filosofía clásica alemana” in the group
Philosophy on Humanities Commons 2 years, 6 months agoUna dicusión crítica de la lectura de Engels. El marxismo tiene como potencia el propio marxismo, pero implica la autocrítica, ubicar a sus exponentes en sus condiciones históricas materiales concretas.
La tarea de los marxistas del presente es, como diría Hegel, actualizar los elementos revolucionarios del marxismo con las potencias revo…[Read more] -
Steve McCarty deposited Translation Issues in the Rapid Transmission of Esoteric Buddhism from India to China to Japan in the group
Global & Transnational Studies on Humanities Commons 2 years, 6 months agoThree consecutive patriarchs of Esoteric Buddhism were Amoghavajra of India, Huiguo of China, and Kūkai of Japan. This paper foregrounds the usually taken-for-granted but vital historical role of language education and translation in the international spread of religion and culture. There had to be sufficiently educated bilingual or multilingual…[Read more]
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José Angel GARCÍA LANDA started the topic Science and Philosophy in the discussion
Philosophy on Humanities Commons 2 years, 7 months agoIssues on the interface of contemporary science (e.g. physics, cosmology, evolutionism, bioengineering) and philosophy. First post, a retropost in Spanish, 2013: El Renacer del Tiempo https://vanityfea.blogspot.com/2013/07/el-renacer-del-tiempo.html
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Pragya Ranjan deposited Lysistrata: through a feminist’s lens in the group
Gender Studies on Humanities Commons 2 years, 7 months ago‘There is no truth, only perception of truth’, and that perception too changes with time. Lysistrata is one such text where this difference of perception prevails. Written by Aristophanes in 411 BCE, Lysistrata is one of the eleven Old Greek Comedy plays surviving out of forty-two. The play revolves around the Peleponnesian war, when women hav…[Read more]
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Rafael Neis deposited Book Preview: Rabbis & the Reproduction of Species in the group
Gender Studies on Humanities Commons 2 years, 7 months agoThis is pre-publication preview introduces the major questions, methods, and insights of my book When a Human Gives Birth to a Raven: Rabbis & the Reproduction of Species (UC Press, 2023).
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James Louis Smith deposited The nonhuman condition: Radical democracy through new materialist lenses in the group
Philosophy on Humanities Commons 2 years, 7 months agoThis Critical Exchange explores the nonhuman condition. It asks: What are the implications of decentering the human subject via a new materialist reading of radical democracy? Does this reading dilute political agency? Or should this be seen, on the contrary, as an invitation for new voices and demands to enter into democratic assemblages? How…[Read more]
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Sonia D. Andras deposited Selling Glamour: Marketing Western Women’s Fashion in Interwar Bucharest in the group
Gender Studies on Humanities Commons 2 years, 8 months agoThis paper explores the dynamics of women’s fashion marketing in advertisements and promotional materials related to Western ideas, materials or products. It will analyse published promotional visual and written texts in the interwar Bucharest press, with local or national distribution. The aim is to ascertain the degree and nature of Western w…[Read more]
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Pragya Ranjan deposited Cave of Spleen – a feminist perspective: Status of women in early 18th century England in the group
Gender Studies on Humanities Commons 2 years, 8 months ago“The Rape of the Lock” by Alexander Pope published in 1712 is a mock-heroic narrative which satirically
glorifies trivial incident of cutting of locks of protagonist Belinda. This poem was written in the
Augustan Era (1660-1784) which is marked by the period of scientific reason and rationality, whose
effect can be seen on the writers of those…[Read more] -
Liz Sparg deposited Generation to Generation in the group
Gender Studies on Humanities Commons 2 years, 8 months agoThis book brings together thirteen contributors from diverse backgrounds – mean and women born in Cameroon, England, Scotland, South Africa, Zambia. What they all have in common is years of service within their respective communities, working individually and within projects and programmes, with both young people and adults to build social c…[Read more]
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Christopher Griffin deposited Recognition Against Liberation: On the UK’s Unreformed Gender Recognition Act in the group
Gender Studies on Humanities Commons 2 years, 8 months agoIn this short article I argue that the UK government’s decision not to update the Gender Recognition Act 2004 (GRA) is more than a missed opportunity. It weaponises the GRA, now an effective instrument of assimilation and containment. The failure to reform the GRA seems like a maintenance of the status quo, but given that the circumstances have s…[Read more]
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Christopher Griffin deposited Covid Disobedience and the Autoimmune Self-Destruction of Liberal Individualism in the group
Political Philosophy & Theory on Humanities Commons 2 years, 8 months agoIn this short article, I discuss a form of civil disobedience that emerged during the Covid-19 pandemic: the refusal to comply with lockdown rules. Because such rule-breakers often claim that they are acting to preserve freedom, I ask whether their unwillingness to help prevent the spread of the virus is symptomatic of neoliberal individualism.…[Read more]
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Paul Dablemont deposited De la continuité entre non-sens et sens : réflexions d’après Deleuze, Ricœur et Wittgenstein in the group
Philosophy on Humanities Commons 2 years, 8 months agoA beginner reader might think that my title is senseless: aren’t sense and nonsense supposed to be opposed? Why seeking continuity there? The Stoics and after them this line that goes from Leibniz to Deleuze via Nietzsche, have revealed an intrinsic relationship of continuity between these two entities that common sense sees as contradictory.…[Read more]
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