This book seeks, in concrete historical terms, to deal with the issue of
constraining war on the basis of moral principles as found in Just War Theory.
As the book makes clear, this theory has its roots in transcultural
experiences, concepts, and principles.
This book explores and analyzes contemporary issues associated with
victimology in more depth than is possible in an introductory textbook.
Included are chapters on rape and sexual assault on the college campus, mass
shootings, institutional victimization, and child-to-parent violence, among
others.
This book examines how the video game industry's economic strategies have
changed over the past decade (2006-2016) from a media effects and game design
perspective. It also features discussions and analyses on the social impact of
these changes and how consumers have reacted to evolving marketing and design
strategies.
De-Whitening Intersectionality: Race, Intercultural Communication, and
Politics reevaluates how the logic of color-blindness as whiteness evolves
amidst current race and intercultural communication research, underscoring
that, in order to play well with intersectionality, research scholars must be
attentive to its origins and implications.
This book facilitates a critical reassessment of African immigrants, as well
as their transnational challenges. It promotes knowledge about Africans in the
Diaspora and the African continent through current and relevant case studies.
This book presents a history of the development of film noir and neo-noir in
Argentina, as well as a technical, aesthetic, and socio-historical analysis of
recent Argentine neo-noir films. It also considers the question of neo-noir
inscription of classic Hollywood noirs.
In this book, autoethnographies reflect a wide range of perspectives on grief
and loss to reflect the unique and individual experiences of each
contributor's story while also analyzing broader cultural themes and
discussing how we communicate about these experiences. číst celé
The Black male scholars within this important book are painfully aware that the brutal murder of George Floyd was not due to a few "bad apples." They understand that they are perceived as "threats" and "criminals" within a distorted white imaginary that is embedded with processes of mythopoetic construction, racial capitalism, and a deep anti-Black male social ontology. Edited by prominent philosopher George Yancy, Black Men from behind the Veil: Ontological Interrogations emphasizes the importance of Black male epistemic agency and the courage to speak the truth regarding an America that values Black male life on the cheap and that attempts to control the movement of Black men, their capacity to breathe, and their being through anti-Black technologies of surveillance, confinement, policing, and white nation-building. There is no single monolithic Black male voice that dominates this crucial and necessary text. Each voice speaks of pain behind the Veil, revealing narrative specificity and an important recursive truth: Black men, within the white American psyche, are both necessary and yet disposable. The existential and sociohistorical weight of this truth is made painfully clear through the voices of these Black men.
Bringing together work from twelve leading scholars in the field of
ecocriticism, Modernism and the Anthropocene explores the diverse ways that
early twentieth-century literature initiated far-reaching conversations about
the material and non-human world.
This collection of essays by dancers, scholars of ethnochoreology, dance
studies, drama studies, cultural studies, literature, and architecture
explores Irish-German connections through dancein choreographic processes and
on stage, in literary texts, photography, dance documentation, film, and
architecture since the 1920s.