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      • Trusted Partner
        September 1989

        In der Opiumhöhle

        Unbekannte Erzählungen des Autors der »Bauern«

        by Wladyslaw St. Reymont, Jan Zieliński, Olaf Kühl, Renate Schmidgall, Andreas Lawaty, Jan Zieliński

        Die vorliegende Auswahl, um vier Themenbereiche gruppiert (Drogen, Mystik, Erotik, Politik), versammelt Schriften Reymonts, die sich einer genauen Einordnung entziehen: Texte zwischen Erzählung, Reportage, Traumstück. In ihnen geht es um Drogenerfahrungen in einer Londoner Opiumhöhle, mystisch-religiöse Erlebnisse auf einer Wallfahrt nach Jasna Góra, um Traumgeschichten, in denen Erotik, Tod und religiöse Ekstase sich unentwirrbar vermischen, um den visionären Fall eines Despoten und seines Reiches, um den Kampf der linierten Katholiken gegen die russische Machtpolitik in den ostpolnischen Gebieten.

      • Trusted Partner
        True stories (Children's/YA)
        August 2018

        Niños

        by María Jose Ferrada, María Elena Valdez

        Thirty-four poems, one for each of the young children (all under the age of 14) that were executed, arrested or disappeared during the Chilean dictatorship. A book dedicated to all those little Chilean victims, but also to all the children that each day suffer the consequences of violence.

      • Trusted Partner
        January 2006

        Christoph Kolumbus

        by Frauke Gewecke

        "»Ich schenkte dem König und der Königin die indischen Lande; ich schenkte sie ihnen, so als gehörten sie mir.«Schon zu Lebzeiten hat Christoph Kolumbus an seiner eigenen Legende gestrickt, doch daß er eine »Neue Welt« betreten hatte, sollte der »Entdecker« Amerikas nie erfahren. Als Held und Heiliger verehrt, als selbstherrlicher und habgieriger Despot verachtet, hat Kolumbus die Nachwelt beschäftigt wie kaum ein anderer Entdeckungsreisender.

      • Trusted Partner
        The Arts
        November 2013

        Popular television in authoritarian Europe

        by Peter Goddard

        This lively and ground-breaking collection brings together work on forms of popular television within the authoritarian regimes of Europe after World War Two. Ten chapters based on new and original research examine approaches to programming and individual programmes in Spain, Greece, Czechoslovakia, Romania, the USSR and the GDR at a time when they were governed as dictatorships or one-party states. Drawing on surviving archives, scripts and production records, contemporary publications, YouTube clips and interviews with producers and performers, its chapters recover examples of television programming history unknown beyond national borders and often preserved largely in the memories of the audiences who lived with them. The introduction examines how television can be considered 'popular' in circumstances where audience appeal is often secondary to the need for state control. Published in English, Popular television in authoritarian Europe represents a significant intervention in transnational television studies, making these histories available to scholars for the first time, encouraging comparative enquiry and extending the reach - intellectually and geographically - of European television history. There is a foreword by John Corner and an informative timeline of events in the history of television in the countries covered. ;

      • Trusted Partner
        Humanities & Social Sciences
        June 2020

        Debates on Stalinism

        by Mark Edele, Roger Richardson

      • Trusted Partner
        Humanities & Social Sciences
        October 2024

        Egypt and the rise of fluid authoritarianism

        Political ecology, power and the crisis of legitimacy

        by Maria Gloria Polimeno

        Egypt and the rise of fluid authoritarianism focuses on the struggle of the post-2013 political authorities for internal political legitimacy after the crisis following the 2013 coup d'état. It explores the microstructural and macro-systemic dynamics of leadership, power, protests and the authority-making process in political systems. These cannot simply be defined as structural, political, social and economic projections of the authoritarianism of the past, but rather as a rupture with that past. The book offers a complex, ground-breaking socio-political and economic analysis into how the forging of an internal political legitimacy claim has eventually modified the regime in Egypt along the authoritarian spectrum, turning into a fluid autocracy closer to a non-exclusivist personalist regime. This shift had implications that resonated both politically and economically.

      • Trusted Partner
        Humanities & Social Sciences
        January 2024

        The urban life of workers in post-Soviet Russia

        Engaging in everyday struggle

        by Alexandrina Vanke

        Despite the intense processes of deindustrialisation around the world, the working class continues to play an important role in post-industrial societies. However, working-class people are often stigmatised, morally judged and depicted negatively in dominant discourses. This book challenges stereotypical representations of workers, building on research into the everyday worlds of working-class and ordinary people in Russia's post-industrial cities. The urban life of workers in post-Soviet Russia is centred on the stories of local communities engaged in the everyday struggles that occur in deindustrialising settings under neoliberal neo-authoritarianism. The book suggests a novel approach to everyday life in post-industrial cities. Drawing on an ethnographic study with elements of arts-based research, the book presents a new genre of writing about workers influenced by the avant-garde documentary tradition and working-class literature.

      • Trusted Partner
        December 2014

        Polycrates, Tyrant of Samos

        New Light on Archaic Greece

        by Carty, Aideen

      • Trusted Partner
        September 2019

        Bemerkungen zu ›The Authoritarian Personality‹

        und weitere Texte

        by Theodor W. Adorno, Eva-Maria Ziege

        1948 schrieb Theodor W. Adorno einen bis heute unpublizierten Text zum autoritären Charakter, in dem es nicht so sehr um einen Rückblick auf die Nazi-Barbarei geht, sondern vor allem und allgemeiner um das Individuum im Spätkapitalismus, das in Unmündigkeit gezwungen ist, diese aber auch zu wählen scheint. Besonders intensiv erörtert er die Dialektik der Aufklärung und die Bedeutung des Antisemitismus für die Kritische Theorie – also Themen, die angesichts der heutigen Krise des Politischen nichts an Aktualität eingebüßt haben. Neben den erstmals publizierten »Bemerkungen« enthält der Band weitere Schlüsseltexte zum autoritären Charakter und zur öffentlichen Meinung. Ein Kommentar der Herausgeberin erläutert deren Entstehungskontext und stellt Bezüge zu heutigen Debatten her.

      • Trusted Partner
      • Trusted Partner
      • Trusted Partner
        Humanities & Social Sciences
        February 2024

        Governing the military

        by Carlos Solar

      • Trusted Partner
        Fiction

        The Remains Of The Last Emperor

        by Prof Bayo Williams

        Haunting, intensely lyrical, its canvas teeming with unforgettable weirdos, The Remains of the Last Emperor is a memorable portrait of the last moments of a mad tyrant and the extraordinary events leading to his final extermination. A spellbinding narrative on power dementia, this novel reveals that not even the most crafty ruler can win against an enraged populace and that a determined people can unseat any tyrant. The book is a powerful political fable from the author of the award-winning book The Year of the Locusts.

      • Trusted Partner
        Humanities & Social Sciences
        January 2020

        Ideas of monarchical reform

        Fénelon, Jacobitism, and the political works of the Chevalier Ramsay

        by Joseph Bergin, Andrew Mansfield, Penny Roberts, William G. Naphy

        This book examines the political works of Andrew Michael Ramsay (1683-1743) within the context of early eighteenth-century British and French political thought. In the first monograph on Ramsay in English for over sixty years, the author uses Ramsay to engage in a broader evaluation of the political theory in the two countries and the exchange between them. At the beginning of the eighteenth century, Britain and France were on divergent political paths. Yet in the first three decades of that century, the growing impetus of mixed government in Britain influenced the political theory of its long-standing enemy. Shaped by experiences and ideologies of the seventeenth century, thinkers in both states exhibited a desire to produce great change by integrating past wisdom with modern knowledge.

      • Trusted Partner
        The Arts
        January 2019

        Marguerite Duras

        by Renate Gunther

        The first book in English to deal exclusively with Duras' cinema, including such films as India Song, Le Camion, and Nathalie Granger. Provides a lucid and stimulating introduction to her films, which is accessible to a wide readerhip, both specialist and non-specialist.. Locates the films in their autobiographical as well as social and historical context, making the book broadly interesting to students and teachers in all areas of French Studies.. The book's empahasis on gender issues widens it's appeal to include those working in Women's Studies, Gender Studies and Gay and Lesbian Studies.

      • Trusted Partner
        Business, Economics & Law
        November 2020

        Communists constructing capitalism

        State, market, and the Party in China’s financial reform

        by Julian Gruin

        Why has China's 'transition' to a market economy not catalysed corresponding political transformation? In an era of deepening synergy between authoritarian politics and capitalist economics, this book offers a novel perspective on this central dilemma of contemporary Chinese development, shedding light on how the Chinese Communist Party achieved rapid economic growth while preserving political stability. Drawing on extensive fieldwork and over sixty interviews with policymakers, bankers and former party and state officials, the book delves into the role of China's state-owned banking system since 1989, showing how political control over capital has been central to the country's experience of capitalist development. It challenges existing state-market paradigms of political economy and reveals the Eurocentric assumptions underpinning liberal perspectives towards Chinese authoritarian resilience.

      • Trusted Partner
        Humanities & Social Sciences
        July 2018

        Security sector reform in transforming societies

        Croatia, Serbia and Montenegro

        by Timothy Edmunds

        This book is about the relationship between societies and their security forces at times of great political and societal change. It uses the experiences of Croatia, Serbia and Montenegro to examine the control, management and reform of armed forces, police and intelligence agencies in the aftermath of conflict and authoritarianism. The book assesses the theory and practice of security sector reform programmes in the context of Europe and the Western Balkans, the relationship between security sector reform and normative international policy more generally, and the broader dynamics of post-conflict and post-authoritarian transformation. In so doing it addresses two underlying questions. First, how and in what ways does reform in the security sector interrelate with processes of domestic political and societal transformation, particularly democratisation. Second, how and in what ways do these processes relate and respond to internationally-driven efforts to promote a particular type of security sector reform as a component of wider peacebuilding and democracy promotion strategies.

      • Trusted Partner
        Plays, playscripts
        January 2007

        Galatea and midas

        John Lyly

        by Edited by George Hunter and David Bevington

        Galatea and Midas are two of John Lyly's most engaging plays. Lyly took up the story of two young women, Galatea (or Gallathea) and Phillida who are dressed up in male clothes by their fathers so that they can avoid the requirement of the god Neptune that every year 'the fairest and chastest virgin in all the country' be sacrificed to a sea-monster. Hiding together in the forest, the two maidens fall in love, each supposing the other to be a young man. Galatea has become the subject of considerable feminist critical study in recent years. Midas (1590) uses mythology in quite a different way, dramatising two stories about King Midas in such a way as to fashion a satire of King Philip of Spain (and of any tyrant like him) for colossal greediness and folly. In the wake of the defeat of Philip's Armada fleet and its attempted invasion of England in 1588, this satire was calculated to win the approval of Queen Elizabeth and her court.

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