Search results for ""fordham university press""
ME - Fordham University Press Young Reds in the Big Apple The New York Young Pioneers of America 19231934
£78.30
ME - Fordham University Press Politics in Captivity Plantations Prisons and WorldBuilding
£81.90
ME - Fordham University Press Democratic Anarchy Aesthetics and Political Resistance in U.S. Literature
£92.70
ME - Fordham University Press The American ArtUnion Utopia and Skepticism in the Antebellum Era
£31.00
ME - Fordham University Press Mother of Stories An Elegy
£71.10
ME - Fordham University Press Finding God in a World Come of Age Karl Rahner and Johann Baptist Metz
£9.09
ME - Fordham University Press Enlightened Spirituality Immanuel Kant Paul Tillich and Reinhold Niebuhr
£9.09
ME - Fordham University Press The War InBetween Indexing a Visual Culture of Survival
£27.99
ME - Fordham University Press Breaking the Bronze Ceiling Women Memory and Public Space
£23.99
ME - Fordham University Press Defective Institutions A Protocol for the Republic
£24.99
ME - Fordham University Press Cybernetic Capitalism
£27.99
ME - Fordham University Press In Excess Studies of Saturated Phenomena
Includes Reduction and Givenness and Being Given. In this title, the author argues for a phenomenology of givenness, with penetrating analyses of the phenomena of event, idol, flesh, and icon.
£31.00
ME - Fordham University Press Documentality
Written in an easy, often witty, style Documentality revises Foucault’s late concept of the “ontology of actuality” into the project of an “ontological laboratory,” thereby reinventing philosophy as a pragmatic activity that is directly applicable to our everyday life.
£33.00
ME - Fordham University Press Between Chora and the Good Metaphors Metaphysical Neighborhood
Bigger's larger goal is to align the primacy of the Good in Plato and Christian Neoplatonism with the creator God of Genesis and the God of love in the New Testament.
£71.10
ME - Fordham University Press Prolegomena to Charity
In seven essays that draw from metaphysics, phenomenology, literature, Christological theology, and Biblical exegesis,Marion sketches several prolegomena to a future fuller thinking and saying of love's paradoxical reasons, exploring evil, freedom, bedazzlement, and the loving gaze; crisis, absence, and knowing.
£66.60
ME - Fordham University Press Portrait Stories
What makes stories about portraits so gripping and unsettling? Through close readings of nineteenth-century portrait stories from different literary traditions, the book analyzes the way subjectivity is produced in relation to representations, focusing on the power to represent, especially its relation to gender, and on the act of seeing.
£39.00
ME - Fordham University Press Cool
A narrative history of the development of air conditioning from its beginnings to its current state, with an emphasis on its reception by members of the public.
£16.99
ME - Fordham University Press Listen
Examines what the role of the listener is, and has been, through the centuries. The author explains his love of musical arrangement (since arrangements allow him to listen to someone listening to music), and wonders whether it is possible in other ways to convey to others how we ourselves listen to music.
£74.00
ME - Fordham University Press We Charge Genocide
£97.34
ME - Fordham University Press The Location of Experience Victorian Women Writers the Novel and the Feeling of Living
£100.11
ME - Fordham University Press Devils Mile The Rich Gritty History of the Bowery
£15.99
ME - Fordham University Press Democratic Anarchy Aesthetics and Political Resistance in U.S. Literature
£27.99
ME - Fordham University Press Assembling Futures Economy Ecology Democracy and Religion
£92.70
ME - Fordham University Press Reading the Impossible Sexual Difference Critique and the Stamp of History
£19.99
ME - Fordham University Press Philosophizing the Americas
£27.99
Carcanet Press Ltd Stone Sleeper
Inspired by tombstones and their inscriptions, Mak Dizdar's rich and haunting poems in "Stone Sleeper", his most famous work, are a journey into the mysterious heart of medieval Bosnia. The poems form a three-way dialogue between the modern poet, the Christian heretics awaiting Judgement Day beneath their enigmatically-carved tombstones, and the heretic-hunters. Beneath the local and temporal, Dizdar explores universal issues: the value of resistance, though it might be futile; of faith, though it might be illusory; and, of life, though it ends in death. Francis R Jones' inventive and beautiful translations convey his deep understanding of Dizdar's purpose. In addition a penetrating analysis of "Stone Sleeper"'s historical, religious and spiritual background is given by the distinguished scholar Rusmir Mahmutaehajia, whose book "Across the Water: On the Poetry of Mak Dizdar" is published by Fordham University Press.
£12.42
The Lilliput Press Ltd Out of the Ordinary: A Life through Gender and Spiritual Transitions
Now available for the first time in Ireland and the UK - more than half a century after it was written - is the memoir of Michael Dillon/Lobzang Jivaka (1915-62), the Anglo-Irish doctor and Buddhist monastic novice chiefly known to scholars of sex, gender, and sexuality for his pioneering transition from female to male between 1939 and 1949, and for his groundbreaking 1946 book Self: A Study in Ethics and Endocrinology. Here at last is Dillon/Jivaka's extraordinary life story told in his own words. Out of the Ordinary captures Dillon/Jivaka's various journeys - to Oxford, into medicine, across the world by ship - within the major narratives of his gender and religious journeys. Moving chronologically, Dillon/Jivaka was from Lismullin House, County Meath, but spent his childhood in Folkestone, England, where he was raised by spinster aunts, telling of his days at Oxford immersed in theology, classics, and rowing. He recounts his hormonal transition while working as an auto mechanic and fire watcher in Bristol during World War II and describes his surgical transition under Sir Harold Gillies while Dillon himself attended medical school at Trinity College, Dublin (1945-51). He details his travels as a ship's surgeon in the British Merchant Navy with extensive commentary on his engagement with colonial and postcolonial subjects in Asia, followed by his 'outing' by the British press while he served aboard The City of Bath. Out of the Ordinary is not only a unique record of early gender affirmation but also a compelling account of religious conversion in the mid-twentieth century. Dillon/Jivaka chronicles his gradual shift from Anglican Christianity to the esoteric spiritual systems of George Gurdjieff and Peter Ouspensky, to Theravada and finally Mahayana Buddhism. He concludes his memoir with the contested circumstances of his Buddhist monastic ordination in India and Tibet. Ultimately, while Dillon/Jivaka died before becoming a monk, his novice ordination was significant: it made him the first white European man to be ordained in the Tibetan Buddhist tradition. This first-person narrative, written in the early 1960s and first published more than a generation later in the US by Fordham University Press, is both ahead of its time and distinctly of its time and class, with Dillon's views being sometimes enlightened, sometimes colonial. A Foreword by Susan Stryker from the Fordham University Press edition describes Dillon as 'a seeker after truth, who traveled wherever his queries led him'. An Afterword, 'A Mapless Journey', by London-based literary agent Andrew Hewson - unique to the Lilliput Press edition - traces the typescript memoir's provenance and preservation prior to its eventual publication. An introductory biographical essay by consultant psychologist Aidan Collins gives an overview of the timeline of this remarkable individual's history. Out of the Ordinary is a landmark publication that sets free a singular voice from within the history of the transgender movement.
£16.00