Search results for ""Duke University Press""
Duke University Press Signs of Borges
Available for the first time in English, Signs of Borges is widely regarded as the best single book on the work of Jorge Luis Borges. With a critical sensibility informed by Barthes, Lacan, Foucault, Blanchot, and the entire body of Borges scholarship, Sylvia Molloy explores the problem of meaning in Borges's work by remaining true to the uncanniness that is its foundation. Borges's sustained practice of the uncanny gives rise in his texts to endless tensions between illusion and meaning, and to the competing desires for fragmentation, dispersal, and stability. Molloy traces the movement of Borges's own writing by repeatedly spanning the boundaries of genre and cutting across the conventional separations of narrative, lyric and essay, fact and fiction. Rather than seeking to resolve the tensions and conflicts, she preserves and develops them, thereby maintaining the potential of these texts to disturb. At the site of these tensions, Molloy locates the play between meaning and meaninglessness that occurs in Borges's texts. From this vantage point his strategies of deception, recourse to simulacra, inquisitorial urge to unsettle binarism, and distrust of the permanent--all that makes Borges Borges--are examined with unmatched skill and acuity. Elegantly written and translated, Signs of Borges presents a remarkable and dynamic view of one of the most international and compelling writers of this century. It will be of great interest to all students of twentieth-century literature, particularly to students of Latin American literature.
£85.00
Duke University Press Aesthetic Revolutions and Twentieth-Century Avant-Garde Movements
This collection examines key aesthetic avant-garde art movements of the twentieth century and their relationships with revolutionary politics. The contributors distinguish aesthetic avant-gardes —whose artists aim to transform society and the ways of sensing the world through political means—from the artistic avant-gardes, which focus on transforming representation. Following the work of philosophers such as Friedrich Schiller and Jacques Rancière, the contributors argue that the aesthetic is inherently political and that aesthetic avant-garde art is essential for political revolution. In addition to analyzing Russian constructivsm, surrealism, and Situationist International, the contributors examine Italian futurism's model of integrating art with politics and life, the murals of revolutionary Mexico and Nicaragua, 1960s American art, and the Slovenian art collective NSK's construction of a fictional political state in the 1990s. Aesthetic Revolutions and Twentieth-Century Avant-Garde Movements traces the common foundations and goals shared by these disparate arts communities and shows how their art worked towards effecting political and social change. Contributors. John E. Bowlt, Sascha Bru, David Craven, Aleš Erjavec, Tyrus Miller, Raymond Spiteri, Miško Šuvakovic
£97.00
Duke University Press This Was Not Our War: Bosnian Women Reclaiming the Peace
"Replacing tyranny with justice, healing deep scars, exchanging hatred for hope . . . the women in This Was Not Our War teach us how."—William Jefferson ClintonThis Was Not Our War shares amazing first-person accounts of twenty-six Bosnian women who are reconstructing their society following years of devastating warfare. A university student working to resettle refugees, a paramedic who founded a veterans’ aid group, a fashion designer running two nonprofit organizations, a government minister and professor who survived Auschwitz—these women are advocates, politicians, farmers, journalists, students, doctors, businesswomen, engineers, wives, and mothers. They are from all parts of Bosnia and represent the full range of ethnic traditions and mixed heritages. Their ages spread across sixty years, and their wealth ranges from expensive jewels to a few chickens. For all their differences, they have this much in common: all survived the war with enough emotional strength to work toward rebuilding their country. Swanee Hunt met these women through her diplomatic and humanitarian work in the 1990s. Over the course of seven years, she conducted multiple interviews with each one. In presenting those interviews here, Hunt provides a narrative framework that connects the women’s stories, allowing them to speak to one another.The women describe what it was like living in a vibrant multicultural community that suddenly imploded in an onslaught of violence. They relate the chaos; the atrocities, including the rapes of many neighbors and friends; the hurried decisions whether to stay or flee; the extraordinary efforts to care for children and elderly parents and to find food and clean drinking water. Reflecting on the causes of the war, they vehemently reject the idea that age-old ethnic hatreds made the war inevitable. The women share their reactions to the Dayton Accords, the end of hostilities, and international relief efforts. While they are candid about the difficulties they face, they are committed to rebuilding Bosnia based on ideals of truth, justice, and a common humanity encompassing those of all faiths and ethnicities. Their wisdom is instructive, their courage and fortitude inspirational.
£40.50
Duke University Press Lines of Thought: Discourse, Architectonics, and the Origin of Modern Philosophy
It is considerably easier to say that modern philosophy began with Descartes than it is to define the modernity and philosophy to which Descartes gave rise. In Lines of Thought, Claudia Brodsky Lacour describes the double origin of modern philosophy in Descartes’s Discours de la méthode and Géométrie, works whose interrelation, she argues, reveals the specific nature of the modern in his thought. Her study examines the roles of discourse and writing in Cartesian method and intuition, and the significance of graphic architectonic form in the genealogy of modern philosophy.While Cartesianism has long served as a synonym for rationalism, the contents of Descartes’s method and cogito have remained infamously resistant to rational analysis. Similarly, although modern phenomenological analyses descend from Descartes’s notion of intuition, the “things” Cartesian intuitions represent bear no resemblance to phenomena. By returning to what Descartes calls the construction of his “foundation” in the Discours, Brodsky Lacour identifies the conceptual problems at the root of Descartes’s literary and aesthetic theory as well as epistemology. If, for Descartes, linear extension and “I” are the only “things” we can know exist, the Cartesian subject of thought, she shows, derives first from the intersection of discourse and drawing, representation and matter. The crux of that intersection, Brodsky Lacour concludes, is and must be the cogito, Descartes’s theoretical extension of thinking into material being. Describable in accordance with the Géométrie as a freely constructed line of thought, the cogito, she argues, extends historically to link philosophy with theories of discursive representation and graphic delineation after Descartes. In conclusion, Brodsky Lacour analyzes such a link in the writings of Claude Perrault, the architectural theorist whose reflections on beauty helped shape the seventeenth-century dispute between “the ancients and the moderns.”Part of a growing body of literary and interdisciplinary considerations of philosophical texts, Lines of Thought will appeal to theorists and historians of literature, architecture, art, and philosophy, and those concerned with the origin and identity of the modern.
£76.50
MD - Duke University Press Eating Is an English Word
£19.99
MD - Duke University Press The Suicide Archive
£22.99
MD - Duke University Press Sound and Silence My Experience with China and Literature
£19.99
MD - Duke University Press Camera Geologica
£22.99
MD - Duke University Press Knowing by Ear Listening to Voice Recordings with African Prisoners of War in German Camps 19151918
£20.99
MD - Duke University Press All of Us or None Migrant Organizing in an Era of Deportation and Dispossession
£78.30
MD - Duke University Press State of Fear Policing a Postcolonial City
£80.10
MD - Duke University Press The Suicide Archive Reading Resistance in the Wake of French Empire
£80.10
MD - Duke University Press Open Admissions The Poetics and Pedagogy of Toni Cade Bambara June Jordan Audre Lorde and Adrienne Rich in the Era of Free College
£78.30
MD - Duke University Press Incommunicable Toward Communicative Justice in Health and Medicine
£22.99
MD - Duke University Press In the Land of the Unreal Virtual and Other Realities in Los Angeles
£80.10
MD - Duke University Press The Prestes Column An Interior History of Modern Brazil
£80.10
MD - Duke University Press Incommunicable Toward Communicative Justice in Health and Medicine
£80.10
MD - Duke University Press Mu 49 Marks of Abolition
£78.30
MD - Duke University Press Black Girl Autopoetics Agency in Everyday Digital Practice
£71.10
MD - Duke University Press Reproductive Racial Capitalism
£11.99
MD - Duke University Press War Makes Monsters Crime and Criminality in Times of Conflict
£11.23
MD - Duke University Press Silicon Valley Imperialism Techno Fantasies and Frictions in Postsocialist Times
£21.99
MD - Duke University Press In the Land of the Unreal Virtual and Other Realities in Los Angeles
£22.99
MD - Duke University Press Survival of a Perverse Nation Morality and Queer Possibility in Armenia
£21.99
MD - Duke University Press The Story of What Is Broken Is Whole An Aurora Levins Morales Reader
£24.99
MD - Duke University Press Artist Audience Accomplice Ethics and Authorship in Art of the 1970s and 1980s
£21.99
MD - Duke University Press Heavyweight Black Boxers and the Fight for Representation
£22.99
MD - Duke University Press An237bal Quijano Foundational Essays on the Coloniality of Power
£25.99
MD - Duke University Press Porous Becomings
£23.99
MD - Duke University Press Fractal Repair Queer Histories of Modern Jamaica
£20.99
MD - Duke University Press At the Vanguard of Vinyl A Cultural History of the LongPlaying Record in Jazz
£24.99
MD - Duke University Press The Prestes Column An Interior History of Modern Brazil
£22.99
MD - Duke University Press The Cybernetic Border Drones Technology and Intrusion
£20.99
MD - Duke University Press Mu 49 Marks of Abolition
£21.99
MD - Duke University Press Blues Mamas and Broadway Belters Black Women Voice and the Musical Stage
£78.30
MD - Duke University Press Eating Is an English Word
£74.70
MD - Duke University Press Artist Audience Accomplice Ethics and Authorship in Art of the 1970s and 1980s
£78.30
MD - Duke University Press Unspooled How the Cassette Made Music Shareable
£20.99
MD - Duke University Press Shooting for Change Korean Photography after the War
£80.10
MD - Duke University Press Unsettling Queer Anthropology Foundations Reorientations and Departures
£23.99
MD - Duke University Press Violent Intimacies The Trans Everyday and the Making of an Urban World
£21.99
MD - Duke University Press Secularism as Misdirection Critical Thought from the Global South
£23.99
MD - Duke University Press Erosion
£21.99
MD - Duke University Press Impossible Things
£18.99
MD - Duke University Press Jill Johnston in Motion
£21.99
MD - Duke University Press The Promise of Beauty
£22.99
MD - Duke University Press All of Us or None Migrant Organizing in an Era of Deportation and Dispossession
£21.99
MD - Duke University Press State of Fear Policing a Postcolonial City
£22.99