Results for ' modern-colonial world system'

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  1.  87
    Race, Religion, and Ethics in the Modern/Colonial World.Nelson Maldonado-Torres - 2014 - Journal of Religious Ethics 42 (4):691-711.
    The concept of religion as an anthropological category and the idea of race as an organizing principle of human identification and social organization played a major role in the formation of modern/colonial systems of symbolic representation that acquired global significance with the expansion of Western modernity. The modern concepts of religion and race were mutually constituted and together became two of the most central categories in drawing maps of subjectivity, alterity, and sub-alterity in the modern (...). This makes the critical theory of religion highly relevant for the theory of race, and both of them crucial for ethics. It follows from this, not only that religion and race have been profoundly intertwined in modernity, but also that any ethics that seeks to take seriously the challenges created by modernity/coloniality has to be, at least to some extent, decolonial. (shrink)
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  2.  63
    The Colonial/Modern [Cis]Gender System and Trans World Traveling.Brooklyn Leo - 2020 - Hypatia 35 (3):454-474.
    Trans of Color inclusion is not simply a gesture of affectionate commitment to María Lugones's theory of impure communities. Rather, it is required for the enactment of her liberatory theory within and across communities of color. While María Lugones's historico-theoretical analysis of the colonial/modern gender system relies upon anthropological citations of Native gender and sexual diversity, she argues that we must bracket gender for the benefit of [cis]women of color feminisms. However, if this bracketing does not first (...)
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  3.  7
    Modern isonomy: democratic participation and human rights protection as a system of equal rights: an essay.Gerald Stourzh - 2021 - London: University of Chicago Press. Edited by Cynthia Peck-Kubaczek.
    In Modern Isonomy distinguished political theorist Gerald Stourzh develops the idea of "isonomy" or a system of equal rights for all, as an alternative to the concept of "democracy." The ideal for Stourzh is a state, and indeed a world, in which individual rights, including the right to participate in politics equally, are clearly defined, and possessed by all, as the core of a real democratic system. Stourzh begins with ancient Greek thought contrasting isonomy--which is associated (...)
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  4.  16
    Bearing witness beyond colonial epistemologies: Silvia Rivera Cusicanqui’s critical phenomenology of deep silence.Martina Ferrari - 2021 - Chiasmi International 23:239-260.
    This paper is one in a series of attempts on my part to think through one of the central challenges left to us by Merleau-Ponty’s sudden death in 1961: if we understand the turn, in his later writings, toward an ontology of the flesh as “a radical rethinking of the experience of belonging from within, [as] a phenomenology of being-of-the-world”, how are we to bear witness to such an experience? What modalities are called forth to do justice to this (...)
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  5.  13
    Globalization, modernity, and the rise of religious fundamentalism: the challenge of religious resurgence against the "end of history" (a dialectical kaleidoscopic analysis).Dimitrios Methenitis - 2019 - New York: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group.
    The emergence of religious fundamentalism in a globalized, post-colonial world poses a significant challenge to the "End of History" narratives common in academic and non-academic literature alike. Globalization, Modernity and the Rise of Religious Fundamentalismproposes that we must seek new explanations for this phenomenon that recasts the relationship between globalization, modernity and religion. One model through which this possible is that of a dialectical kaleidoscopic methodology - one that applies a variety of theoretical tools and takes a truly (...)
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  6.  10
    Artificial Intelligence in the Colonial Matrix of Power.James Muldoon & Boxi A. Wu - 2023 - Philosophy and Technology 36 (4):1-24.
    Drawing on the analytic of the “colonial matrix of power” developed by Aníbal Quijano within the Latin American modernity/coloniality research program, this article theorises how a system of coloniality underpins the structuring logic of artificial intelligence (AI) systems. We develop a framework for critiquing the regimes of global labour exploitation and knowledge extraction that are rendered invisible through discourses of the purported universality and objectivity of AI. ​​Through bringing the political economy literature on AI production into conversation with (...)
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  7.  33
    Thomas Hobbes in a world-system-view. Some comments on the modern and the conservative aspects of Hobbes's political thoughts.Ronald Commers - 1979 - Philosophica 24.
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  8.  3
    Technology and the Modern World-System: Some Reflections.David A. Smith - 1993 - Science, Technology and Human Values 18 (2):186-195.
    This article represents a preliminary attempt to conceptualize the relationship between technology and global inequality, using a political economy of the world-system perspective. Despite the crucial role that technical innovation and adaptation play in the process of international development, many macroanalyses of social change focus little explicit attention on technology. Only neoevolutionary theory discusses its role in long-term social change, and then in ways that miss some key dimensions. The author argues that technology is a social product designed (...)
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  9.  7
    A system of life: Mawdūdī and the ideologisation of Islam.Jan-Peter Hartung - 2014 - New York: Oxford University Press USA.
    While much current research on political Islam revolves around militant Islamism, the genesis of this ideology remains little understood. A System of Life is a pioneering examination of the earliest attempt at a systematic outline of Islamist ideology, namely that proposed in the 1930s and early 1940s by the renowned Indo-Muslim intellectual Sayyid Abu'l-A'la Mawdudi. Hartung reconstructs his thought in the light of the competing ideologies at play at the time, especially his claim to recast Islam as an all-comprehensive, (...)
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  10. The Modern World-System As A Civilization.Immanuel Wallerstein - 1988 - Thesis Eleven 20 (1):70-86.
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  11. The Modern World-System in Crisis [2004].Immanuel Wallerstein - 2007 - In Craig J. Calhoun (ed.), Contemporary Sociological Theory. Blackwell. pp. 2--461.
  12.  10
    Models of the Modern World-System.Peter Worsley - 1990 - Theory, Culture and Society 7 (2-3):83-95.
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  13. The modern world system : its structures, its geoculture, its crisis and transformation.Richard Lee - 2011 - In David Palumbo-Liu, Bruce Robbins & Nirvana Tanoukhi (eds.), Immanuel Wallerstein and the problem of the world: system, scale, culture. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
     
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  14.  18
    Border Zones, in-Between Spaces, and Turns: On Lugones, the Coloniality of Gender, and the Diasporic Peregrina.Ofelia Schutte - 2020 - Critical Philosophy of Race 8 (1-2):102-118.
    This article considers María Lugones's work in Pilgrimages/Peregrinajes, especially her association of the fragmented self with modernity, in order to understand the existential grounds of what she calls an impure, perceptually aware, mestizaje. It suggests that the impure Latina self validated thereby may be seen retrospectively as the forerunner of the decolonial feminist self who unveils the coloniality of gender analysis. Noting some discrepancies between them, the article questions whether Lugones's use of Quijano's world systems theory leads to an (...)
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  15. The Ability System and Decolonial Resistance: The Case of the Victorian Invalid.Rachel Cicoria - 2021 - Journal of World Philosophies 6 (2):45-60.
    Determinations of ability/disability are rooted in coloniality, specifically in categorizations of race, gender, and animality as they bear on social formations. I elucidate this rootedness by weaving the “coloniality of ability” into María Lugones’ accounts of the coloniality of gender and the colonial-modern system as founded on the “human-nonhuman” difference. This enables me to reveal an “ability system” based on the “ability-bestiality” difference and delineate with more specificity liminal sites of oppression and resistance across the heterogeneous (...)
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  16.  45
    Immanuel Wallerstein, The Modern World-System IV Centrist Liberalism Triumphant, 1789–1914. [REVIEW]Valentin Cojanu - 2012 - Theory and Society 41 (4):421-424.
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  17. An Appreciation of Arvind Mandair's Sikh Philosophy: Exploring Gurmat Concepts in a Decolonizing World.Jeffery D. Long - 2024 - Philosophy East and West 74 (2):353-363.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:An Appreciation of Arvind Mandair's Sikh Philosophy:Exploring Gurmat Concepts in a Decolonizing WorldJeffery D. Long (bio)"Sikhism," the Colonial Project, and Modernity1I do not use this adjective lightly, but in his brilliant volume Sikh Philosophy: Exploring Gurmat Concepts in a Decolonizing World (Bloomsbury, 2022) Arvind-Pal Singh Mandair goes a considerable distance toward liberating sikhī—known more widely in the academic world as Sikhism—from the conceptual constraints that have (...)
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  18.  32
    The Modern World-System IV: Centrist Liberalism Triumphant, 1789–1914, Immanuel Wallerstein, Berkeley: University of California Press, 2011. [REVIEW]Rafael Khachaturian - 2013 - Historical Materialism 21 (4):273-288.
    The book continues Immanuel Wallerstein’s historical narrative of the modern world-system. It focuses primarily on the social and political developments in the European core during the nineteenth century, tracing the rise of liberal hegemony, the growth of the administrative state, and the emergence of modern social science. It also examines the rise of anti-systemic socialist, feminist, and nationalist movements that challenged the liberal project. The book successfully illustrates how the world-systems framework can be used to (...)
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  19.  9
    Unbecoming modern: colonialism, modernity, colonial modernities.Saurabh Dube & Ishita Banerjee-Dube (eds.) - 2018 - London: Routledge.
    In this volume well-known scholars from India and Latin America - Enrique Dussel, Madhu Dubey, Walter D. Mignolo, and Sudipta Sen, to name a few - discuss the concepts of modernity and colonialism and describe how the two relate to each other. This second edition to the volume comes with a new introduction which extends and critically supplements the discussion in the earlier introduction to the volume. It explores the vital impact of the colonial pasts of India, Mexico, China, (...)
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  20.  68
    “White Crisis” and/as “Existential Risk,” or the Entangled Apocalypticism of Artificial Intelligence.Syed Mustafa Ali - 2019 - Zygon 54 (1):207-224.
    In this article, I present a critique of Robert Geraci's Apocalyptic artificial intelligence (AI) discourse, drawing attention to certain shortcomings which become apparent when the analytical lens shifts from religion to the race–religion nexus. Building on earlier work, I explore the phenomenon of existential risk associated with Apocalyptic AI in relation to “White Crisis,” a modern racial phenomenon with premodern religious origins. Adopting a critical race theoretical and decolonial perspective, I argue that all three phenomena are entangled and they (...)
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  21.  59
    A metatheoretical critique of Immanuel Wallerstein's the modern world system.Stanley Aronowitz - 1981 - Theory and Society 10 (4):503-520.
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  22.  12
    Theorizing untranslatability: Temporalities and ambivalence in colonial literature of Taiwan and Korea.Pei Jean Chen - 2021 - Thesis Eleven 162 (1):62-74.
    This paper theorizes and historicizes the ideas of modern language and translation and challenges the imperialist and nationalistic mode of worlding with the notion of ‘untranslatability’ that is embedded in the linguistic and cultural practices of colonial Taiwan and Korea. I redefine the notion of translation as a bordering system – the knowledge-production of boundaries, discrimination, and classification – that simultaneously creates the translatable and the untranslatable in asymmetrical power relations. With this, I discuss how this ambivalence (...)
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  23.  41
    [Book review] chaos and governance in the modern world system[REVIEW]Giovanni Arrighi, Beverly J. Silver & Iftikhar Ahmad - 2001 - Science and Society 65 (3):386-397.
  24.  7
    Connecting histories of education: transnational and cross-cultural exchanges in (post-)colonial education.Barnita Bagchi (ed.) - 2014 - London: Berghahn Books.
  25.  8
    Kinship acknowledged and denied: Collecting and publishing kinship materials in 19th-century settler-colonial states.Helen Gardner - forthcoming - History of the Human Sciences.
    In the second half of the 19th century, anthropology rode the coat-tails of modernity, adopting new printing technologies, following new travel networks, and gaining increasing access to Indigenous people as colonialism spread and new policies were developed to contain and control people in settler-colonial states. The early innovator in kinship studies Lewis Henry Morgan and his two greatest proteges, Lorimer Fison and A. W. Howitt, working respectively in the United States, Fiji, and Australia, epitomised this conflation of governance, technologies (...)
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  26. Modernization, Globalization and the Problem of Culture in World-Systems Theory.Roland Robertson & Frank Lechner - 1985 - Theory, Culture and Society 2 (3):103-117.
  27.  16
    What is world-systems analysis? Distinguishing theory from perspective.Salvatore Babones - 2015 - Thesis Eleven 127 (1):3-20.
    World-systems analysis is a well-established but poorly-defined critical research tradition in the social sciences. Its undisputed progenitor, Immanuel Wallerstein, steadfastly maintains that world-systems analysis is not a theory, yet it is widely referred to as such by commentators, critics, and practitioners alike. The resolution to this conundrum is to identify the defining elements of world-systems analysis as a perspective for understanding human society, then to evaluate propositions based on these defining elements as theories that have been conceptualized (...)
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  28.  22
    Foundations of modernity: human agency and the imperial state.Isa Blumı - 2012 - New York: Routledge.
    Investigating how a number of modern empires transform over the long century (1789-1914) as a consequence of their struggle for ascendancy in the Eastern Mediterranean and Middle East, Foundations of Modernity: Human Agency and the Imperial State moves the study of the modern empire towards a comparative, trans-regional analysis of events along the Ottoman frontiers: Western Balkans, the Persian Gulf and Yemen. This inter-disciplinary approach of studying events at different ends of the Ottoman Empire challenges previous emphasis on (...)
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  29.  15
    The idea of Europe and the “Dispute of the New World”: Some reflections between history and historiography.Maria Matilde Benzoni - 2008 - History of European Ideas 34 (4):375-382.
    This paper would like to contribute to the discussion on the formation of the idea of Europe and contextually shaping of the debate on the New World in early modern and modern history. Following an important Italian historiographic tradition, the paper discusses the eighteenth-century within a wider objective and subjective historical development.The first part of the paper focuses on the Eurocentric realigning of the relations in the Atlantic world. It argues that this realignment remains basically a (...)
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  30.  13
    The idea of Europe and the “Dispute of the New World”: Some reflections between history and historiography.Maria Matilde Benzoni - 2008 - History of European Ideas 34 (4):375-382.
    This paper would like to contribute to the discussion on the formation of the idea of Europe and contextually shaping of the debate on the New World in early modern and modern history. Following an important Italian historiographic tradition, the paper discusses the eighteenth-century within a wider objective and subjective historical development. The first part of the paper focuses on the Eurocentric realigning of the relations in the Atlantic world. It argues that this realignment remains basically (...)
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  31.  82
    Culture as the Ideological Battleground of the Modern World-System.Immanuel Wallerstein - 1990 - Theory, Culture and Society 7 (2-3):31-55.
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  32.  32
    The emergence of modern science and world system theory.Robert Wuthnow - 1979 - Theory and Society 8 (2):215-243.
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  33. Marx, Marxism-Leninism, and Socialist Experiences in the Modern World-System.Immanuel Wallerstein - 1990 - Thesis Eleven 27 (1):40-53.
  34.  32
    Mass culture and the modern world-system.Chandra Mukerji - 1979 - Theory and Society 8 (2):245-268.
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  35.  8
    Jaime Marroquín Arredondo and Ralph Bauer (eds.) 2019: Translating Nature. Cross-Cultural Histories of Early Modern Science and Allison Margaret Bigelow 2020: Mining Language. Racial Thinking, Indigenous Knowledge, and Colonial Metallurgy in the Early Modern Iberian World[REVIEW]Andrés Vélez-Posada - 2024 - NTM Zeitschrift für Geschichte der Wissenschaften, Technik und Medizin 32 (1):97-101.
  36.  18
    Knowledge matters: the structures of knowledge and the crisis of the modern world-system.Richard E. Lee - 2011 - New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers.
    "Originally published in 2010 by University of Queensland Press.".
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  37.  24
    The moral world of the law.Peter R. Coss (ed.) - 2000 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    The dominant and deceptively simple theme of this book is the relationship between the moral environment of the courtroom and that of the society in which the court is situated. Like other Past and Present conference proceedings, the volume ranges widely across time and space, from ancient Greece to twentieth-century Africa. As a consequence, it encompasses not only the highly professional legal systems of the Roman, later medieval and modern worlds, but also the relatively unprofessionalised courts of classical Athens (...)
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  38. Heterosexualism and the colonial / modern gender system.María Lugones - 2007 - Hypatia 22 (1):186-209.
    : The coloniality of power is understood by Anibal Quijano as at the constituting crux of the global capitalist system of power. What is characteristic of global, Eurocentered, capitalist power is that it is organized around two axes that Quijano terms "the coloniality of power" and "modernity." The coloniality of power introduces the basic and universal social classification of the population of the planet in terms of the idea of race, a replacing of relations of superiority and inferiority established (...)
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  39. Heterosexualism and the Colonial/Modern Gender System.María Lugones - 2007 - Hypatia 22 (1):186-219.
    The coloniality of power is understood by Anibal Quijano as at the constituting crux of the global capitalist system of power. What is characteristic of global, Eurocentered, capitalist power is that it is organized around two axes that Quijano terms “the coloniality of power” and “modernity.” The coloniality of power introduces the basic and universal social classification of the population of the planet in terms of the idea of race, a replacing of relations of superiority and inferiority established through (...)
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  40.  40
    Heterosexualism and the Colonial / Modern Gender System.María Lugones - 2007 - Hypatia 22 (1):186-209.
    The coloniality of power is understood by Anibal Quijano as at the constituting crux of the global capitalist system of power. What is characteristic of global, Eurocentered, capitalist power is that it is organized around two axes that Quijano terms “the coloniality of power” and “modernity.” The coloniality of power introduces the basic and universal social classification of the population of the planet in terms of the idea of race, a replacing of relations of superiority and inferiority established through (...)
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  41.  61
    Colonialidade do poder e os desafios da integração regional na América Latina.Carlos Walter Porto-Gonçalves & Pedro de Araújo Quental - 2012 - Polis: Revista Latinoamericana 31.
    Os processos de integração regional em curso hoje na América Latina têm sido marcados por uma lógica territorial que tem concebido grandes áreas do espaço geográfico latino-americano como “vazios demográficos” ou “terras disponíveis”. Essa forma de conceber o espaço geográfico latino-americano remonta ao legado colonial que atravessa a formação sócio-espacial da região e a própria posição que o continente americano ocupou no processo de formação do sistema-mundo moderno-colonial, a partir de 1492. Este artigo tem por objetivo problematizar os (...)
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  42.  5
    Connecting the Empire: New Research Perspectives on Infrastructures and the Environment in the (Post)Colonial World.Ute Hasenöhrl & Jonas van der Straeten - 2016 - NTM Zeitschrift für Geschichte der Wissenschaften, Technik und Medizin 24 (4):355-391.
    In the academic debate on infrastructures in the Global South, there is a broad consensus that (post)colonial legacies present a major challenge for a transition towards more inclusive, sustainable and adapted modes of providing services. Yet, relatively little is known about the emergence and evolution of infrastructures in former colonies. Until a decade ago, most historical studies followed Daniel Headrick’s (1981) “tools of empire” thesis, painting—with broad brush strokes—a picture of infrastructures as instruments for advancing the colonial project (...)
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  43.  22
    Evolution of the Modem World-System.Immanuel Wallerstein - 1995 - ProtoSociology 7:4-10.
    What social scientists study is the evolution of historical systems. Evolution refers to the trajectory of processes inherent in the structure of the system. The structure of a system cannot explain either its genesis nor what happens to it following its inevitable structural crisis. The mechanisms of the evolution of the modern worldsystem, a system structured around the primum mobile of the endless accumulation of capital, is described.
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  44.  24
    Revolution and Reaction in Early Modern EuropeCapitalism and Material Life: 1400-1800The Dutch Rural Economy in the Golden Age, 1500-1700.The German Military Entrepreneur and his Work Force: A Study in European Economic and Social History.The Modern World System: Capitalist Agriculture and the Origins of the European World Economy in the Sixteenth Century.The Imperial Theme in the Sixteenth Century. [REVIEW]M. D. Feld, Fernand Braudel, Miriam Kochan, Jan De Vries, Fritz Redlich, Immanuel Wallerstein & Frances A. Yates - 1977 - Journal of the History of Ideas 38 (1):175.
  45.  64
    Jesus the World-Protector: Eighteenth-Century Gelukpa Historians View Christianity (1).Michael J. Sweet - 2006 - Buddhist-Christian Studies 26 (1):173.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Jesus the World-Protector:Eighteenth-Century Gelukpa Historians View Christianity1Michael J. SweetThe assumption that religion was so seamlessly woven into non-Western and preindustrial cultures that it was not even distinguished as a separate entity, let alone regarded as an object for study, has been a commonplace among Western scholars of religion for some decades.2 From this point of view, which can be broadly characterized as postmodernist and postcolonialist, the concept of (...)
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  46. Urbanization and Political Development of the World System.Leonid Grinin & Andrey Korotayev - 2013 - Entelequia 15:197-255.
    Section 1 of this article presents a mathematical analysis of the longterm global urbanization dynamics and demonstrates that it could be described as a series of phase transitions between attraction basins. This makes it possible to suggest new approaches to the analysis of global social macroevolution. Section 2 presents a threestage model of the macroevolution of the World System statehood (early – developed – mature state) that, we believe, describes the main features of political macroevolution better than the (...)
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  47.  14
    Practical knowledge and empire in the early modern Iberian world. Towards an artisanal turn.Antonio Sánchez - 2019 - Centaurus 61 (3):268-281.
    Several fields of research associated with the history of the early modern Iberian world have experienced a significant boost in recent decades: Iberian science as it relates to the Atlantic world, the history of European colonial empires, and the study of knowledge production in Latin American cultures. This expansion has coincided with a renewed interest of historians of the early modern period in practical knowledge and artisanal cultures. This paper presents an updated historiographic review of (...)
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  48.  24
    The Politics of Humour in Kafkaesque Cinema: A World-Systems Approach.Angelos Koutsourakis - 2020 - Film-Philosophy 24 (3):259-283.
    Kafka's work has exercised immense influence on cinema and his reflections on diminished human agency in modernity and the dominance of oppressive institutions that perpetuate individual or social alienation and political repression have been the subject of debates by philosophers such as Theodor Adorno, Walter Benjamin, Gilles Deleuze, Félix Guattari, and Alexander Kluge. Informed by a world-systems approach and taking a cue from Jorge Luis Borges’ point that Kafka has modified our conception of the future, and André Bazin's suggestion (...)
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  49. Getting ‘Naked’ in the Colonial/Modern Gender System: A Preliminary Trans Feminist Analysis of Pornography.Talia Mae Bettcher - 2017 - In Mari Mikkola (ed.), Beyond Speech: Pornography and Analytic Feminist Philosophy. New York, US: Oxford University Press. pp. 157-176.
  50.  41
    Preface.Priti Ramamurthy & Ashwini Tambe - 2017 - Feminist Studies 43 (3):503.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:preface This special issue provokes a conversation between decolonial and postcolonial feminisms by asking what they are, how they speak about each other, and how they can speak to each other. Read together, the articles engage and sometimes trouble the temporal and spatial distinctions drawn between decolonial and postcolonial approaches. Kiran Asher explores overlaps between decolonial and postcolonial thought by comparing the ideas of Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak and Silvia (...)
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