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Freedom Writers
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Journal Article
Cultural Politics (2015) 11 (3): 315–328.
Published: 01 November 2015
... practices and race for racist whites. © 2015 Duke University Press 2015 World War II Holocaust whiteness racism Paper Clips Freedom Writers Jewish American groups, such as the Anti-Defamation League, have expressed dismay over how references to the Holocaust of World War II have increased...
Journal Article
Cultural Politics (2007) 3 (2): 203–222.
Published: 01 July 2007
... a devaluation of canons in the name of commercial interests, with a view to generating saleable product for mass-consumer culture. Unlike the earlier attack on traditional canons, which was grounded in Enlightenment ideals such as freedom and democracy, the current deconstruction of canons lacks a coherent...
Journal Article
Cultural Politics (2011) 7 (3): 465–476.
Published: 01 November 2011
... profound sense the possibility of freedom. Understanding what this means entails thinking about the way the idea of representation may be seen to apply to the classic political idea of government, whether communist or liberal, as a mode of representing the people. In this framework the idea...
Journal Article
Cultural Politics (2013) 9 (1): 53–69.
Published: 01 March 2013
... Press . I would like to thank the editorial board and two anonymous reviewers for their genuinely helpful comments on an earlier version of this essay. The gap between the freedom to speak (opposing the APSA and APSR anonymously) and the practice of free speech (addressing 250 envelopes...
Journal Article
Cultural Politics (2006) 2 (3): 281–298.
Published: 01 November 2006
... that human action is always goal-directed, hence rational, Hegel argues that history is itself rational. History for Hegel is teleological, since it is composed of actions which are themselves goal-directed. The goal of human action, hence of human history, is freedom, which need not mean that it is in fact...
Journal Article
Cultural Politics (2005) 1 (1): 5–22.
Published: 01 March 2005
..., they surmised, culture divides people more than it unites them. On the other side, advocates insisted that social and cultural identity is a condition of equal access to income, health, education, free association, religious freedom, housing and employment. According to this view, cultural respect...
Journal Article
Cultural Politics (2017) 13 (3): 284–287.
Published: 01 November 2017
..., what was lost in the advance of Western capitalist freedom celebrated by Giddens was deep human connection, respect, and a determination to care for others when times are hard and it would be easier to walk away. This is, I think, how Bauman’s project focused on the transformation of solid...
Journal Article
Cultural Politics (2017) 13 (1): 34–47.
Published: 01 March 2017
...Malcolm Miles In an essay on French literature in the period of Nazi occupation, Herbert Marcuse argues that a literature of intimacy—love poems and romantic novels—is the last resort of freedom in totalitarian conditions. Written in 1945 and revised in the 1970s, Marcuse’s essay argues...
Journal Article
Cultural Politics (2022) 18 (3): 312–329.
Published: 01 November 2022
... advocate of Lyotard's libidinal legacy) agree on one point: that the origin of Spain's current political context is to be found in the transition to democracy. As political debates continue to unfold, the COVID-19 crisis has reactivated the old debate on freedom that occupied Spanish intellectuals...
Journal Article
Cultural Politics (2017) 13 (3): 397–399.
Published: 01 November 2017
... generally,” Roquet writes, “reliance on atmosphere as a mechanism of indirect social control often allows for increased freedom and self-determination at the local level” (182). Indeed, in a world full of drama, exaggeration, and bombastic rhetoric on the political stage, many seek solace in this sort...
Journal Article
Cultural Politics (2011) 7 (3): 431–444.
Published: 01 November 2011
... reality and that of personal freedom. Baudrillard's perfect crime becomes, for Dantec, the alibi for an absolute crime: the invisible and perfectly integrated acts of numerous serial killers operating with impunity. However, it is not so much individual acts such as murder that constitute evil...
Journal Article
Cultural Politics (2022) 18 (1): 12–27.
Published: 01 March 2022
... sexual rights (see Roy 2015 ). Internal contradictions within the feminist project also became explicit, such as the articulation of gender and sexual rights in the language of enterprise, consumer freedoms, and empowerment, prompting concerns around “neoliberal feminism” in the Indian context (Gupta...
Journal Article
Cultural Politics (2005) 1 (3): 295–316.
Published: 01 November 2005
... refers to both the impotence of God and the hopeless nature of progressive politics) that opens up the space of freedom. In other words, the impotence of God and the hopeless nature of progressive politics enable, or perhaps even demand, revolutionary action. When the symbolic order has reached the point...
Journal Article
Cultural Politics (2014) 10 (2): 182–193.
Published: 01 July 2014
... such as Yevgeny Zamyatin’s We , George Orwell’s 1984 , and Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World . Here, I compare and contrast notions of narcotization, state control, and freedom across Chan’s work and the Western dystopias, noting key cultural differences in the process. Beyond this work, I move on to place Chan’s...
Journal Article
Cultural Politics (2007) 3 (1): 35–50.
Published: 01 March 2007
... enjoyed reappraisal are William Klein's pop art critique of American imperialism Mr. Freedom (1969) and British director Peter Watkins's controversial and little-seen Punishment Park (1971). Celebrated documentaries like Peter Davis's Hearts and Minds (1974), Emile de Antonio's In The Year...
Journal Article
Cultural Politics (2014) 10 (2): 239–249.
Published: 01 July 2014
... failed to realize their aims). This was, too, the period of modernism, of the movements from realism and impressionism to cubism and expressionism that are the phases of a radically new art, which was (or was claimed to be) autonomous in the artist’s freedom from social norms and in the refusal...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Cultural Politics (2010) 6 (3): 269–286.
Published: 01 November 2010
... Métastabilité . Paris : Aubier . Ward Colin 1973 . Anarchy in Action . London : Freedom Press . 13. Contrary to what one might imagine, public knowledge represents merely a fraction of existing knowledge. A large part of scientific knowledge falls within the sphere of – state...
Journal Article
Cultural Politics (2010) 6 (3): 331–356.
Published: 01 November 2010
.../withefordpaper2006.html (accessed September 2, 2009), Dyson E. Gilder G. Keyworth G. and Toffler A. 1994 . “ A Magna Carta for the Knowledge Age .” The Progress and Freedom Foundation. Available at http://www.pff.org/issues-pubs/futureinsights/f1.2magnacarta.html (accessed April 20, 2009...
Journal Article
Cultural Politics (2009) 5 (1): 73–96.
Published: 01 March 2009
... contingent.” Hence nature is not simply part of its own domain (contingency), nor of the domain of freedom (necessity); rather it “underlies the possibility of the two domains as the presupposition indispensable to their separation” (Bennington 2000: 74) . (The necessary contingency of the law might perhaps...
Journal Article
Cultural Politics (2021) 17 (2): 175–192.
Published: 01 July 2021
... in production, no matter what its distinctive traits might be, lends itself to metaphysical interpretations the two authors would have disavowed. It was the freedom of determining one's living labor that interested Marx and Engels, rather than a supposed spontaneity of volitions and occupations, as they knew...
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