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1-18 of 18 Search Results for
extraterritorial images
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Journal Article
Public Culture (2020) 32 (1): 185–213.
Published: 01 January 2020
... and political order in the name of law, and by the subjects who are obliged to participate in their creation: staging and documenting their own performance to become or remain lawful citizens. Examining this kind of visual surveillance and the “extraterritorial” quality of the produced images, a line is drawn...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Public Culture (2014) 26 (2 (73)): 257–280.
Published: 01 May 2014
... pictures of the earth have been used in countless advertisements about an environmentally connected consciousness and a sense of globalism, The Blue Marble is not necessarily a global image but an American image of the globe. Moreover, both iconic images prominently feature our most extraterritorial...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Public Culture (2000) 12 (3): 769–786.
Published: 01 September 2000
...
quality of both cities and to the fact that the most familiar images of these cities
do not necessarily describe them best. To put this another way: cosmopolitanism
must take place somewhere, in specific sites and situations—even if these places...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2000) 12 (3): 703–706.
Published: 01 September 2000
...
Copyright © 2000 by Duke University Press
Map © 2000 Le Monde diplomatique and Philippe Rekacewicz
703
PC 12.3-05 Rekacewicz 11/21/00 4:46 PM Page 704
Public Culture fect image of the author’s...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2014) 26 (2 (73)): 205–211.
Published: 01 May 2014
...Allison Carruth; Robert P. Marzec This special issue of Public Culture explores forms of environmental image making and visualization in the context of the Anthropocene. The essays aim to spark dialogue about how visual technologies and media—from satellite imaging and military simulation...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2002) 14 (2): 411–428.
Published: 01 May 2002
... for
Khalistan. In Sikh temples from London to New York, these images are exhibited
in rooms adjacent to congregation halls, forming sites of knowledge production
and reverence for men known as shahids, martyrs who have met a heroic death...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2006) 18 (3): 573–605.
Published: 01 September 2006
... invaluable
help in preparing the images for print. My gratitude also goes to Oleg Timofeyev and to my col-
leagues Maureen Robertson and Alan Nagel for their helpful feedback on earlier versions of the text,
and to Yelena Perkhounkova for her thorough proofreading. Finally, special thanks go to Marina...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2000) 12 (1): 259–284.
Published: 01 January 2000
... are assumed by preaching, the administra-
tion of the sacraments, the liturgy, and various rituals, including healing rituals.
Wars, along with the volatility and hazards of everyday life, have led to reinter-
pretations of the narratives of the Passion and Calvary, as well as of the images
of the Last...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2005) 17 (1): 193–202.
Published: 01 January 2005
... and squalor existed side by side. He argues that in the 1920s
and 1930s, Shanghai developed a “cosmopolitanism of extraterritoriality” while,
from the 1980s onward, Hong Kong developed a “cosmopolitanism of depen-
dency.”12
These kinds of changes are taking place in many cities of the global south...
Journal Article
Public Culture (1997) 9 (2): 209–232.
Published: 01 May 1997
... and journalists, at its disposal, in
Public Culture addition to prison guards and torturers, is better suited to the needs of
other cultures. The alternative to this spurious and self-deceptive kind
of cosmopolitanism is one with a clear image of a specific...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2017) 29 (1 (81)): 27–51.
Published: 01 January 2017
... data. Figure 5 “Migration pattern within and from Africa 1970–2005.” Image from de Haas 2007 Figure 5. “Migration pattern within and from Africa 1970–2005.” Image from de Haas 2007 Yet, even if providing critical perspective on invasion maps, de Haas’s cartography is nonetheless...
FIGURES
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Journal Article
Public Culture (1999) 11 (1): 75–107.
Published: 01 January 1999
... has been written about Shanghai in Western languages, and the
corpus of “popular literature” that contributed to its legendary image bequeaths a
dubious legacy. For aside from perpetuating the city’s glamour and mystery, it
also succeeded in turning the name of the city into a debased verb...
Journal Article
Public Culture (1993) 5 (3): 411–429.
Published: 01 September 1993
... were once the key to
the linkage of territorial affiliation with state monopoly of the means of violence,
414 key identities and identificatbns now only partially revolve around the realities
Public Culture and images of place. In the Sikh demand for Khalistan, in French...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2000) 12 (1): 215–232.
Published: 01 January 2000
... as instantiations of different spatialities within the global.
7. The doctrine of extraterritoriality was developed precisely to accommodate the nonunitary
condition of the national and to secure the extension of state authority beyond the geographic bound-
aries of national territory (Mattingly 1988...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2015) 27 (2 (76)): 361–386.
Published: 01 May 2015
... by exchange and circulation and full of ‘emergent’ risks” ( Braun 2007 : 6). It is within these spaces of perceived risk, characterized by the permeability of bodies, that states exercise new forms of territorial and extraterritorial control. In contrast, claims of genomic sovereignty appear in biomedical...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2017) 29 (2 (82)): 261–285.
Published: 01 May 2017
... World goods and services that heritage migrants are able to provide (cf. S. Jain 2012 : 901). In a market-driven world economy, countries now brand themselves ( Newland and Taylor 2010 : 10), and both frontier return and heritage migrants play a pivotal role in forming their new “global” image. However...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2002) 14 (2): 281–304.
Published: 01 May 2002
.... Putnam, in particular, casts civil
society in the image of a historical past—pre-electronic, pre–mass communica-
tion, pre-suburb, pre-megalopolis—anchored in the institution of a strong nuclear
family. In his own celebration of family values, Fukuyama presents Chinese Con-
fucianism as a model...
Journal Article
Public Culture (1993) 6 (1): 97–131.
Published: 01 January 1993
...
by an awareness that “the prodigious new expansion of multinational capital [has]
end[ed] up penetrating and colonizing those very precapitalist enclaves (Nature
and the Unconscious) which offered extraterritorial and Archimedean footholds
for critical effectivity.*
One also encounters this concretely...