Your Search Results

      • Trusted Partner
        Humanities & Social Sciences
        December 2022

        Class, work and whiteness

        Race and settler colonialism in Southern Rhodesia, 1919–79

        by Nicola Ginsburgh

        This book offers the first comprehensive history of white workers from the end of the First World War to Zimbabwean independence in 1980. It reveals how white worker identity was constituted, examines the white labouring class as an ethnically and nationally heterogeneous formation comprised of both men and women, and emphasises the active participation of white workers in the ongoing and contested production of race. White wage labourers' experiences, both as exploited workers and as part of the privileged white minority, offer insight into how race and class co-produced one another and how boundaries fundamental to settler colonialism were regulated and policed. Based on original research conducted in Zimbabwe, South Africa and the UK, this book offers a unique theoretical synthesis of work on gender, whiteness studies, labour histories, settler colonialism, Marxism, emotions and the New African Economic History.

      • Trusted Partner
        Humanities & Social Sciences
        September 2020

        Class, work and whiteness

        by Nicola Ginsburgh, Alan Lester

      • Trusted Partner
        Literature & Literary Studies
        June 2017

        Gothic forms of feminine fictions

        by Susanne Becker

      • Trusted Partner
        The Arts
        January 2016

        Face: shape and angle

        Helen Muspratt, photographer

        by Jessica Sutcliffe

        Born into a civil service family in India in 1907, Helen Muspratt was a lifelong communist, a member of the Cambridge intellectual milieu of the 1930s, and a working mother at a time when such a role was unusual for women of her class. She was also a pioneering photographer, creating an extraordinary body of work in many different styles and genres. In partnership with Lettice Ramsey she made portraits of many notable figures of the 1930s in the fields of science and culture. Her experimental photography, using techniques such as solarisation and multiple exposure, bears comparison with the innovations of Man Ray and Lee Miller. This book reproduces some of Helen Muspratt's most important photographic images, including documentary records of the Soviet Union and the Welsh valleys. The accompanying text by Jessica Sutcliffe is an intimate and revealing memoir of her mother that offers a fascinating insight into her life, work and politics. ;

      • Trusted Partner
      • Trusted Partner
      • Trusted Partner
      • Trusted Partner
        Humanities & Social Sciences
        June 2021

        Feeling the strain

        A cultural history of stress in twentieth-century Britain

        by Jill Kirby

        Examining the popular discourse of nerves and stress, this book provides a historical account of how ordinary Britons understood, explained and coped with the pressures and strains of daily life during the twentieth century. It traces the popular, vernacular discourse of stress, illuminating not just how stress was known, but the ways in which that knowledge was produced. Taking a cultural approach, the book focuses on contemporary popular understandings, revealing continuity of ideas about work, mental health, status, gender and individual weakness, as well as the changing socio-economic contexts that enabled stress to become a ubiquitous condition of everyday life by the end of the century. With accounts from sufferers, families and colleagues it also offers insight into self-help literature, the meanings of work and changing dynamics of domestic life, delivering a complementary perspective to medical histories of stress.

      • Trusted Partner
      • Trusted Partner
      • Trusted Partner
        Literature & Literary Studies
        January 2021

        The art of The Faerie Queene

        by Richard Danson Brown

        The Art of The Faerie Queene is the first book centrally focused on the forms and poetic techniques employed by Spenser. It offers a sharp new perspective on Spenser by rereading The Faerie Queene as poetry which is at once absorbing, demanding and experimental. Instead of the traditional conservative model of Spenser as poet, this book presents the poem as radical, edgy and unconventional, thus proposing new ways of understanding the Elizabethan poetic Renaissance. The book moves from the individual words of the poem to metre, rhyme and stanza form onto its larger structures of canto and book. It will be of particular relevance to undergraduates studying Elizabethan poetry, graduate students and scholars of Renaissance poetry, for whom the formal aspect of the poetry has been a topic of growing relevance in recent years.

      • Trusted Partner
        August 1993

        Kalkül der Form

        Herausgegeben von Dirk Baecker

        by Dirk Baecker, Dirk Baecker

        Der oder das Kalkül? Der Titel dieses Buches läßt die Frage bewußt offen. Der Kalkül stellt auf das von der Logik bereitgestellte Instrument zur Durchführung von Berechnungen ab. Das Kalkül meint die Berechnung selbst im Hinblick auf ein anderes, im Kalkül selbst nicht Erfaßtes. In den Beiträgen dieses Bandes geht es um G. Spencer Browns »Gesetze der Form« im doppelten Sinne der Form eines Kalküls, der eingesetzt wird und Berechnungen ermöglicht, in denen er selbst noch einmal vorkommt als das, was er nicht erfaßt. Der Band enthält die allererste Besprechung der »Gesetze der Form«, die Heinz von Foerster für die kalifornische Ökofibel »Whole Earth Catalog« geschrieben hat, sowie Beiträge, die Spencer Brown im Kontext des optionalen Konstruktivismus, der modernen sowohl zwei- wie mehrwertigen Logik und einer Theorie des Paradoxen lesen.

      • Trusted Partner
        August 1993

        Probleme der Form

        by Dirk Baecker

        Gibt es also doch etwas wie »Gesetze der Form«? Die Interpretation, die G. Spencer Brown seinem Kalkül der Form mit auf den Weg gibt, tut ihr Bestes, um diesen Eindruck zu erwecken. Freilich tut sie auch alles, um diesen Eindruck, kaum ist man bereit, ihm zu folgen, wieder zu dementieren. Beides zusammen macht Spencer Browns Formbegriff für eine Soziologie interessant, die aus der Vermutung, daß noch die Aufhebung der Gesetze Gesetzen folgt, eine Wissenschaft macht. Der Band versammelt Beiträge, die die Möglichkeiten des Formen- und Indikationskalküls zur Beobachtung der Dynamik von Bezeichnungen in Abhängigkeit von Unterscheidungen nutzen. Das reicht von frühen Entdeckungen des Formproblems im Roman und im Drama, in der Logik und in der Sprache über Rekonstruktionen des Zeichen-, Latenz- und Spielverständnisses bis zu Beschreibungen des Geldes, der Universität, des Staates, der sozialen Bewegungen, der Karriere und der Krankheit.

      • Trusted Partner
        The Arts
        January 2019

        Bertrand Blier

        by Sue Harris

        The most complete study of Blier's work to date, Harris traces the director's career from the early 1960s until the present. Outlines the forms, themes and style which dominate in Blier's work, and challenges the many labels that have been used to describe both the corpus of films and the man himself. Provides an original and controversial discussion of Blier's alleged 'misogyny', and invites the reader to understand the scatological and corporeal aspects of Blier's filmmaking in terms of long-established traditions of popular dramatic culture. Brings to light the comic mechanisms underpinning Blier's films and identifies strategies which navigate through one of the most entertaining and disconcerting bodies of work of recent years. The first book on Blier published in English.

      • Trusted Partner
        Literature & Literary Studies
        September 2020

        The art of The Faerie Queene

        by Richard Danson Brown, Joshua Samuel Reid

        The Art of The Faerie Queene is the first book centrally focused on the forms and poetic techniques employed by Spenser. It offers a sharp new perspective on Spenser by rereading The Faerie Queene as poetry which is at once absorbing, demanding and experimental. Instead of the traditional conservative model of Spenser as poet, this book presents the poem as radical, edgy and unconventional, thus proposing new ways of understanding the Elizabethan poetic Renaissance. The book moves from the individual words of the poem to metre, rhyme and stanza form onto its larger structures of canto and book. It will be of particular relevance to undergraduates studying Elizabethan poetry, graduate students and scholars of Renaissance poetry, for whom the formal aspect of the poetry has been a topic of growing relevance in recent years.

      • Trusted Partner
        May 1986

        Die Leistung der Form

        Lessings Dramen

        by Peter Pütz

        In seiner Monographie über Lessings Dramen erarbeitet Peter Pütz den kognitiven Mehrwert der dramatischen Form gegenüber abschöpfbaren ›Aussagen‹ und ›Lehren‹, zeigt - in ständigem Vergleich mit einschlägigen Beispielen diskursiver Darlegungen aus dem 18. Jahrhundert - die spezifische Erkenntnisleistung künstlerischer Darstellung, holt sie - nie im Abstrakt-Allgemeinen sich verlierend - durch präzise Textanalysen ein. Grundlegend erörtert das Buch Probleme der literarischen Form und schafft sich mit der begrifflichen Differenz von ›Darlegung‹ und ›Darstellung‹ eine tragfähige Basis für die nachfolgenden Interpretationen der Lessingschen Dramen, die schließlich auch neue Aufschlüsse geben über ideen- und sozialgeschichtliche Befunde der Aufklärung.

      • Trusted Partner
        History of medicine
        January 2016

        Work, psychiatry and society, c. 1750–2015

        by Edited by Waltraud Ernst

        This book offers the first systematic critical appraisal of the uses of work and work therapy in psychiatric institutions across the globe, from the late eighteenth to the end of the twentieth century. Contributors explore the daily routine in psychiatric institutions and ask whether work was therapy, part of a regime of punishment or a means of exploiting free labour. By focusing on mental patients' day-to-day life in closed institutions, the authors fill a gap in the history of psychiatric regimes. The geographical scope is wide, ranging from Northern America to Japan, India and Western as well as Eastern Europe, and the authors engage with broad historical questions, such as the impact of colonialism and communism and the effect of the World Wars. The book presents an alternative history of the emergence of occupational therapy and will be of interest not only to academics in the fields of history and sociology but also to health professionals.

      • Trusted Partner

      Subscribe to our

      newsletter