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1

Antonson, Jan. Representation & sponsring: Intern och extern representation, jubiléum/gåvor, idrotts- och kultursponsring, muta-bestickning, reglerna i nya skattesystemet. Göteborg: Tholin & Larsson, 1992.

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Antonson, Jan. Representation & sponsring: Intern och extern representation, jubileum/gåvor, idrotts- och kultursponsring, muta-bestickning, reglerna i nya skattesystemet. 3rd ed. Göteborg: Tholin & Larsson, 1995.

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3

Alan, Rosenthal. A new public perspective on representative democracy: A guide for legislative interns. Denver, Colo: National Conference of State Legislatures, 2000.

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Inter/cultural communication: Representation and construction of culture. Thousand Oaks: SAGE, 2013.

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India. Delegation (Inter-Parliamentary Union. Assembly (113th : 2005 : Geneva, Switzerland)). Report on the participation of Indian parliamentary delegation at the 113th assembly of the Inter-Parliamentary Union (IPU) Geneva (Switzerland) 17 to 19 October, 2005. New Delhi: Lok Sabha Secretariat, 2006.

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New Zealand. Delegation (Inter-parliamentary Union. Conference (107th : 2002 : Marrakech, Morocco)). Report by the New Zealand Delegation to the 107th Conference of the Inter-Parliamentary Union, Marrakech, Morocco, 17-22 March 2002. [Wellington]: New Zealand House of Representatives, 2003.

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India. Parliament. Lok Sabha. Secretariat. and Inter-parliamentary Union Assembly, eds. Report on the participation of Indian parliamentary delegation at the 114th assembly of the Inter Parliamentary Union (IPU), Nairobi (Kenya), 7 to 12 May, 2006. New Delhi: Lok Sabha Secretariat, 2006.

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New Zealand. Delegation (Inter-parliamentary Union. Assembly (109th : 2003 : Geneva, Switzerland)). Report by the New Zealand Delegation to the 109th Assembly of the Inter-Parliamentary Union, Geneva, Switzerland, 1-3 October 2003. [Wellington]: New Zealand House of Representatives, 2005.

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McKenzie, Robert E. Representation before the Collection Division of the IRS. [St. Paul, Minn.]: West Group, 1989.

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McKenzie, Robert E. Representation before the Collection Division of the IRS. Deerfield, Ill. (155 Pfingsten Rd., Deerfield 60015): Callaghan, 1989.

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Boelter, Arthur H. Representation before the Appeals Division of the IRS. Deerfield, Ill: Clark Boardman Callaghan, 1990.

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12

Boelter, Arthur H. Representation before the Appeals Division of the IRS. 2nd ed. [St. Paul, Minn.]: Thomson/West, 2003.

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13

Democratic innovations: Designing institutions for citizen participation. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2009.

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Richard, Gramkow, and Pinheiro Christy, eds. PassKey EA review: Representation : IRS enrolled agent exam study guide. 2nd ed. Elk Grove, CA: PassKey Publications, 2013.

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15

A course on the Web graph. Providence, R.I: American Mathematical Society, 2008.

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16

See it now confronts McCarthyism: Television documentary and the politics of representation. Tucaloosa: University of Alabama Press, 1994.

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17

Runcan, Miruna, editor, writer of foreword, Pedestru Mihai editor, and Universitatea "Babeș-Bolyai", eds. Proceedings of The Digital Generation: Self-representation, urban mythology and cultural practices : international conference, Cluj, 16-18 September 2011. Cluj-Napoca: Editura Limes, 2011.

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Beryl, Plimmer, Rodgers Peter, and SpringerLink (Online service), eds. Diagrammatic Representation and Inference: 7th International Conference, Diagrams 2012, Canterbury, UK, July 2-6, 2012. Proceedings. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2012.

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19

Office, General Accounting. United Nations: Targeted strategies could help boost U.S. representation : report to congressional requesters. Washington, D.C: U.S. General Accounting Office, 2001.

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Guelton, Bernard. Les arts visuels, le web et la fiction: Colloque ... Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne, CÉRAP. Paris: Publications de la Sorbonne, 2009.

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21

Nesi, Paolo, Jaime Delgado, and Kia Ng, eds. AXMEDIS 2008. Florence: Firenze University Press, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.36253/978-88-8453-811-6.

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The AXMEDIS International Conference series aims to explore all subjects and topics related to cross-media and digital-media content production, processing, management, standards, representation, sharing, protection and rights management, to address the latest developments and future trends of the technologies and their applications, impacts and exploitation. The AXMEDIS events offer venues for exchanging concepts, requirements, prototypes, research ideas, and findings which could contribute to academic research and also benefit business and industrial communities. In the Internet as well as in the digital era, cross-media production and distribution represent key developments and innovations that are fostered by emergent technologies to ensure better value for money while optimising productivity and market coverage.
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22

Kondrat'ev, Gennadiy. Clifford Geometric Algebra. ru: INFRA-M Academic Publishing LLC., 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.12737/1832489.

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The monograph is devoted to the fundamental aspects of geometric algebra and closely related issues. The category of Clifford algebras is considered as the conjugate category of vector spaces with a quadratic form. Possible constructions in this category and internal algebraic operations of an algebra with a geometric interpretation are studied. An application to the differential geometry of a Euclidean manifold based on a shape tensor is included. We consider products, coproducts and tensor products in the category of associative algebras with application to the decomposition of Clifford algebras into simple components. Spinors are introduced. Methods of matrix representation of the Clifford algebra are studied. It may be of interest to students, postgraduates and specialists in the field of mathematics, physics and cybernetics.
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23

1972-, Seely Scott, ed. Effective REST services via .NET: For .NET Framework 3.5. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Addison-Wesley, 2009.

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24

Representation Theory I Finite Dimensional Algebras: Proceedings of the Fourth Intern. Conf. on Representations of Algebras held in Ottawa, Canada, Aug. 16-25, 1984. Berlin: Springer, 1986.

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25

Representation Theory II Groups and Orders: Preoceedings of the Fourth Intern. Conf. on Representaion of Algebrtas held in Ottawa, Canada, Aug. 16-25,1984. Berlin: Springer, 1986.

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26

Konrad-Adenauer-Stiftung. Bureau régional en Afrique de l'Ouest., ed. Parlementarisme en Afrique de l'Ouest: Les actes des séminaires inter-parlementaires, 1ère, 2e et 3e édition. Cotonou: Konrad-Adenauer-Stiftung, 1995.

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27

Egan, Frances. Representationalism. Edited by Eric Margolis, Richard Samuels, and Stephen P. Stich. Oxford University Press, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780195309799.013.0011.

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The article gives an overview of several distinct theses demonstrating representationalism in cognitive science. Strong representationalism is the view that representational mental states have a specific form, in particular, that they are functionally characterizable relations to internal representations. The proponents of strong representationalism typically suggest that the system of internal representations constitutes a language with a combinatorial syntax and semantics. Braddon-Mitchell and Jackson argued that mental representations might be more analogous to maps than to sentences. Waskan argued that mental representations are akin to scale models. Fodor and Fodor and Pylyshyn argued that certain pervasive features of thought can only be explained by the hypothesis that thought takes place in a linguistic medium. A physical symbol system (PSS) hypothesis is a version of strong representationalism, the idea that representational mental states are functionally characterizable relations to internal representations. The representational content has a significant role in computational models of cognitive capacities. The internal states and structures posited in computational theories of cognition are distally interpreted in such theories. The distal objects and properties that determine the representational content of the posited internal states and structures serve to type-individuate a computationally characterized mechanism. Strong Representationalism, as exemplified by the PSS hypothesis, construes mental processes as operations on internal representations.
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28

The State of Interdependence Information Technology Law. T.M.C. Asser Press, 2010.

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29

Fundación de Investigaciones Sociales y Políticas. Comisión de Política Institucional., ed. Algunas cuestiones sobre la democracia: Seminario interno de la Comisión de Política Institucional (FISyP). Buenos Aires, Argentina: FISyP, 1989.

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30

Herbert, Kitschelt, ed. Post-communist party systems: Competition, representation, and inter-party cooperation. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1999.

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31

Rey, Georges. Representation of Language. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198855637.001.0001.

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This book is a defense, against mostly philosophical objections, of a Chomskyan postulation of an internal, innate computational system for human language that is typically manifested in native speaker’s intuitive responses to samples of speech. But it is also a critical examination of some of the glosses on the theory: the assimilation of it to traditional Rationalism; a supposed conflict between being innate and learned; an unclear ontology which requires what I call a “representational pretense” (whereby linguists merely pretend for the sake of exposition that, e.g., tokens of words are uttered); and, most crucially to my concerns, Chomsky’s specific eliminativism about the role of intentionality not only in his own theories, but in any serious science at all. This last is a fundamentally important issue for linguistics, psychology, and philosophy that I hope an examination of a theory as rich and promising as a Chomskyan linguistics will help illuminate. I will also touch on some peripheral issues that Chomsky seems to me to mistakenly associate with his theory: an anti-realism about ordinary thought and talk, and a peculiar dismissal of the mind/body problem(s), toward the solution of some of which I think his theory actually makes a promising contribution.
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32

Pruysers, Scott, William P. Cross, Anika Gauja, and Gideon Rahat. Candidate Selection Rules and Democratic Outcomes. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198758631.003.0009.

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Using data from the Political Party Database, this chapter analyses the impact of the internal structures and rules of political parties on women’s representation (conceptualized as the number of female candidates nominated). It examines the impact of candidate selection methods (inclusive/exclusive, centralized/decentralized), gender quotas, the presence of intra-party women’s organizations, reserved positions in party institutions, and candidacy requirements. The multivariate analysis reveals that state-level gender quotas have a significant positive effect on the number of women nominated, as does the presence of women in positions of authority, such as in parliament and on party executives. Interestingly, the authors find that the formal rules adopted by parties concerning candidate selection (including candidate selection rules) do not make a significant difference when considering representational outcomes.
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33

Japanese Religions On The Internet Innovation Representation And Authority. Routledge, 2010.

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34

Manion, Jen. Transgender Representations, Identities, and Communities. Edited by Ellen Hartigan-O'Connor and Lisa G. Materson. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780190222628.013.34.

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Accounts of people who crossed genders, either temporarily or for a lifetime, are well known to historians. The emerging field of transgender studies has raised a new set of questions for scholars intent on unpacking more fully the meaning of the lives of people who were never neatly contained by the categories of “man” or “woman.” A historic approach to this subject is invaluable since particular historic periods signaled significant changes in how such people were perceived and treated by institutions, including the state and the medical establishment. Another crucial axis of difference exists between dominant understandings of those who were assigned the female sex at birth and those who were assigned the male sex at birth.
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35

Ockelford, Adam. Shape in music notation. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199351411.003.0010.

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This chapter explores how perceptual domains function in the auditory and visual modalities, and sets out a model, using ‘zygonic’ theory, showing how different forms of mapping between the two may logically occur in cognition. Such mappings enable the perceived shapes of patterns in sound to be represented as two-dimensional visual shapes. Four types of inter-domain relationship are identified: ‘regular’, ‘irregular’ (the latter being ‘indirect’ or ‘arbitrary’) and ‘synaesthetic’. ‘Regular’, ‘indirect’ and ‘arbitrary’ representations are somewhat analogous to the threefold typology of signs defined in Peircean semiotics: icon, index and symbol. The new model is tested in the context of (1) young children’s ‘picture’ scores, (2) blind children’s tactile representations of pitch, (3) Western staff notation, (4) music in braille, (5) guitar chord symbols and (6) a synaesthete’s representation of patterns in sound. The implications for musicians and for musicological and music-psychological understanding and future research are discussed.
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36

Reader, Ian, Birgit Staemmler, and Erica Baffelli. Japanese Religions on the Internet: Innovation, Representation, and Authority. Taylor & Francis Group, 2013.

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37

Caballero-Esteve, Mercè. Structural dimensions of object representation: An analysis of inter-rater reliability and internal consistency. 1985.

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38

Lawrence, Jeffrey. An Inter-American Episode. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190690205.003.0003.

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This chapter focuses on a paradigmatic misencounter between an American experiencer and a Latin American reader. Examining an implicit debate about the sources of Walt Whitman’s poetry and vision of the Americas, I argue that Waldo Frank, one of the twentieth century’s main literary ambassadors from the US to Latin America, positioned Whitman as the representative US writer whose antibookish experiential aesthetics could serve as a model for “American” writers both in the North and in the South. I show how Frank’s framework provided a foil for Borges’s idiosyncratic view that Whitman’s poetry about America derived entirely from his readings of European and US writers. Although much of the best scholarship on Whitman’s reception in Latin America has concentrated on poets like José Martí and Pablo Neruda, who adapted Whitman’s naturalism, I contend that Borges’s iconoclastic portrait of Whitman as a reader profoundly influenced a range of anti-experiential literary theories and practices in Latin America.
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39

Wu, Shih-Wei, and Paul W. Glimcher. The Emerging Standard Neurobiological Model of Decision Making. Edited by Shu-Heng Chen, Mak Kaboudan, and Ye-Rong Du. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199844371.013.45.

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The standard neurobiological model of decision making has evolved, since the turn of the twenty-first century, from a confluence of economic, psychological, and neurosci- entific studies of how humans make choices. Two fundamental insights have guided the development of this model during this period, one drawn from economics and the other from neuroscience. The first derives from neoclassical economic theory, which unambiguously demonstrated that logically consistent choosers behave “as if” they had some internal, continuous, and monotonic representation of the values of any choice objects under consideration. The second insight derives from neurobiological studies suggesting that the brain can both represent, in patterns of local neural activity, and compare, by a process of interneuronal competition, internal representations of value associated with different choices.
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40

Postfeminist Digital Cultures: Femininity, Social Media, and Self-Representation. Palgrave Macmillan, 2015.

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41

Electronic Democracy in Europe: Prospects and Challenges of E-Publics, E-Participation and E-Voting. Springer, 2016.

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42

Aichholzer, Georg, Leonhard Hennen, and Ralf Lindner. Electronic Democracy in Europe: Prospects and Challenges of E-Publics, E-Participation and E-Voting. Springer, 2018.

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43

Keller, Lorraine Juliano. The Argument from Intentionality (or Aboutness). Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190842215.003.0002.

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The Theistic Argument from Intentionality (TAI) is a venerable argument for the existence of God from the existence of eternal truths. The argument relies inter alia on the premises that (i) truth requires representation, and that (ii) non-derivative representation is a function of, and only of, minds. If propositions are the fundamental bearers of truth and falsity, then these premises entail that propositions (or at least their representational properties) depend on minds. Although it is widely thought that psychologism—the view that the fundamental truth-bearers are mind-dependent—was refuted by Frege, a psychologistic view of propositions has been undergoing a revival. However, this new psychologism suffers from a problem of scarcity—finite minds cannot generate enough thoughts to play the role of fundamental truth-bearers. This objection paves the way for a revised version of the TAI: only an infinite mind can furnish enough thoughts to play the role of propositions.
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44

Mansfeldova, Zdenka, Radoslaw Markowski, Gabor Toka, and Herbert Kitschelt. Post-Communist Party Systems: Competition, Representation, and Inter-Party Cooperation (Cambridge Studies in Comparative Politics). Cambridge University Press, 1999.

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45

Mansfeldova, Zdenka, Radoslaw Markowski, Gabor Toka, and Herbert Kitschelt. Post-Communist Party Systems: Competition, Representation, and Inter-Party Cooperation (Cambridge Studies in Comparative Politics). Cambridge University Press, 1999.

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46

Jihadism: Online Discourses and Representations (Studying Jihadism). V&R unipress, 2013.

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47

Schlapbach, Karin. Epilogue: Dance as Experience. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198807728.003.0008.

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The epilogue synthesizes the insights gained from the preceding chapters. The observation that non-representational dances trigger interpretations in the internal audiences highlights at once the capability of dance to go beyond representation and the need to find meaning in it. Just as the dancers are affected by the physical reality of their performance, so the spectators too are affected by the physical presence of the dancers. Dance is performative and dynamic, and its way to cognition and action is experience. Dance reconciles opposites by encapsulating vitality and disruption, rational patterns and sensory experience, presence and transience, active and passive. The mimesis of dance interacts in many ways with the pragmatic contexts of its performance, making it a powerful cultural force.
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48

Di Paolo, Ezequiel A., Thomas Buhrmann, and Xabier E. Barandiaran. Virtual actions and abstract attitudes. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780198786849.003.0008.

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This chapter discusses the claim that enactivism cannot account for “representation-hungry” cognitive performance. Clusters of sensorimotor schemes suggest a way in which the virtual sensitivities inherent in every act of sense-making can be extended beyond the immediate situation by means of virtual actions. These are regulations performed by the agent that alter the functional relations between potential acts in a given activity. The chapter also reconsiders the question of object perception. Evidence suggests that adopting an abstract perceptual attitude toward an object (seeing it beyond its instrumental use) is a social skill, both in terms of how it develops and in terms of what this attitude entails, particularly as a form of decentering. Both of these analyses sketch viable routes through which enactivism can claim to address complex cognitive phenomena that previously only seemed explainable via the use of internal representations.
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49

Garrett, Don. Representation and Consciousness in Spinoza’s Naturalistic Theory of the Imagination. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195307771.003.0018.

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Margaret Wilson argued that Spinoza’s theory of mind cannot “recognize and take account of” such specific phenomena of human mentality as ignorance of many internal bodily states, representation of the external world, consciousness, and the expression of mentality in behavior. By resolving a set of puzzles about the scope, representational content, consciousness, and bodily expression of imagination more generally, this chapter defends Spinoza’s panpsychistic theory of mind against these objections. The key lies in understanding his theory of the imagination itself; his doctrines concerning a number of closely related topics such as inherence, intellect, confusion, conatus, perfection, and “power of thinking”; and what may be called his “incremental naturalism” that is, his guiding conviction that intentionality, desire, belief, understanding, and consciousness are already present in their most rudimentary forms throughout nature. The chapter argues that Spinoza identifies consciousness (conscientia), in its various degrees, with power of thinking (cogitandi potentia).
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50

Baxter, Katherine Isobel. Imagined States. Edinburgh University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474420839.001.0001.

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Imagined States examines the significance of the law in colonial and postcolonial fiction from and about Nigeria between 1900 and 1966. The book argues that in the discrete period of the final half-century of British colonialism in Nigeria through into the early years of independence prior to the Biafran War, the law provided a key site for fiction’s negotiations with the increasingly complex realities of the colonial project. Attending to the representation of the law in that fiction provides important insights not only into the realities of the historical period but, equally importantly, into the dominant and emergent discourses and ideologies that shaped those realities. Imagined States explores a range of texts including popular, middle-brow and acclaimed postcolonial novels, as well as newspaper stories and memoirs, by both British and Nigerian authors (including Chinua Achebe, Joyce Carey, Cyprian Ekwensi and Edgar Wallace), focusing in particular on how the state of exception and ideas of civilisation were negotiated imaginatively in the law and fiction. These explorations are organised chronologically and thematically, moving from the law ‘upcountry’ (focusing on pre- and inter-war British representations of the District Commissioner), through the law in the city (focusing on late colonial and early postcolonial Nigerian fiction), to law and politics (focusing on postcolonial Nigerian representations of treason and violence).
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