Academic literature on the topic 'Modes of subjugation'

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Journal articles on the topic "Modes of subjugation"

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Ramos Silva, Luciane. "Black Brazilians on the Move." Dance Research Journal 53, no. 2 (2021): 124–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0149767721000267.

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AbstractThis Keynote offers a brief overview of an artistic and activist editorial project based in São Paulo City, the magazine O Menelick 2° Ato, as well as presents a portrait of some Black contemporary women artists, some of them interdisciplinary, and articulates modes of interrogating political and symbolic violence and subjugation from Brazilian colonially, creating an artistic presence rooted in the search for self-determination, autonomy, and modes of existence ignited by Black diasporas’ ways of self-writing. Their creative work also disrupts hegemonic epistemologies and calls us to
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Yogesh Shreekant Anvekar. "Feminist analysis of Rupa Bajwa’s: The sari shop." World Journal of Advanced Research and Reviews 22, no. 1 (2024): 543–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.30574/wjarr.2024.22.1.1134.

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An analysis of the ‘The Sari Shop’ by Rupa Bajwa using Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s Theory of women and economics has been attempted. The Researcher has analyzed the different ways and circumstances through which the women protagonists were made to leave productive modes of employment to take up reproductive employment and the benefits offered to them, the consequences and the intermingling of both capitalism and patriarchy to keep those women under subjugation along with the consequences of the rebellion lead by the protagonists which differed according to their class, family and educational ba
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Christiansen, Steen Ledet. "Pain and the Cinesthetic Subject in Black Swan." Screen Bodies 1, no. 2 (2016): 25–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.3167/screen.2016.010203.

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Darren Aronofsky’s Black Swan (2010) produces a cinesthetic subject that articulates issues of gendered violence but at the same time also opens up space for producing a new subject outside of biopower. Tracing the production of pain as a way of feeling gendered violence rather than simply understanding it, the article also argues that Nina Sawyer’s transformation is an act of subversive becoming. Pain is produced by the film’s formal properties, pulling us along as viewers, and producing new modes of sensing biopower’s cultural techniques and subjugation of bodies. At the same time, pain beco
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Yogesh, Shreekant Anvekar. "Feminist analysis of Rupa Bajwa's: The sari shop." World Journal of Advanced Research and Reviews 22, no. 1 (2024): 543–46. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.14206324.

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An analysis of the ‘The Sari Shop’ by Rupa Bajwa using Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s Theory of women and economics has been attempted. The Researcher has analyzed the different ways and circumstances through which the women protagonists were made to leave productive modes of employment to take up reproductive employment and the benefits offered to them, the consequences and the intermingling of both capitalism and patriarchy to keep those women under subjugation along with the consequences of the rebellion lead by the protagonists which differed according to their class, family
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Simone, AbdouMaliq. "An Urban Political from the "End of the World": Dock Nine and its Technical Epistles." Anthropological Quarterly 96, no. 1 (2024): 153–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/anq.2024.a923087.

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ABSTRACT: This essay explores some resonances between the measures taken by the intensely subjugated residents of an urban district in Jayapura, West Papua (Indonesia) and notions of the "technical" examined by multiple strands in philosophies of media/computation, as well as Black thought. It explores some of the collective orientations and practices deployed to address a context of intensive subjugation, emphasizing these practices as modes of technicity applied to sustaining ways of acting in concert in a situation that continually undermines social coherence and intimacy. This exploration
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Burguete Miguel, Enrique Eduardo. "Gender’s post-feminism and transhumanism." Medicina e Morale 68, no. 2 (2019): 197–210. http://dx.doi.org/10.4081/mem.2019.582.

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The corollary of the humanist project for human enhancement is transhumanism, which considers post-human modes of existence to be desirable, and aspires to overcome our vulnerability by incorporating available technology into our nature. One of its manifestations is the queer theory, which calls for actively redefining the “self”, starting with the sexed body and its functioning. This article analyses the transhumanist impulse and the queer theory from the concepts of emancipation and progress, asking the following questions: a) What do both terms mean when we refer to human beings? and b) Are
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Tazzioli, Martina, and Nicholas De Genova. "Kidnapping migrants as a tactic of border enforcement." Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 38, no. 5 (2020): 867–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0263775820925492.

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This article identifies and analyses the tactic of kidnapping migrants that is increasingly deployed by states to disrupt, decelerate, and block migrants’ mobility. Kidnapping, we argue, is one of the political technologies of capture used by state authorities in their efforts to reassert control over migratory movements. This analysis contributes to a new understanding of the politics of border enforcement through strategies aimed at the containment of migration. The article focuses on the U.S.–Mexico border and the European border in the Mediterranean Sea as crucial sites where states have i
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Du, Yifan. "During the Anti-Japanese war period, Comparison of the newspaper distribution of the Communist Party of China between in the Shanxi-Gansu-Ningxia border area and the Kuomintang area." SHS Web of Conferences 157 (2023): 03014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/shsconf/202315703014.

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The “Lugou bridge Incident” broke out on July 7, 1937. In order to save the country from subjugation, the Kuomintang and the Communist Party carried out the second cooperation. This cooperation is non party cooperation, and there are great differences in political, military and ruling regions. In response to these differences, the Communist Party of China adopted different newspaper distribution models and public opinion management modes. Based on the historical and environmental background of the War of Resistance against Japanese Aggression, this paper collects the distributing data of Party
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Williams, Sean, and Lillis Ó Laoire. "Vernacular Catholicism in Ireland: The Keening Woman." Religions 15, no. 7 (2024): 879. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/rel15070879.

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The relationship between popular vernacular Catholicism and the more official liturgical variety has varied over centuries. Following the subjugation of Ireland by the late 17th century, and the institution of anti-Catholic proscriptions, the number of priests available became more restricted. Religious observation subsequently centered on holy days and local sacred sites including healing wells, many of them dedicated to saints. Always central figures in death rituals, women who mourned the dead—“keening women”—were so called because they lamented the dead through a combination of voice and s
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Yıldız, Hatice. "The Politics of Time in Colonial Bombay: Labor Patterns and Protest in Cotton Mills." Journal of Social History 54, no. 1 (2019): 206–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jsh/shz016.

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Abstract This article examines the modes of time and work discipline that emerged through factory industry in colonial Bombay. Based on a wide range of archival sources, it shows that mechanized production did not invariably suggest a transition from task-based, irregular to clock-measured, rationally organized work patterns. Operating simultaneously within temporal orders constructed by the global economy, agriculture, family, and community, cotton mills combined new disciplinary practices with a flexible approach to labor. Gender, marital status, religion, skill, and position in the manufact
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Modes of subjugation"

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Roberto-Alba, Nelson Fernando. "Politique et subjectivation. Michel Foucault, Félix Guattari, Jacques Rancière." Electronic Thesis or Diss., Paris 8, 2022. http://www.theses.fr/2022PA080062.

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Cette thèse porte sur la question des modes de subjectivation et leur rapport avec la politique chez Michel Foucault, Félix Guattari et Jacques Rancière. Elle s’inscrit dans le domaine de la philosophie politique et sociale de la seconde moitié du XXe siècle en France autour de la question : comment dans la politique se constituent des modes de subjectivation collectifs et comment ces subjectivations collectives sont à l’origine des formes de pratique et d’agencement politiques ? L’analyse des modes de subjectivation s’impose d’une façon particulière à chacun de ces philosophes par une mise en
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Salvatori, Betty. "Towards a culturally relevant model for assisted accommodation services for homeless young Aboriginal women: A case for actualising one's potential or the continuing process of subjugation of peoples colonised?" Thesis, Indigenous Heath Studies, 2000. http://hdl.handle.net/2123/5688.

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The purpose of this study is to identify the needs of homeless young Aboriginal women and develop a culturally appropriate, therapeutic, service delivery model. This model could assist in the natural development of these girls as they journey through the rites of passage into womanhood if implemented in a nurturing, culturally sensitive and relevant environment. A qualitative content analysis methodological approach was used to examine major issues, identify key concepts and analyse these concepts in order to develop deductively, propositions from which organising constructs could be derived a
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Books on the topic "Modes of subjugation"

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Strain, Virginia Lee. Legal Reform in English Renaissance Literature. Edinburgh University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474416290.001.0001.

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This book investigates rhetorical and representational practices that were used to monitor English law at the turn of the seventeenth century. While the majority of Law and Literature studies characterise the law as a force of coercion and subjugation, this book instead treats in greater depth the law’s own vulnerability, both to corruption and to correction. The dominance of law in early modern life made its failings and improvements of widespread concern: it was a regular and popular focus of criticism. The terms and techniques of legal reform provided modes of analysis through which legal a
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Rivera, Takeo. Model Minority Masochism. Oxford University Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197557488.001.0001.

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There are few grand narratives that loom over Asian Americans more than the “model minority.” While many Asian Americanist scholars and activists aim to disprove the model minority as “myth,” author Takeo Rivera instead rethinks the model minority as cultural politics. Rather than disproving the model minority, Rivera instead argues that Asian Americans have formulated their racial and gendered subjectivities in relation to what Rivera terms “model minority masochism.” Rivera details two complementary forms of contemporary racial masochism: a self-subjugating masochism which embraces the model
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Mitcheson, Katrina. Visual Art and Self-Construction. Edinburgh University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9780748693672.001.0001.

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Starting from the criticisms of a simple, given self found in Nietzsche, Freud and Foucault, Visual Art and Self-Construction employs artworks to address the problem of how a complex self, incorporating multiple drives, is constructed, and how a hermeneutics of the self can avoid reproducing a subjugated self. Literary artworks have previously been looked to for models of self-construction, and narrative theories of the self turn to the novel in particular as a paradigm of self-unification. Exploring the narrative theory of the self advanced by Paul Ricoeur this book argues that narrative theo
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Laski, Gregory. Epilogue. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190642792.003.0007.

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The Epilogue places Spike Lee’s Bamboozled into dialogue with the thought of Ralph Ellison, whose Invisible Man constitutes the silent source for Lee’s film. At the center of both works is the image of a falling body, which highlights the relationship between the present-past of slavery and the possibility of achieving a democratic future. Whereas Lee leaves viewers locked in the past of racial subjugation that his film’s treatment of blackface minstrelsy represents, Ellison revises Walt Whitman’s vision to underscore the ways nonprogressive temporal models can facilitate political progress. L
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Pauwels, Heidi R. Sītā. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198767022.003.0008.

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The impulse in Hinduism to attribute divinity to women is well demonstrated in the legend of Sītā. Her unconditional devotion to her husband Rāma qualifies her as worthy of devotion, particularly because as consort to Rāma who is Viṣṇu in human form, Sītā can be regarded as Lakṣmī, to be worshiped jointly with him. Her total surrender to Rāma’s will elevates her in Vaiṣṇava thought as the model for the soul’s passive dependence upon God and as mediator between Viṣṇu and worshipers. But offering a contrary view, Śākta narratives shift redemptive power from Rāma to Sītā. Yet another construction
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Anderson, Cheryl P., and Debra L. Martin, eds. Massacres. University Press of Florida, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.5744/florida/9781683400691.001.0001.

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Bioarchaeology and forensic anthropology offer unique perspectives on studies of mass violence and present opportunities to interpret human skeletal remains in a broader cultural context. Massacres and other forms of large-scale violence have been documented in many different ancient and modern contexts. Moving the analysis from the victims to the broader political and cultural context necessitates using social theories about the nature of mass violence. Massacres can be seen as a process, that is, as the unfolding of nonrandom patterns or chains of events that precede the events and continue
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Tierney, Matt. Dismantlings. Cornell University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.7591/cornell/9781501746413.001.0001.

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“For the master's tools,” the poet Audre Lorde wrote, “will never dismantle the master's house.” This book is a study of literary, political, and philosophical critiques of the utopian claims about technology in the Long Seventies, the decade and a half before 1980. Following Alice Hilton's 1963 admonition that the coming years would bring humanity to a crossroads, the book explores wide-ranging ideas from science fiction, avant-garde literatures, feminist and anti-racist activism, and indigenous eco-philosophy that may yet challenge machines of war, control, and oppression. It opposes the lan
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Johansen, Bruce, and Adebowale Akande, eds. Nationalism: Past as Prologue. Nova Science Publishers, Inc., 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.52305/aief3847.

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Nationalism: Past as Prologue began as a single volume being compiled by Ad Akande, a scholar from South Africa, who proposed it to me as co-author about two years ago. The original idea was to examine how the damaging roots of nationalism have been corroding political systems around the world, and creating dangerous obstacles for necessary international cooperation. Since I (Bruce E. Johansen) has written profusely about climate change (global warming, a.k.a. infrared forcing), I suggested a concerted effort in that direction. This is a worldwide existential threat that affects every living t
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Book chapters on the topic "Modes of subjugation"

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Pazzagli, Rossano. "Il tempo di Leonardo fra territorio e modernità." In Lo sguardo territorialista di Leonardo. Firenze University Press, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.36253/978-88-5518-514-1.05.

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Leonardo’s life and work coincide with the time the modern world was born, involving a strong change in the relationship with the territory and an acceleration of human subjugation of nature. Leonardo’s artistic and technical work moves between two polarities: the idea of a generating nature and the human aspiration to domination, with a vision of knowledge not yet fragmented by the specialism of modernity. Leonardo’s multifaceted activity is a child of his age: of a Renaissance that was more innovation than method and of a period in which political transformations and a demographic recovery d
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Peterson, John A. "Contesting Modes of Colonialism." In Historical Archaeology of Early Modern Colonialism in Asia-Pacific. University Press of Florida, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5744/florida/9780813054766.003.0002.

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The Spanish entrance to Island Southeast Asia in the sixteenth century had profoundimpacts on native peoples and terrain, but followed a millennia of intrusion into the region by Indian (Hindu), Buddhist, Chinese, Muslim, and native traders who established entrepôts in the Indonesian Archipelago from Malaka to Java to the Moluccas Islands. This trading network extended from Venice to Guangzhou. The southern Philippines lay at the edge, but participated in the trade of cloves, nutmeg, pepper, and other spices and forest products, first through Majapahit and later through Chinese traders. A cons
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Bridges, Khiara M. "Race, Rights, and Reproductive Oppression." In The Oxford Handbook of Race and Law in the United States. Oxford University Press, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780190947385.013.35.

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Abstract This chapter draws into greater relief the relationship of race to reproductive rights. The first section explains why abortion rights are an issue of racial justice. The second section explores a few of the myriad modes by which reproductive oppression—that is, the domination and subjugation that operate through the regulation and exploitation of people’s reproductive capacities—is inflicted in the United States today. It discusses the United States’ long history of sterilization abuse against poor and nonwhite communities, the criminalization of substance use during pregnancy, and t
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Graham, T. Austin, and Jay Watson. "Reconstructions: Faulkner and Du Bois on the Civil War." In Faulkner and the Black Literatures of the Americas. University Press of Mississippi, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.14325/mississippi/9781496806345.003.0008.

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The Unvanquished was Faulkner’s most sustained fictional account of the Civil War, as well as an occasion for him to model various methods of studying the conflict. The novel approaches the war from several historiographically distinct viewpoints, sometimes presenting it as a demonstration of abstract, universal principles, and other times as a fight over slavery. In making the former case, The Unvanquished resembles some of the most cutting-edge, “revisionist” Civil War histories of the 1920s and 30s. But in making the latter it echoes W.E.B. Du Bois’ then-unfashionable, now-accepted insisten
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Gash, Alison L., and Daniel J. Tichenor. "Governing Children." In Democracy's Child. Oxford University PressNew York, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197581667.003.0002.

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Abstract This chapter focuses on how children have been governed over time. It moves chronologically through history from the time when children were viewed as parental property to when they were viewed as rights-bearing individuals demanding special protection from the state until reaching the age of majority. The chapter goes on to map diverse laws, policies, and practices regulating children, considering whether they advance significant control or autonomy for young people and whether they primarily serve “the best interests of the child” or other interests. This chapter helps readers make
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Matthews, Scott L. "Documenting SNCC and the Rural South." In Capturing the South. University of North Carolina Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.5149/northcarolina/9781469646459.003.0005.

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This chapter examines the cultural politics of civil rights movement photography by analysing the work of Danny Lyon who worked as a photographer for the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee between 1962 and 1964. It explores how documentarians such as Robert Frank, Walker Evans, and James Agee inspired Lyon’s documentary work and how the political culture of the New Left influenced his work’s reception. The chapter first focuses on Lyon’s photographs of black SNCC activists in the South, particularly Robert Moses. Lyon’s photographs of Moses helped spread a romantic mythology around Mose
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Rowe, John Carlos. "The View from Rock Writing Bluff The Nick Black Elk Narratives and U.S. Cultural Imperialism." In literary culture and Us. Imperialism. Oxford University PressNew York, NY, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195131505.003.0010.

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Abstract The history of the Lakota Hehaka Sapa’s, or Nicholas Black Elk’s, reception, celebrity, and complex mythologization by Native American and Euro-American cultures represents effectively the possibilities and limitations of the colonized subject responding to U.S. Imperialism in the modern period. The different and often contradictory ways in 218 literary culture and U.S. Imperialism which the Black Elk narratives represent Lakota culture and its relation to Euro-American culture do not fit conventional theoretical models either for assimilation to the dominant, colonizing society or fo
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Marchiori, Silvia M. "David A. Lines, The Dynamics of Learning in Early Modern Italy. Arts and Medicine at the University of Bologna. I Tatti Studies in Italian Renaissance History. Cambridge, MA, and London: Harvard University Press, 2023." In History of Universities: Volume XXXVI / 2. Oxford University PressOxford, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198901730.003.0013.

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Abstract This chapter provides a commentary on David Lines’s The Dynamics of Learning in Early Modern Italy. Arts and Medicine at the University of Bologna (2023). This book on the history of the University of Bologna presents an excellent overview of the activity of the studium from its first formal statutes in the fifteenth century to its developments in the late eighteenth century. Lines examines the centuries-long unfolding of a multifaceted institution, building convincing arguments about the gradual but continuous changes that affected teachings in the arts, medicine, and theology. Quest
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Atkins, Ed. "Global." In A Just Energy Transition. Policy Press, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1332/policypress/9781529220957.003.0008.

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This chapter presents a final geographical dimension of a just energy transition: exploring the global dimensions of decarbonisation. It adopts an approach of cosmopolitan justice to explore how contemporary energy transitions represent a process of cost-shifting between countries and communities that leads to renewable energy technologies benefiting some and negatively impacting others. To do so, this chapter explores how solar panels and battery technologies are implicated in environmental destruction in South America’s ‘lithium triangle’, child labour in the Democratic Republic of Congo, an
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Beck, Colin J., Mlada Bukovansky, Erica Chenoweth, George Lawson, Sharon Erickson Nepstad, and Daniel P. Ritter. "Political Theory and the Dichotomies of Revolution." In On Revolutions. Oxford University Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197638354.003.0007.

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Chapter 6 argues that political theory can help explain emergent properties of revolutionary struggles that are unfolding now. Hannah Arendt’s book, On Revolution, departs from the social science model that seeks to generate empirically verifiable propositions about causal dynamics. She asserts the normativity of revolution and embraces “the political” as a decisive sphere of human action. Her ideas value the emancipatory and innovative potential of revolutions and decry their co-optation, derailment, or violent suppression. She invites scholars to evaluate as well as explain revolutionary pro
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Conference papers on the topic "Modes of subjugation"

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Ruggieri, Andrea, Teresa Gil-Piqueras, and Pablo Rodríguez-Navarro. "El Castillo de L’Aquila. Fortificación e identidad local." In FORTMED2025 - Defensive Architecture of the Mediterranean. edUPV. Editorial Universitat Politècnica de València, 2025. https://doi.org/10.4995/fortmed2025.2025.20257.

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The city of L’Aquila, which was founded twice (both times in the 13th century), was, in the 15th century, the second most important city in the Kingdom of Naples. At the same time, it was a territory disputed between the Spanish and the French. It is within this historical context that the construction of an important castle began, initiated by the Viceroy, Prince Philibert of Orange, and completed by his successor, Pedro de Toledo, Marquis of Villafranca. It was in this context that the renowned Valencian architect Luis Escrivá was summoned to L’Aquila.The objective was to dominate the strate
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