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1
Trousson, Raymond / Vercruysse, Jeroom (dir.),
Dictionnaire general de Voltaire. (Champion classiques, references et dictionnaires 18) 1272 p. 2020:10 (Champion, FR) <670-9>
ISBN 978-2-38096-016-7 paper ¥7,064.- (税込) EUR 38.00
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1
Auerbach, Adam Michael / Thachil, Tariq,
Migrants and Machine Politics: How India's Urban Poor Seek Representation and Responsiveness. (Princeton Studies in Political Behavior) 256 pp. 2023:1 (Princeton U. Pr., US) <680-980>
ISBN 978-0-691-23608-7 hard ¥25,872.- (税込) US$ 120.00 *
ISBN 978-0-691-23609-4 paper ¥7,546.- (税込) US$ 35.00 *
How poor migrants shape city politics during urbanizationAs the Global South rapidly urbanizes, millions of people have migrated from the countryside to urban slums, which now house one billion people worldwide. The transformative potential of urbanization hinges on whether and how poor migrants are integrated into city politics. Popular and scholarly accounts paint migrant slums as exhausted by dispossession, subdued by local dons, bought off by wily politicians, or polarized by ethnic appeals. Migrants and Machine Politics shows how slum residents in India routinely defy such portrayals, actively constructing and wielding political machine networks to demand important, albeit imperfect, representation and responsiveness within the country's expanding cities.Drawing on years of pioneering fieldwork in India's slums, including ethnographic observation, interviews, surveys, and experiments, Adam Michael Auerbach and Tariq Thachil reveal how migrants harness forces of political competition-as residents, voters, community leaders, and party workers-to sow unexpected seeds of accountability within city politics. This multifaceted agency provokes new questions about how political networks form during urbanization. In answering these questions, this book overturns longstanding assumptions about how political machines exploit the urban poor to stifle competition, foster ethnic favoritism, and entrench vote buying.By documenting how poor migrants actively shape urban politics in counterintuitive ways, Migrants and Machine Politics sheds new light on the political consequences of urbanization across India and the Global South.
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2
EUにおけるマイノリティ政治研究ハンドブック
Malloy, Tove H. / Vizi, Balazs (eds.),
Research Handbook on Minority Politics in the European Union. 464 pp. 2022:11 (E. Elgar, UK) <680-910>
ISBN 978-1-80037-592-5 hard ¥57,834.- (税込) GB£ 203.00 *
This timely Research Handbook provides a multidisciplinary overview of research on ethno-cultural minority issues at the supranational level of the EU. It delivers a state-of-the-art review of the EU's approaches to development and institutional implementation of minority policies from the Treaty of Rome until today.Through critical analyses, this Research Handbook addresses minority politics from the perspectives of politicization and depoliticization of minority rights, anti-discrimination, case law, cultural and linguistic diversity protection, cohesion and regional development as well as enlargement and external action. Chapters also focus on policy areas that indirectly affect the lives of ethno-cultural minorities as well as non-policy approaches emanating from the tensions in the EU architecture and legal framework. Although the Research Handbook confirms the EU's ambivalence towards minority politics, it also offers new views on a policy area that is under pressure to become more flexible.Offering an innovative approach in analysing policy, legislative and institutional developments, this Research Handbook will be an ideal read for students and scholars interested in European politics and public policy. Its critical insights on European policy will also make this a beneficial read to policy-makers.
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3
Hof, Helena,
The EU Migrant Generation in Asia: Middle-Class Aspirations in Asian Global Cities. (Global Migration and Social Change) 240 pp. 2022:11 (Bristol U. Pr., UK) <680-939>
ISBN 978-1-5292-2500-6 hard ¥22,792.- (税込) GB£ 80.00 *
Drawing on an extensive study with young individuals who migrated to Singapore and Tokyo in the 2010s, this book sheds light on the friendships, emotions, hopes and fears involved in establishing life as Europeans in Asia. It demonstrates how migration to Asian business centres has become a way of distinction and an alternative route of middle-class reproduction for young Europeans during that period. The perceived insecurities of life in the crisis-ridden EU result in these migrants' onward migration or prolonged stays in Asia. Capturing the changing roles of Singapore and Japan as migration destinations, this pioneering work makes the case for EU citizens' aspired lifestyles and professional employment that is no longer only attainable in Europe or the West.
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4
Taylor, Liza,
Feminism in Coalition: Thinking with US Women of Color Feminism. 312 pp. 2023:1 (Duke U. Pr., US) <680-873>
ISBN 978-1-4780-1651-9 hard ¥22,627.- (税込) US$ 104.95 *
ISBN 978-1-4780-1915-2 paper ¥6,025.- (税込) US$ 27.95 *
In Feminism in Coalition Liza Taylor examines how US women of color feminists' coalitional politics provides an indispensable resource to contemporary political theory, feminist studies, and intersectional social justice activism. Taylor charts the theorization of coalition in the work of Bernice Johnson Reagon, Audre Lorde, Barbara Smith, the Combahee River Collective, Gloria Anzaldua, Cherrie Moraga, and others. For these activist-scholars, coalition is a dangerous struggle that emerges from a shared political commitment to undermining oppression and an emphasis on self-transformation. Taylor shows how their coalitional understandings of group politics, identity, consciousness, and scholarship have transformed how activists and theorists build alliances across race, class, gender, sexuality, faith, and ethnicity to tackle systems of domination. Their coalitional politics enrich current discussions surrounding the impetus and longevity of effective activism, present robust theoretical accounts of political subject formation and political consciousness, and demonstrate the promise of collective modes of scholarship. In this way, women of color feminists have been formulating solutions to long-standing problems in political theory. By illustrating coalition's vitality to a variety of practical and philosophical interdisciplinary discussions, Taylor encourages us to rethink feminist and political theory.
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5
Jungbluth, Konstanze / Savedra, Monica et al. (eds.),
Language - Belonging - Politics: Impacts for a Future of Complex Diversities. (Border Studies. Cultures, Spaces, Orders 6) 230 S. 2022:2 (Nomos, GW) <680-817>
ISBN 978-3-8487-7031-1 paper ¥13,888.- (税込) EUR 59.00 *
In diesem Buch werden die komplexen Beziehungen zwischen verschiedenen Konzeptualisierungen von Sprache, sozialer Zugehoerigkeit und Politik untersucht. Anhand verschiedener Fallstudien von Sprachsituationen in der romanischen Welt untersuchen die Beitraege dieses Buches die vielfaeltigen Dynamiken von Sprache und sozialer Grenzbildung.
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6
Cruz, Wilfredo,
Latinos in Chicago: Quest for a Political Voice. 184 pp. 2022:11 (Southern Illinois U. Pr., US) <680-860>
ISBN 978-0-8093-3883-2 paper ¥5,282.- (税込) US$ 24.50 *
The Path to Political Power for Latinos in Chicago In the Midwest's largest city, Latinos have been fighting for political representation for more than half a century. In this exploration of urban politics in Chicago, Wilfredo Cruz shows for the first time how Latinos went from being ignored by the Irish-controlled political machine to becoming a respected constituency. Beginning with the Latino community's first attempt to acquire a political voice in Chicago politics in 1911 and continuing through Latino officeholders of the early twenty-first century, Cruz surveys not only the struggles of this community-specifically the two largest Latino groups in the city, Mexicans and Puerto Ricans-but also the ways in which Chicago's Latinos overcame those challenges to gain their political voice. For most of the twentieth century, Chicago politicians ignored the growing Latino community. This disregard changed with the 1983 election of Mayor Harold Washington, an African American who defied the political machine and actively recruited Latinos to his administration and helped them win city and statewide political offices. His actions opened the doors of government for Latinos in Chicago. Subsequent mayors, seeing the political success of Washington's move, continued his policies. Many up-and-coming Latino politicians making strides in Chicago, including state representative AarOn OrtIz, Alderman Andre Vasquez, and Alderman Rossana RodrIguez-Sanchez, contribute their takes on the struggle for political power and the challenges facing the rising new generation of elected officials. With this book, Cruz asks and answers this question: What does the future hold for Latinos politically in Chicago?
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7
Vera, Antonio / Behr, Rafael / Brussig, M. u. a. (Hrsg.),
Migration und Polizei: Auswirkungen der Zuwanderung auf die Organisation und Diversitaet der deutschen Polizei. (Sicherheit. Polizeiwissenschaft und Sicherheitsforschung im Kontext 11) 275 S. 2022:6 (Nomos, GW) <680-648>
ISBN 978-3-8487-8341-0 paper ¥11,534.- (税込) EUR 49.00 *
Diese Anthologie enthaelt die Ergebnisse eines Forschungsprojekts, das die Prozesse institutionellen Wandels, mit denen die Polizei auf die Herausforderungen der Migration reagiert, mit qualitativen empirischen Methoden analysiert hat. Die darin enthaltenen Beitraege beschaeftigen sich insb. mit dem Personal- und Diversitaetsmanagement der Polizei sowie ihrer Organisationskultur und -gestaltung. Dabei zeigt sich, dass die Migrationsbewegungen der letzten Jahre und Jahrzehnte zu deutlichen Veraenderungen in diesen Themenfeldern gefuehrt haben. Die Autor:innen sind in der Soziologie und Oekonomie beheimatet und zugleich Expert:innen fuer Migrations- und/oder Polizeiforschung. Mit Beitraegen von Alexander Auth; Prof. Dr. Rafael Behr; Prof. Dr. Martin Brussig; Alexandra Graevskaia, M.A.; Annelie Molapisi, M.A.; Benedikt Mueller, M.A.; Verena Thomas, M.A.; Prof. Dr. Dr. Antonio Vera und Prof. Dr. Anja Weiss.
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8
Chandler, Nahum Dimitri,
Annotations: On the Early Thought of W. E. B. Du Bois. 200 pp. 2023:5 (Duke U. Pr., US) <680-50>
ISBN 978-1-4780-1579-6 hard ¥20,471.- (税込) US$ 94.95 *
ISBN 978-1-4780-1842-1 paper ¥5,379.- (税込) US$ 24.95 *
In Annotations Nahum Dimitri Chandler offers a philosophical interpretation of W. E. B. Du Bois's 1897 American Negro Academy address, "The Conservation of Races." Chandler approaches Du Bois as a generative and original philosophical thinker-writer on the status and historical implication of matters of human difference, both the fact of and the very idea thereof. Chandler proposes both a close reading of Du Bois's engagement of the concept of so-called race and a deep meditation on Du Bois's conceptualization of historicity in general. He elaborates on the way Du Bois's thought in this address can give an account of the organization of the historicity that yields the emergence of something like the African American, at once with its own internal dimensions and yet also as an originary articulation of forces and possibilities that have world historical implications. Chandler refigures Du Bois's thought as a vital theoretical resource for rethinking our concepts of differences among humans and, so too, our understanding of modern historicity itself.
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9
Thym, Daniel / Odysseus Academic Network (eds.),
Reforming the Common European Asylum System: Opportunities, Pitfalls, and Downsides of the Commission Proposals for a New Pact on Migration and Asylum. (Schriften zum Migrationsrecht 38) 299 S. 2022:3 (Nomos, GW) <680-568>
ISBN 978-3-8487-8725-8 paper ¥19,773.- (税込) EUR 84.00 *
Der Band bietet hochaktuelle und gehaltvolle Beitraege zu den wichtigsten Einzelaspekten der laufenden Reformdebatte zum europaeischen Asylrecht, geschrieben von fuehrenden ExpertInnen aus ganz Europa. Er verbindet eine detaillierte Analyse der Vorhaben im Lichte der geaeusserten Kritikpunkte mit einem Argumentationsstil, der sich an eine breite Leserschaft richtet: Wissenschaft, Rechtspraxis und Politik, Studierende und Promovierende. Rechtstechnische Einzelheiten werden zu uebergreifenden Fragestellungen in Bezug gesetzt, mit Blick auf politische Entwicklungstendenzen, die Beachtung der Menschenrechte sowie die praktische Umsetzung vor Ort. Eine unentbehrliche Hilfestellung fuer das Verstaendnis der komplexen europaeischen Vorhaben. Mit Beitraegen von Dr. Ulrike Brandl, Dr. Galina Cornelisse, Prof. Philippe De Bruycker, Jean-Baptiste Farcy, Prof. Paula Garcia Andrade, Prof. Dr. Iris Goldner Lang, Prof. Elspeth Guild, Dr. Meltem ?neli Ciger, Dr. Lyra Jakuleviciene, Prof. Francesco Maiani, Dr. Madalina Bianca Moraru, Prof. Violeta Moreno-Lax, Prof. Sylvie Sarolea, Dr. Lieneke Slingenberg, Prof. Dr. Daniel Thym, Prof. Lilian Tsourdi und Prof. Jens Vedsted-Hansen.
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10
Carmody, Todd,
Work Requirements: Race, Disability, and the Print Culture of Social Welfare. 336 pp. 2022:8 (Duke U. Pr., US) <680-315>
ISBN 978-1-4780-1544-4 hard ¥22,627.- (税込) US$ 104.95 *
ISBN 978-1-4780-1807-0 paper ¥6,025.- (税込) US$ 27.95 *
Throughout the history of the United States, work-based social welfare practices have served to affirm the moral value of work. In the late nineteenth century this representational project came to be mediated by the printed word with the emergence of industrial print technologies, the expansion of literacy, and the rise of professionalization. In Work Requirements Todd Carmody asks how work, even the most debasing or unproductive labor, came to be seen as inherently meaningful during this era. He explores how the print culture of social welfare-produced by public administrators, by economic planners, by social scientists, and in literature and the arts-tasked people on the social and economic margins, specifically racial minorities, incarcerated people, and people with disabilities, with shoring up the fundamental dignity of work as such. He also outlines how disability itself became a tool of social discipline, defined by bureaucratized institutions as the inability to work. By interrogating the representational effort necessary to make work seem inherently meaningful, Carmody ultimately reveals a forgotten history of competing efforts to think social belonging beyond or even without work.
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11
Schalk, Sami,
Black Disability Politics. 216 pp. 2022:10 (Duke U. Pr., US) <680-316>
ISBN 978-1-4780-2325-8 hard ¥20,471.- (税込) US$ 94.95 *
ISBN 978-1-4780-2500-9 paper ¥5,379.- (税込) US$ 24.95 *
In Black Disability Politics Sami Schalk explores how issues of disability have been and continue to be central to Black activism from the 1970s to the present. Schalk shows how Black people have long engaged with disability as a political issue deeply tied to race and racism. She points out that this work has not been recognized as part of the legacy of disability justice and liberation because Black disability politics differ in language and approach from the mainstream white-dominant disability rights movement. Drawing on the archives of the Black Panther Party and the National Black Women's Health Project alongside interviews with contemporary Black disabled cultural workers, Schalk identifies common qualities of Black disability politics, including the need to ground public health initiatives in the experience and expertise of marginalized disabled people so that they can work in antiracist, feminist, and anti-ableist ways. Prioritizing an understanding of disability within the context of white supremacy, Schalk demonstrates that the work of Black disability politics not only exists but is essential to the future of Black liberation movements.
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12
Omer, Atalia / Lupo, Joshua (eds.),
Religion and Broken Solidarities: Feminism, Race, and Transnationalism. (Contending Modernities) 188 pp. 2022:12 (U. Notre Dame Pr., US) <680-150>
ISBN 978-0-268-20385-6 hard ¥21,560.- (税込) US$ 100.00 *
ISBN 978-0-268-20386-3 paper ¥7,546.- (税込) US$ 35.00 *
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13
Hajjat, Abdellali / Mohammed, Marwan,
Islamophobia in France: The Construction of the "Muslim Problem". Tr. By S. Garner. (Sociology of Race and Ethnicity) 328 pp. 2023:1 (U. Georgia Pr., US) <680-126>
ISBN 978-0-8203-6324-0 hard ¥24,783.- (税込) US$ 114.95 *
ISBN 978-0-8203-6325-7 paper ¥7,535.- (税込) US$ 34.95 *
In 2004 France banned Muslim women from wearing veils in school. In 2010 France passed legislation that banned the wearing of clothing in public that covered the face, mainly to target women who wore burqas. President Emmanuel Macron has stated that the hijab is not in accordance with French ideals. Islamophobiain France takes many forms, both explicit and implicit, and often appears to be sanctioned by the governing bodies themselves. These cultural biases reveal how the Muslim population acts as a scapegoat for the problematic status of immigrants in France more generally.Islamophobia in France is an English translation of Abdellali Hajjat and Marwan Mohammed's Islamophobie: Comment les e?lites franc?aises fabriquent le "proble`me musulman." In this groundbreaking book, Hajjat and Mohammed argue that Islamophobia in France is not the result of individual prejudice or supposed Muslim cultural or racial deficiencies but rather arose out of structures of power and control already in place in France.Hajjat and Mohammed analyze how French elites deploy Islamophobia as a state technology for contesting and controlling the presence of specific groups of postcolonial immigrants and their descendants in contemporary France. With a new introduction for U.S. readers, the authors unpack the data on Islamophobia in France and offer a portrait of how it functions in contemporary society.
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14
McLagan, Elizabeth,
A Peculiar Paradise: A History of Blacks in Oregon, 1788-1940. 2nd ed. 224 pp. 2022:11 (Oregon State U. Pr., US) <680-1208>
ISBN 978-0-87071-221-0 paper ¥4,947.- (税込) US$ 22.95 *
Published in cooperation with Oregon Black Pioneers Elizabeth McLagan's A Peculiar Paradise: a History of Blacks in Oregon, 1788-1940 remains the most comprehensive chronology of Black life in Oregon more than forty years after its original publication. The book has long been a resource for those seeking information on the legal and social barriers faced by people of African descent in Oregon. McLagan's work reveals how, in spite of those barriers, Black individuals and families made Oregon their home, and helped create the state's modern Black communities. Long out of print, the book is available again through Oregon Black Pioneers, Oregon's statewide African American historical society. This revised second edition includes additional details for students and scholars, an expanded reading list, updated artwork, and a new foreword.
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15
Mirande, Alfredo,
The Chicano Experience: An Alternative Perspective. 2nd ed. 376 pp. 2022:8 (U. Notre Dame Pr., US) <680-1209>
ISBN 978-0-268-20284-2 hard ¥26,950.- (税込) US$ 125.00 *
ISBN 978-0-268-20285-9 paper ¥7,546.- (税込) US$ 35.00 *
This revised, second edition of The Chicano Experience offers a new interpretation of the social, cultural, and economic forces that shape the situation of Chicanos today. For more than thirty years, and now in its ninth printing, Alfredo Mirande's The Chicano Experience has captivated readers with its groundbreaking analysis of Chicanos in the United States. Although its original context differs markedly from the current demographic landscape, it remains no less relevant today-Latinos have emerged as the largest minority population in the United States. With updated chapters revised in light of contemporary scholarship, this second edition speaks to the Chicano of today, in addition to puertoriquenos, Central Americans, and other groups who share common experiences of colonization, racialization, and, especially in the last decade, demonization. In this foundational text, Mirande develops a comprehensive framework for Chicano sociology that, in attending closely to Chicano experience, aims to correct the biases and misconceptions that have prevailed in the field. He demonstrates how the conventional immigrant group model of society, with its focus on assimilation into mainstream American culture, does not apply to Chicanos. Supporting this constructive proposal are analyses of Chicano social history and culture, with chapters focusing on the economy, the border, law, education, family, gender and machismo, and religion. The book concludes with a case study of community attitudes toward the police in an urban barrio. In many ways, the first edition of The Chicano Experience anticipated the sensitivity to the experiences of the underrepresented in American culture. This second edition reaffirms the prescience of Mirande's work and makes it available to a new generation of students and scholars of Chicano and Latino studies, ethnic and race studies, sociology, and cultural studies.
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16
Rosenberg, Andrew S.,
Undesirable Immigrants: Why Racism Persists in International Migration. (Princeton Studies in International History and Politics) 384 pp. 2022:9 (Princeton U. Pr., US) <680-1213>
ISBN 978-0-691-23873-9 hard ¥25,872.- (税込) US$ 120.00 *
ISBN 978-0-691-23874-6 paper ¥7,546.- (税込) US$ 35.00 *
How the racist legacy of colonialism shapes global migrationThe Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965 officially ended the explicit prejudice in American immigration policy that began with the 1790 restriction on naturalization to free White persons of "good character." By the 1980s, the rest of the Anglo-European world had followed suit, purging discriminatory language from their immigration laws and achieving what many believe to be a colorblind international system. Undesirable Immigrants challenges this notion, revealing how racial inequality persists in global migration despite the end of formally racist laws.In this eye-opening book, Andrew Rosenberg argues that while today's leaders claim that their policies are objective and seek only to restrict obviously dangerous migrants, these policies are still correlated with race. He traces how colonialism and White supremacy catalyzed violence and sabotaged institutions around the world, and how this historical legacy has produced migrants that the former imperial powers and their allies now deem unfit to enter. Rosenberg shows how postcolonial states remain embedded in a Western culture that requires them to continuously perform their statehood, and how the closing and policing of international borders has become an important symbol of sovereignty, one that imposes harsher restrictions on non-White migrants.Drawing on a wealth of original quantitative evidence, Undesirable Immigrants demonstrates that we cannot address the challenges of international migration without coming to terms with the brutal history of colonialism.
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17
Rosenhaft, Eve / Sierra, Maria (eds.),
European Roma: Lives beyond Stereotypes. 352 pp. 2022:3 (Liverpool U. Pr., UK) <680-1214>
ISBN 978-1-80085-656-1 hard ¥31,196.- (税込) GB£ 109.50 *
ISBN 978-1-80085-657-8 paper ¥8,771.- (税込) GB£ 30.79 *
An Open Access edition of this book is available on the Liverpool University Press website and the OAPEN library. This book, designed as a resource for scholars, educators, activists and non-specialist readers, presents the results of new research on the role of Romani groups in European culture and society since the nineteenth century. Its specific focus is on the ways in which Romani actors, in their interactions with non-Romanies, have contributed to shaping Europe's public spaces. Twelve chapters recount the experiences and accomplishments of individuals and families, from across Europe (England, France, Spain, Germany, Poland, Hungary, Romania and Finland) and Canada. All based on new research, and maintaining a focus on the real lives and activities of Romani people rather than on the perspective of the majority societies, these studies exemplify the creative presence of Romani people in the fields of politics, economics and culture. We see them as writers, artists and performers, political activists and resistance fighters, traders and entrepreneurs, circus and cinema managers and purveyors of popular science. Sensitive to the ambivalent position from which Roma act, the cases are linked and contextualized by a general introduction and by section introductions written by leading scholars of Romani studies with expertise in history, ethnography, musicology, literary and discourse studies and visual culture. The volume is richly illustrated, including many images that have never been published before, and includes an extensive bibliography / guide to further reading. Contributors to the volume: Begona Barrera, Beatriz Carrillo de los Reyes, Malte Gasche, Pawel Lechowski, Anna G. Piotrowska, Laurence Prempain, Juan Pro, Eve Rosenhaft, Carolina Garcia Sanz, Maria Sierra, and Tamara West.
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18
Salah, Albert Ali / Korkmaz, Emre Eren / Bircan, T. (eds.),
Data Science for Migration and Mobility. (Proceedings of the British Academy 251) 474 pp. 2022 (Oxford U. Pr., UK) <680-1215>
ISBN 978-0-19-726710-3 hard ¥25,641.- (税込) GB£ 90.00 *
Migration is a complex phenomenon with multi-dimensional factors. With ever-expanding data storage and processing capabilities, new data sources (such as social media, mobile call data records, and satellite imaging) are becoming available to study migration from both qualitative and quantitative perspectives. Data Science for Migration and Mobility addresses the needs of both migration scholars who stand to benefit from the analysis of these new sources but lack the computational tools, as well as data scientists who have practical and theoretical knowledge in dealing with these data sources but have no familiarity with the relevant questions of migration research. It describes the main conceptual frameworks, explains techniques of data collection and processing, provides case studies, discusses the strengths and limitations of each data source, and critically discusses the ethical, legal, and privacy-related issues specific to each data source.
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19
S.サッセン他編 ジェンダーとグローバルな移民必携-西洋の研究を超えて
Ribas-Mateos, Natalia / Sassen, Saskia (eds.),
The Elgar Companion to Gender and Global Migration: Beyond Western Research. 480 pp. 2022 (E. Elgar, UK) <680-1217>
ISBN 978-1-80220-125-3 hard ¥54,700.- (税込) GB£ 192.00 *
This timely Companion traces the interlinking histories of globalisation, gender, and migration in the 21st century, setting up a completely new agenda beyond Western research production. Natalia Ribas-Mateos and Saskia Sassen bring together 27 incisive contributions from leading international experts on gender and global migration, uncovering the multitude of economies, histories, families and working cultures in which local, regional, national, and global economies are embedded. Examining recent migratory flows and changing migration corridors across the globe, the Companion offers critical insights into the wider dynamics that compel people to migrate. Chapters address key topics relating to gender and global migration, from global cities and border regions, internal displacements, and humanitarian risks, to the changing face of care chains and labour, pandemic mobilities, expulsions from climate change and the weight of critical historical colonial studies in contemporary feminisms. The volume further explores extractivism, colonial images, the agrifood industry, qualified labour, remittances, cross-border trade, and extreme violence. Advancing a compelling range of forward-looking perspectives, this dynamic Companion establishes a novel agenda for future research on gender and global migration. Integrating empirical case studies with cutting-edge theory, The Elgar Companion to Gender and Global Migration will be an invaluable resource for a multidisciplinary audience of scholars across sociology, anthropology, geography, economics and political science, as well as migration and gender studies. Its themes will also be of significant interest to policymakers, administrators and grassroots organisations involved in emerging topics in migration studies.
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20
Schlabach, Elizabeth Schroeder,
Dream Books and Gamblers: Black Women's Work in Chicago's Policy Game. 208 pp. 2022:11 (U. Illinois Pr., US) <680-1219>
ISBN 978-0-252-04478-6 hard ¥23,716.- (税込) US$ 110.00 *
ISBN 978-0-252-08687-8 paper ¥5,390.- (税込) US$ 25.00 *
Ubiquitous illegal lotteries known as policy flourished in Chicago's Black community during the overlapping waves of the Great Migration. Policy "queens" owned stakes in lucrative operations while women writers and clerks canvased the neighborhood, passed out winnings, and kept the books. Elizabeth Schroeder Schlabach examines the complexities of Black women's work in policy gambling. Policy provided Black women with a livelihood for themselves and their families. At the same time, navigating gender expectations, aggressive policing, and other hazards of the infromal economy led them to refashion ideas about Black womanhood and respectability. Policy earnings also funded above-board enterprises ranging from neighborhood businesses to philanthropic institutions, and Schlabach delves into the various ways Black women straddled the illegal policy business and reputable community involvement. Vivid and revealing, Dream Books and Gamblers tells the stories of Black women in the underground economy and how they used their work to balance the demands of living and laboring in Black Chicago.
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21
Ulibarri, Kristy L.,
Visible Borders, Invisible Economies: Living Death in Latinx Narratives. (Latinx: The Future is Now) 312 pp. 2022:11 (U. Texas Pr., US) <680-1225>
ISBN 978-1-4773-2601-5 hard ¥22,638.- (税込) US$ 105.00 *
ISBN 978-1-4773-2657-2 paper ¥7,535.- (税込) US$ 34.95 *
Globalization in the United States can seem paradoxical: free trade coincides with fortification of the southern border, while immigration is reimagined as a national-security threat. US politics turn aggressively against Latinx migrants and subjects even as post-NAFTA markets become thoroughly reliant on migrant and racialized workers. But in fact, there is no incongruity here. Rather, anti-immigrant politics reflect a strategy whereby capital uses specialized forms of violence to create a reserve army of the living, laboring dead.Visible Borders, Invisible Economies turns to Latinx literature, photography, and films that render this unseen scheme shockingly vivid. Works such as Valeria Luiselli's Tell Me How It Ends and Alex Rivera's Sleep Dealer crystallize the experience of Latinx subjects and migrants subjugated to social death, their political existence erased by disenfranchisement and racist violence while their bodies still toil in behalf of corporate profits. In Kristy L. Ulibarri's telling, art clarifies what power obscures: the national-security state performs anti-immigrant and xenophobic politics that substitute cathartic nationalism for protections from the free market while ensuring maximal corporate profits through the manufacture of disposable migrant labor.
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22
Wallace, Maurice O.,
King's Vibrato: Modernism, Blackness, and the Sonic Life of Martin Luther King Jr. 352 pp. 2022:9 (Duke U. Pr., US) <680-1228>
ISBN 978-1-4780-1574-1 hard ¥22,627.- (税込) US$ 104.95 *
ISBN 978-1-4780-1840-7 paper ¥6,241.- (税込) US$ 28.95 *
In King's Vibrato Maurice O. Wallace explores the sonic character of Martin Luther King Jr.'s voice and its power to move the world. Providing a cultural history and critical theory of the black modernist soundscapes that helped inform King's vocal timbre, Wallace shows how the qualities of King's voice depended on a mix of ecclesial architecture and acoustics, musical instrumentation and sound technology, audience and song. He examines the acoustical architectures of the African American churches where King spoke and the centrality of the pipe organ in these churches, offers a black feminist critique of the influence of gospel on King, and outlines how variations in natural environments and sound amplifications made each of King's three deliveries of the "I Have a Dream" speech unique. By mapping the vocal timbre of one of the most important figures of black hope and protest in American history, Wallace presents King as the embodiment of the sound of modern black thought.
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23
Wozolek, Boni (ed.),
Black Lives Matter in US Schools: Race, Education, and Resistance. (SUNY series, Critical Race Studies in Education) 228 pp. 2022:7 (State U. New York Pr., US) <680-1229>
ISBN 978-1-4384-8917-9 hard ¥21,344.- (税込) US$ 99.00 *
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24
Gray, Biko Mandela,
Black Life Matter: Blackness, Religion, and the Subject. 184 pp. 2022:12 (Duke U. Pr., US) <680-124>
ISBN 978-1-4780-1390-7 hard ¥19,393.- (税込) US$ 89.95 *
ISBN 978-1-4780-1484-3 paper ¥5,379.- (税込) US$ 24.95 *
In Black Life Matter, Biko Mandela Gray offers a philosophical eulogy for Aiyana Stanley-Jones, Tamir Rice, Alton Sterling, and Sandra Bland that attests to their irreducible significance in the face of unremitting police brutality. Gray employs a theoretical method he calls "sitting-with"-a philosophical practice of care that seeks to defend the dead and the living. He shows that the police who killed Stanley-Jones and Rice reduced them to their bodies in ways that turn black lives into tools that the state uses to justify its violence and existence. He outlines how Bland's arrest and death reveal the affective resonances of blackness, and he contends that Sterling's physical movement and speech before he was killed point to black flesh as unruly living matter that exceeds the constraints of the black body. These four black lives, Gray demonstrates, were more than the brutal violence enacted against them; they speak to a mode of life that cannot be fully captured by the brutal logics of antiblackness.
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25
Venditto, David,
Whiteness at the End of the World: Race in Post-Apocalyptic Cinema. (SUNY Series, Horizons of Cinema) 202 pp. 2022:7 (State U. New York Pr., US) <680-1142>
ISBN 978-1-4384-8943-8 hard ¥21,344.- (税込) US$ 99.00 *
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26
Adeyemi, Kemi,
Feels Right: Black Queer Women and the Politics of Partying in Chicago. 192 pp. 2022:9 (Duke U. Pr., US) <680-1162>
ISBN 978-1-4780-1607-6 hard ¥20,471.- (税込) US$ 94.95 *
ISBN 978-1-4780-1869-8 paper ¥5,379.- (税込) US$ 24.95 *
In Feels Right Kemi Adeyemi presents an ethnography of how black queer women in Chicago use dance to assert their physical and affective rights to the city. Adeyemi stages the book in queer dance parties in gentrifying neighborhoods, where good feelings are good business. But feeling good is elusive for black queer women whose nightlives are undercut by white people, heterosexuality, neoliberal capitalism, burnout, and other buzzkills. Adeyemi documents how black queer women respond to these conditions: how they destroy DJ booths, argue with one another, dance slowly, and stop partying altogether. Their practices complicate our expectations that life at night, on the queer dance floor, or among black queer community simply feels good. Adeyemi's framework of "feeling right" instead offers a closer, kinesthetic look at how black queer women adroitly manage feeling itself as a complex right they should be afforded in cities that violently structure their movements and energies. What emerges in Feels Right is a sensorial portrait of the critical, black queer geographies and collectivities that emerge in social dance settings and in the broader neoliberal city. Duke University Press Scholars of Color First Book Award recipient
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27
Alcalde, M. Cristina / Subramaniam, Mangala (eds.),
Dismantling Institutional Whiteness: Emerging Forms of Leadership in Higher Education. (Navigating Careers in Higher Education) 208 pp. 2022:10 (Purdue U. Pr., US) <680-1164>
ISBN 978-1-61249-771-6 hard ¥21,557.- (税込) US$ 99.99 *
ISBN 978-1-61249-772-3 paper ¥5,387.- (税込) US$ 24.99 *
Dismantling Institutional Whiteness: Emerging Forms of Leadership in Higher Education focuses on the experiences of women of color in leadership roles in higher education. Top roles historically have gone to white men, and leadership has not reflected the range of identities and people who make up higher education. Why? And why does this problem continue to this day? Most importantly, what can be done to bring about meaningful change?Dismantling Institutional Whiteness gathers a range of first-person narratives from women of color and examines the challenges they face not only at a systemic level, but also at a deeply personal level. Their experiences combined with research and statistics paint a sobering portrait of higher education's problems when it comes to diversity, equity, and inclusion. Interspersed throughout their stories are practical suggestions for how to address inequity in higher education, and to give a voice to people who have been silenced and excluded. Whether a trustee, university executive, or faculty member at any level, this is essential reading for those interested in diversifying higher education leadership to ensure decisions reflect the priorities of all.
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28
Beeman, Angie,
Liberal White Supremacy: How Progressives Silence Racial and Class Oppression. (Sociology of Race and Ethnicity) 277 pp. 2022:9 (U. Georgia Pr., US) <680-1167>
ISBN 978-0-8203-6227-4 hard ¥26,076.- (税込) US$ 120.95 *
ISBN 978-0-8203-6228-1 paper ¥6,672.- (税込) US$ 30.95 *
In Liberal White Supremacy, Angie Beeman argues that white supremacy is maintained not only by right-wing conservatives or stereotypically uneducated working-class racial bigots but also by progressives who operate from a liberal ideology of color-blindness, racism-evasiveness, and class elitism. This distinction provides insight on divisions among progressives at the local level, in community organizations, and at the national level, in the Democratic Party. By distinguishing between liberal and radical approaches to racism, class oppression, capitalism, and social movement tactics, Beeman shows how progressives continue to be limited by liberal ideology and perpetuate rather than dismantle white supremacy, all while claiming to be antiracist.She conceptualizes this self-serving process as "liberal white supremacy," the tendency for liberal European Americans to constantly place themselves in the superior moral position in a way that reinforces inequality. Beeman advances what she calls action-oriented and racism-centered intersectional approaches as alternatives to progressive organizational strategies that either downplay racism in favor of a class-centered approach or take a talk-centered approach to racism without developing explicit actions to challenge it.
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29
Bey, Marquis,
Cistem Failure: Essays on Blackness and Cisgender. (ASTERISK) 184 pp. 2022:8 (Duke U. Pr., US) <680-1169>
ISBN 978-1-4780-1580-2 hard ¥20,471.- (税込) US$ 94.95 *
ISBN 978-1-4780-1844-5 paper ¥5,379.- (税込) US$ 24.95 *
In Cistem Failure Marquis Bey meditates on the antagonistic relationship between blackness and cisgender. Bey asks, What does it mean to have a gender that "matches" one's sex---that is, to be cisgender---when decades of feminist theory have destroyed the belief that there is some natural way to be a sex? Moving from the The Powerpuff Girls to the greeting "How ya mama'n'em?" to their own gender identity, Bey finds that cisgender is too flat as a category to hold the myriad ways that people who may or may not have undergone gender-affirmative interventions depart from gender alignment. At the same time, blackness, they contend, strikes at the heart of cisgender's invariable coding as white: just as transness names a non-cis space, blackness implies a non-cis space. By showing how blackness opens up a way to subvert the hegemonic power of the gender binary, Bey makes a case for an antiracist gender abolition project that rejects cisgender as a regulatory apparatus.
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30
Blair, John Patrick,
African American State Volunteers in the New South: Race, Masculinity, and the Militia in Georgia, Texas, and Virginia, 1871-1906. (Prairie View A&M University Series) 352 pp. 2022:10 (Texas A&M U. Pr., US) <680-1170>
ISBN 978-1-64843-073-2 hard ¥8,624.- (税込) US$ 40.00 *
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31
Bloch, Rene,
Ancient Jewish Diaspora: Essays on Hellenism. (Supplements to the Journal for the Study of Judaism 206) 2022:11 (Brill, NE) <680-1171>
ISBN 978-90-04-52188-9 hard ¥31,308.- (税込) EUR 133.00
In the Hellenistic period, Jews participated in the imagination of a cosmopolitan world and they developed their own complex cultural forms. In this panoramic and multifaceted book, Rene Bloch shows that the ancient Jewish diaspora is an integral part of what we understand as Hellenism and argues that Jewish Hellenism epitomizes Hellenism at large. Relying on Greek, Latin and Hebrew sources, the fifteen papers collected in this volume trace the evidence of ancient Jews through meticulous studies of ruins, literature, myth and modern reception taking the reader on a journey from Philo's Alexandria to a Roman bust in a Copenhagen museum
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32
Bradway, Tyler / Freeman, Elizabeth (eds.),
Queer Kinship: Race, Sex, Belonging, Form. (Theory Q) 360 pp. 2022:8 (Duke U. Pr., US) <680-1172>
ISBN 978-1-4780-1602-1 hard ¥22,627.- (税込) US$ 104.95 *
ISBN 978-1-4780-1865-0 paper ¥6,241.- (税込) US$ 28.95 *
The contributors to this volume assert the importance of queer kinship to queer and trans theory and to kinship theory. In a contemporary moment marked by the rising tides of neoliberalism, fascism, xenophobia, and homo- and cis-nationalism, they approach kinship as both a horizon and a source of violence and possibility. The contributors challenge dominant theories of kinship that ignore the devastating impacts of chattel slavery, settler colonialism, and racialized nationalism on the bonds of Black and Indigenous people and people of color. Among other topics, they examine the "blood tie" as the legal marker of kin relations, the everyday experiences and memories of trans mothers and daughters in Istanbul, the outsourcing of reproductive labor in postcolonial India, kinship as a model of governance beyond the liberal state, and the intergenerational effects of the adoption of Indigenous children as a technology of settler colonialism. Queer Kinship pushes the methodological and theoretical underpinnings of queer theory forward while opening up new paths for studying kinship. Contributors. Aqdas Aftab, Leah Claire Allen, Tyler Bradway, Juliana Demartini Brito, Judith Butler, Dilara Caliskan, Christopher Chamberlin, Aobo Dong, Brigitte Fielder, Elizabeth Freeman, John S. Garrison, Nat Hurley, Joseph M. Pierce, Mark Rifkin, Poulomi Saha, Kath Weston
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Bynum, Tara A.,
Reading Pleasures: Everyday Black Living in Early America. (New Black Studies Series) 184 pp. 2023:1 (U. Illinois Pr., US) <680-1173>
ISBN 978-0-252-04473-1 hard ¥23,716.- (税込) US$ 110.00 *
ISBN 978-0-252-08683-0 paper ¥5,390.- (税込) US$ 25.00 *
In the early United States, a Black person committed an act of resistance simply by reading and writing. Yet we overlook that these activities also brought pleasure. Tara A. Bynum tells the compelling stories of four early American writers who expressed feeling good despite living while enslaved or only nominally free. The poet Phillis Wheatley delights in writing letters to a friend. Ministers John Marrant and James Albert Ukawsaw Gronniosaw memorialize their love for God. David Walker's pamphlets ask Black Americans to claim their victory over slavery. Together, their writings reflect the joyous, if messy, humanity inside each of them. This proof of a thriving interior self in pursuit of good feeling forces us to reckon with the fact that Black lives do matter. A daring assertion of Black people's humanity, Reading Pleasures reveals how four Black writers experienced positive feelings and analyzes the ways these emotions served creative, political, and racialized ends.
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34
D.S.Massey他著 新しい黒人エリートの起源
Charles, Camille Z. / Kramer, R. / Massey, D. S. et al.,
Young, Gifted and Diverse: Origins of the New Black Elite. 472 pp. 2022 (Princeton U. Pr., US) <680-1176>
ISBN 978-0-691-23738-1 hard ¥25,872.- (税込) US$ 120.00 *
ISBN 978-0-691-23745-9 paper ¥8,613.- (税込) US$ 39.95 *
An in-depth look at the rising American generation entering the Black professional classDespite their diversity, Black Americans have long been studied as a uniformly disadvantaged group. Drawing from a representative sample of over a thousand Black students and in-depth interviews and focus groups with over one hundred more, Young, Gifted and Diverse highlights diversity among the new educated Black elite-those graduating from America's selective colleges and universities in the early twenty-first century.Differences in childhood experiences shape this generation, including their racial and other social identities and attitudes, and beliefs about and interactions with one another. While those in the new Black elite come from myriad backgrounds and have varied views on American racism, as they progress through college and toward the Black professional class they develop a shared worldview and group consciousness. They graduate with optimism about their own futures, but remain guarded about racial equality more broadly. This internal diversity alongside political consensus among the elite complicates assumptions about both a monolithic Black experience and the future of Black political solidarity.
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Choi, Donghyun Danny / Poertner, Mathias / Sambanis, N.,
Native Bias: Overcoming Discrimination against Immigrants. (Princeton Studies in Political Behavior) 312 pp. 2022:10 (Princeton U. Pr., US) <680-1177>
ISBN 978-0-691-22231-8 hard ¥25,872.- (税込) US$ 120.00 *
ISBN 978-0-691-22230-1 paper ¥7,546.- (税込) US$ 35.00 *
What drives anti-immigrant bias-and how it can be mitigatedIn the aftermath of the refugee crisis caused by conflicts in the Middle East and an increase in migration to Europe, European nations have witnessed a surge in discrimination targeted at immigrant minorities. To quell these conflicts, some governments have resorted to the adoption of coercive assimilation policies aimed at erasing differences between natives and immigrants. Are these policies the best method for reducing hostilities? Native Bias challenges the premise of such regulations by making the case for a civic integration model, based on shared social ideas defining the concept and practice of citizenship.Drawing from original surveys, survey experiments, and novel field experiments, Donghyun Danny Choi, Mathias Poertner, and Nicholas Sambanis show that although prejudice against immigrants is often driven by differences in traits such as appearance and religious practice, the suppression of such differences does not constitute the only path to integration. Instead, the authors demonstrate that similarities in ideas and value systems can serve as the foundation for a common identity, based on a shared concept of citizenship, overcoming the perceived social distance between natives and immigrants.Addressing one of the most pressing challenges of our time, Native Bias offers an original framework for understanding anti-immigrant discrimination and the processes through which it can be overcome.
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36
Combs, Barbara Harris,
Bodies out of Place: Theorizing Anti-blackness in U.S. Society. (Sociology of Race and Ethnicity) 277 pp. 2022:9 (U. Georgia Pr., US) <680-1178>
ISBN 978-0-8203-6236-6 hard ¥26,076.- (税込) US$ 120.95 *
ISBN 978-0-8203-6235-9 paper ¥7,535.- (税込) US$ 34.95 *
Bodies out of Place asserts that anti-Black racism is not better than it used to be; it is just performed in more-nuanced ways. Barbara Harris Combs argues that racism is dynamic, so new theories are needed to help expose it. The Bodies-out-of-Place (BOP) theory she advances in the book offers such a corrective lens. Interrogating several recent racialized events-the Central Park birding incident, the killing of Ahmaud Arbery, sleeping while Black occurrences, and others-Combs demonstrates how the underlying belief that undergirds each encounter is a false presumption that Black bodies in certain contexts are out of place.Within these examples she illustrates how, even amid professions to color-blindness, fixed attitudes about where Black bodies belong, in what positions, at what time, and with whom still predominate. Combs describes a long historical pattern of White pushback against Black advancement and illuminates how each of the various forms of pushback is aimed at social control and regulation of Black bodies. She describes overt and covert attempts to push Black bodies back into their presumed place in U.S. society. While the pushback takes many forms, each works to paint a narrative to justify, rationalize, and excuse continuing violence against Black bodies. Equally important, Combs celebrates the resilient Black agency that has resisted this subjugation.
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37
Garcia Pena, Lorgia,
Translating Blackness: Latinx Colonialities in Global Perspective. 336 pp. 2022:9 (Duke U. Pr., US) <680-1185>
ISBN 978-1-4780-1603-8 hard ¥22,627.- (税込) US$ 104.95 *
ISBN 978-1-4780-1866-7 paper ¥6,025.- (税込) US$ 27.95 *
In Translating Blackness Lorgia Garcia Pena considers Black Latinidad in a global perspective in order to chart colonialism as an ongoing sociopolitical force. Drawing from archives and cultural productions from the United States, the Caribbean, and Europe, Garcia Pena argues that Black Latinidad is a social, cultural, and political formation-rather than solely a site of identity-through which we can understand both oppression and resistance. She takes up the intellectual and political genealogy of Black Latinidad in the works of Frederick Douglass, Gregorio Luperon, and Arthur Schomburg. She also considers the lives of Black Latina women living in the diaspora, such as Black Dominicana guerrillas who migrated throughout the diaspora after the 1965 civil war and Black immigrant and second-generation women like Mercedes Frias and Milagros Guzman organizing in Italy with other oppressed communities. In demonstrating that analyses of Black Latinidad must include Latinx people and cultures throughout the diaspora, Garcia Pena shows how the vaiven-or, coming and going-at the heart of migrant life reveals that the nation is not a sufficient rubric from which to understand human lived experiences.
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38
Hashamova, Yana / Popescu-Sandu, Oana et al. (eds.),
Cultures of Mobility and Alterity: Crossing the Balkans and Beyond. (Migrations and Identities 10) 272 pp. 2022:8 (Liverpool U. Pr., UK) <680-1188>
ISBN 978-1-80207-019-4 hard ¥27,065.- (税込) GB£ 95.00 *
Advancing public dialogue surrounding the issues of migrants and refugees, the volume explores the dynamic representations of the recent movement of people from and through the Balkans. It investigates how people within the Balkans view their others, how the West regards the Balkans, and how emigrants from the Balkans reflect upon their experiences as members of cosmopolitan diasporic communities. Highlighting latent tensions between center and periphery and furthering the discussion of racialization related to the Balkans, the collection exposes contradictions in social values, which give rise to national anxieties. Approaching mobility from multiple disciplines, the volume examines several instances of border flows in media, literature, and culture in general, flows of ideas and people. To analyze mobility to, from, and in the Balkans requires one to address the issue of difference, otherness, and race as it relates to South East Europe and as it is understood and reproduced in both transnational and local forms. The racialized category of "migrant" necessitates an understanding of how transnational concepts of race translate into constructs of whiteness and blackness and inform subject positions of the individual and motivate discourses of racialization within communities.
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Herrera, Juan,
Cartographic Memory: Social Movement Activism and the Production of Space. 256 pp. 2022:10 (Duke U. Pr., US) <680-1189>
ISBN 978-1-4780-0607-7 hard ¥21,549.- (税込) US$ 99.95 *
ISBN 978-1-4780-0674-9 paper ¥5,810.- (税込) US$ 26.95 *
In Cartographic Memory, Juan Herrera maps 1960s Chicano movement activism in the Latinx neighborhood of Fruitvale in Oakland, California, showing how activists there constructed a politics forged through productions of space. From Chicano-inspired street murals to the architecture of restaurants and shops, Herrera shows how Fruitvale's communities and spaces serve as a palpable, living record of movement politics and achievements. Drawing on oral histories with Chicano activists, ethnography, and archival research, Herrera analyzes how activism has shaped Fruitvale. Herrera examines the ongoing nature of activism through nonprofit organizations and urban redevelopment projects like the Fruitvale Transit Village that root movements in place. Revealing that the social justice activism in Fruitvale fights for a space that does not yet exist, Herrera brings to life contentious politics about the nature of Chicanismo, Latinidad, and belonging while foregrounding the lasting social and material legacies of movements so often relegated to the past.
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Dewulf, Jeroen,
Afro-Atlantic Catholics: America's First Black Christians. 368 pp. 2022:8 (U. Notre Dame Pr., US) <680-119>
ISBN 978-0-268-20280-4 hard ¥14,014.- (税込) US$ 65.00 *
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41
Hord, Fred Lee / Norman, Matthew D. (eds.),
Knowing Him by Heart: African Americans on Abraham Lincoln. (The Knox College Lincoln Studies Center Series) 576 pp. 2022:11 (U. Illinois Pr., US) <680-1191>
ISBN 978-0-252-04468-7 hard ¥8,613.- (税込) US$ 39.95 *
Though not blind to Abraham Lincoln's imperfections, Black Americans long ago laid a heartfelt claim to his legacy. At the same time, they have consciously reshaped the sixteenth president's image for their own social and political ends. Frederick Hord and Matthew D. Norman's anthology explores the complex nature of views on Lincoln through the writings and thought of Frederick Douglass, Ida B. Wells-Barnett, Mary McLeod Bethune, Thurgood Marshall, Malcolm X, Gwendolyn Brooks, Barbara Jeanne Fields, Barack Obama, and dozens of others. The selections move from speeches to letters to book excerpts, mapping the changing contours of the bond--emotional and intellectual--between Lincoln and Black Americans over the span of one hundred and fifty years. A comprehensive and valuable reader, Knowing Him by Heart examines Lincoln's still-evolving place in Black American thought.
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Huang, Vivian L.,
Surface Relations: Queer Forms of Asian American Inscrutability. 248 pp. 2022:12 (Duke U. Pr., US) <680-1192>
ISBN 978-1-4780-1635-9 hard ¥21,549.- (税込) US$ 99.95 *
ISBN 978-1-4780-1899-5 paper ¥5,594.- (税込) US$ 25.95 *
In Surface Relations Vivian L. Huang traces how Asian and Asian American artists have strategically reworked the pernicious stereotype of inscrutability as a dynamic antiracist, feminist, and queer form of resistance. Following inscrutability in literature, visual culture, and performance art since 1965, Huang articulates how Asian American artists take up the aesthetics of Asian inscrutability-such as invisibility, silence, unreliability, flatness, and withholding-to express Asian American life. Through analyses of diverse works by performance artists (Tehching Hsieh, Baseera Khan, Emma Sulkowicz, Tseng Kwong Chi), writers (Kim Fu, Kai Cheng Thom, Monique Truong), and video, multimedia, and conceptual artists (Laurel Nakadate, Yoko Ono, Mika Tajima), Huang challenges neoliberal narratives of assimilation that erase Asianness. By using sound, touch, and affect, these artists and writers create new frameworks for affirming Asianness as a source of political and social critique and innovative forms of life and creativity. Duke University Press Scholars of Color First Book Award recipient
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43
Irwin, Robert (ed.),
Migrant Feelings, Migrant Knowledge: Building a Community Archive. (Border Hispanisms) 232 pp. 2022 (U. Texas Pr., US) <680-1193>
ISBN 978-1-4773-2622-0 hard ¥19,404.- (税込) US$ 90.00 *
ISBN 978-1-4773-2623-7 paper ¥6,457.- (税込) US$ 29.95 *
The digital storytelling project Humanizing Deportation invites migrants to present their own stories in the world's largest and most diverse archive of its kind. Since 2017, more than 300 community storytellers have created their own audiovisual testimonial narratives, sharing their personal experiences of migration and repatriation. With Migrant Feelings, Migrant Knowledge, the project's coordinator, Robert Irwin, and other team members introduce the project's innovative participatory methodology, drawing out key issues regarding the human consequences of contemporary migration control regimes, as well as insights from migrants whose world-making endeavors may challenge what we think we know about migration.In recent decades, migrants in North America have been treated with unprecedented harshness. Migrant Feelings, Migrant Knowledge outlines this recent history, revealing stories both of grave injustice and of seemingly unsurmountable obstacles overcome. As Irwin writes, "The greatest source of expertise on the human consequences of contemporary migration control are the migrants who have experienced them," and their voices in this searing collection jump off the page and into our hearts and minds.
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Iverson, Justin,
Rebels in Arms: Black Resistance and the Fight for Freedom in the Anglo-Atlantic. (Early American Places Series) 277 pp. 2022:11 (U. Georgia Pr., US) <680-1194>
ISBN 978-0-8203-6279-3 hard ¥26,076.- (税込) US$ 120.95 *
ISBN 978-0-8203-6280-9 paper ¥7,535.- (税込) US$ 34.95 *
Enslaved Black people took up arms and fought in nearly every colonial conflict in early British North America. They sometimes served as loyal soldiers to protect and promote their owners' interests in the hope that they might be freed or be rewarded for their service. But for many Black combatants, war and armed conflict offered an opportunity to attack the chattel slave system itself and promote Black emancipation and freedom.In six cases, starting in 1676 with Nathaniel Bacon's Rebellion in Virginia and ending in 1865 with the First South Carolina Volunteer Infantry Regiment near Charleston, Rebels in Arms tells the long story of how enslaved soldiers and Maroons learned how to use military service and armed conflict to fight for their own interests. Justin Iverson details a different conflict in each chapter, illuminating the participation of Black soldiers. Using a comparative Atlantic analysis that uncovers new perspectives on major military conflicts in British North American history, he reveals how enslaved people used these conflicts to lay the groundwork for abolition in 1865. Over the nearly two-hundred-year history of these struggles, enslaved resistance in the British Atlantic world became increasingly militarized, and enslaved soldiers, Maroons, and plantation rebels together increasingly relied on military institutions and operations to achieve their goals.
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Jacobs, Lanita,
To Be Real: Truth and Racial Authenticity in African American Standup Comedy. (Oxford Studies in Language and Race) 208 pp. 2022:11 (Oxford U. Pr., US) <680-1195>
ISBN 978-0-19-087009-6 hard ¥21,344.- (税込) US$ 99.00 *
ISBN 978-0-19-087008-9 paper ¥6,681.- (税込) US$ 30.99 *
To Be Real: Truth and Racial Authenticity in African American Standup Comedy examines Black standup comedy over the past decade as a stage for understanding why notions of racial authenticity--in essence, appeals to "realness" and "real Blackness"--emerge as a cultural imperative in African American culture. Ethnographic observations and interviews with Black comedians ground this telling, providing a narrative arc of key historical moments in the new millennium. Readers will understand how and why African American comics invoke "realness" to qualify nationalist 9/11 discourses and grapple with the racial entailments of the war, overcome a sense of racial despair in the wake of Hurricane Katrina, critique Michael Richards' ["Kramer's"] notorious rant at The Laugh Factory and subsequent attempts to censor their use of the n-word, and reconcile the politics of a "real" in their own and other Black folks' everyday lives. Additionally, readers will hear through audience murmurs, hisses, and boos how beliefs about racial authenticity are intensely class-wrought and fraught. Moreover, they will appreciate how context remains ever critical to when and why African American comics and audiences lobby for and/or lampoon jokes that differentiate the "real" from the "fake" or "Black folks" from so-called "niggahs." Context and racial vulnerability are critical to understanding how and why allusions to "racial authenticity" persist in the African American comedic and cultural imagination.
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46
Jordan-Zachery, Julia S.,
Erotic Testimonies: Black Women Daring to Be Wild and Free. (SUNY Series in Black Women's Wellness) 144 pp. 2022:12 (State U. New York Pr., US) <680-1196>
ISBN 978-1-4384-9117-2 hard ¥21,344.- (税込) US$ 99.00 *
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47
Kanaaneh, Rhoda,
The Right Kind of Suffering: Gender, Sexuality, and Arab Asylum Seekers in America. 216 pp. 2023:1 (U. Texas Pr., US) <680-1198>
ISBN 978-1-4773-2638-1 hard ¥19,404.- (税込) US$ 90.00 *
ISBN 978-1-4773-2672-5 paper ¥6,457.- (税込) US$ 29.95 *
From the overloaded courts with their constantly changing dates and appointments to the need to prove oneself the "right" kind of victim, the asylum system in the United States is an exacting and drawn-out immigration process that itself results in suffering. When anthropologist Rhoda Kanaaneh became a volunteer interpreter for Arab asylum seekers, she learned how applicants were pushed to craft specific narratives to satisfy the system's requirements. Kanaaneh tells the stories of four Arab asylum seekers who sought protection in the United States on the basis of their gender or sexuality: Saud, who relived painful memories of her circumcision and police harassment in Sudan and then learned to number and sequence these recollections; Fatima, who visited doctors and therapists in order to document years of spousal abuse without over-emphasizing her resulting mental illness; Fadi, who highlighted the homophobic motivations that provoked his arrest and torture in Jordan, all the while sidelining connected issues of class and racism; and Marwa, who showcased her private hardships as a lesbian in a Shiite family in Lebanon and downplayed her environmental activism. The Right Kind of Suffering is a compelling portrait of Arab asylum seekers whose success stories stand in contrast with those whom the system failed.
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Koshy, Susan / Cacho, Lisa Marie et al. (eds.),
Colonial Racial Capitalism. 368 pp. 2022:9 (Duke U. Pr., US) <680-1199>
ISBN 978-1-4780-1610-6 hard ¥22,627.- (税込) US$ 104.95 *
ISBN 978-1-4780-1874-2 paper ¥6,241.- (税込) US$ 28.95 *
The contributors to Colonial Racial Capitalism consider anti-Blackness, human commodification, and slave labor alongside the history of Indigenous dispossession and the uneven development of colonized lands across the globe. They demonstrate the co-constitution and entanglement of slavery and colonialism from the conquest of the New World through industrial capitalism to contemporary financial capitalism. Among other topics, the essays explore the historical suturing of Blackness and Black people to debt, the violence of uranium mining on Indigenous lands in Canada and the Belgian Congo, how municipal property assessment and waste management software encodes and produces racial difference, how Puerto Rican police crackdowns on protestors in 2010 and 2011 drew on decades of policing racially and economically marginalized people, and how historic sites in Los Angeles County narrate the Mexican-American War in ways that occlude the war's imperialist groundings. The volume's analytic of colonial racial capitalism opens new frameworks for understanding the persistence of violence, precarity, and inequality in modern society. Contributors. Joanne Barker, Jodi A. Byrd, Lisa Marie Cacho, Michael Dawson, Iyko Day, Ruth Wilson Gilmore, Alyosha Goldstein, Cheryl I. Harris, Kimberly Kay Hoang, Brian Jordan Jefferson, Susan Koshy, Marisol LeBron, Jodi Melamed, Laura Pulido
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Stanfield, Susan J.,
Rewriting Citizenship: Women, Race, and Nineteenth-Century Print Culture. 277 pp. 2022:10 (U. Georgia Pr., US) <680-12>
ISBN 978-0-8203-6261-8 hard ¥13,571.- (税込) US$ 62.95 *
Rewriting Citizenship provides an interdisciplinary approach to antebellum citizenship. Interpreting citizenship, particularly how citizenship intersects with race and gender, is fundamental to understanding the era and directly challenges the idea of Jacksonian Democracy. Susan J. Stanfield uses an analysis of novels, domestic advice, essays, and poetry, as well as more traditional archival sources, to provide an understanding of both the prescriptions for womanhood espoused in print culture and how those prescriptions were interpreted in everyday life.While much has been written about the cultural marker of true womanhood as a gender ideology of white middle-class women, Stanfield reveals how it served an even more significant purpose by defining racial difference and attaching civic purpose to the daily practices of women. Black and white women were actively engaged in redefining citizenship in ways that did not necessarily call for suffrage rights but did claim a relationship to the state.The prominence of true womanhood relied upon a female-focused print culture. The act of publication gave power to the ideology and allowed for a shared identity among white middle-class women and those who sought to emulate them. Stanfield argues that this domestic literature created a national code for womanhood that was racially constructed and infused with civic purpose. By defining women's household practices as an obligation not only to their husbands but also to the state, women could reimagine themselves as citizens. Through print sources, women publicized their performance of these defined obligations and laid claim to citizenship on their own behalf.
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50
Lands, LeeAnn B.,
Poor Atlanta: Poverty, Race, and the Limits of Sunbelt Development. 277 pp. 2023:1 (U. Georgia Pr., US) <680-1200>
ISBN 978-0-8203-6329-5 hard ¥24,783.- (税込) US$ 114.95 *
ISBN 978-0-8203-6328-8 paper ¥6,888.- (税込) US$ 31.95 *
Poor Atlanta looks at the poor people's campaigns in Atlanta in the 1960s and 1970s, which operated in relationship to Sunbelt city- building efforts. With these efforts, city leaders aimed to prevent urban violence, staunch disinvestment, check white flight, and amplify Atlanta's importance as a business and transportation hub. As urban leaders promoted Forward Atlanta, a program to, in Mayor Ivan Allen Jr.'s words, "sell the city like a product," poor families insisted that their lives and living conditions, too, should improve.While not always operating within public awareness, antipoverty campaigns among the poor presented a regular and sometimes strident critique of inequality and Atlanta's uneven urban development. With Poor Atlanta, LeeAnn B. Lands demonstrates that, while eclipsed by the Black freedom movement, antipoverty organizing (including direct action campaigns, legal actions, lobbying, and other forms of activism) occurred with regularity from 1964 through 1976. Her analysis is one of the few citywide studies of antipoverty organizing in late twentieth-century America.
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