The Discourse of Enclosure
Author: Shari Horner
Publisher: SUNY Press
Published: 2001-05-24
Total Pages: 224
ISBN-13: 9780791450109
DOWNLOAD EBOOKExamines representations of women and femininity in Old English poetry and prose.
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Author: Shari Horner
Publisher: SUNY Press
Published: 2001-05-24
Total Pages: 224
ISBN-13: 9780791450109
DOWNLOAD EBOOKExamines representations of women and femininity in Old English poetry and prose.
Author: Schoechle, Timothy
Publisher: IGI Global
Published: 2009-04-30
Total Pages: 383
ISBN-13: 1605663352
DOWNLOAD EBOOKEstablishes a framework of analysis for public policy discussion and debate. Discusses topics such as social practices and political economic discourse.
Author: Gary Fields
Publisher: Univ of California Press
Published: 2017-09-05
Total Pages: 422
ISBN-13: 0520291042
DOWNLOAD EBOOKEnclosure marshals bold new and persuasive arguments about the ongoing dispossession of Palestinians. Revealing the Israel-Palestine landscape primarily as one of enclosure, geographer Gary Fields sheds fresh light on Israel’s actions. He places those actions in historical context in a broad analysis of power and landscapes across the modern world. Examining the process of land-grabbing in early modern England, colonial North America, and contemporary Palestine, Enclosure shows how patterns of exclusion and privatization have emerged across time and geography. That the same moral, legal, and cartographic arguments were copied by enclosers of land in very different historical environments challenges Israel’s current rationale as being uniquely beleaguered. It also helps readers in the United Kingdom and the United States understand the Israel-Palestine conflict in the context of their own, tortured histories.
Author: Richard Burt
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Published: 2019-06-07
Total Pages: 355
ISBN-13: 1501733591
DOWNLOAD EBOOKEnclosure—the conversion of peasants' commonly held lands to privately owned pasture—has long been considered a critical stage in the transition from feudalism to capitalism. This book is the first, however, to treat in detail the literary and cultural implications of enclosure in early modern England. Bringing together the work of both senior and younger scholars who represent a wide range of critical orientations, Enclosure Acts focuses not only on the historical fact of land enclosure, but also on the symbolic containment of sexuality in Elizabethan and Jacobean literary works. The first type of enclosure frequently has been treated by materialists and new historicists; feminists and theorists concerned with issues of gender have tended to concentrate on the second. The fourteen essays collected here explore the relationships between these two ways of perceiving enclosure in the context of cultural studies. Individual chapters examine the creation of territorial and social boundaries as well as the consequences of enclosure acts.
Author: Robert P. Marzec
Publisher: U of Minnesota Press
Published: 2015-12-21
Total Pages: 291
ISBN-13: 145294556X
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAs the seriousness of climate change becomes more and more obvious, military institutions are responding by taking a prominent role in the governing of environmental concerns, engaging in “climate change war games,” and preparing for the effects of climate change—from conflicts due to loss of food, water, and energy to the mass migration of millions of people displaced by rising sea levels. This combat-oriented stance stems from a self-destructive pattern of thought that Robert P. Marzec names “environmentality,” an attitude that has been affecting human–environmental relations since the seventeenth century. Militarizing the Environment traces the rise of this influential mindset in America and other nations that threatens to supplant ideas of sustainability with demands for adaptation. In this extensive historical study of scientific, military, political, and economic formations across five centuries, Marzec reveals how environmentality has been instrumental in the development of today’s security society—informing the creation of the military-industrial complex during World War II and the National Security Act that established the CIA during the Cold War. Now embedded in contemporary Western thought, environmentality has even infiltrated scientific thinking—transforming Darwinian insights into a quasi-theology that makes security the biological basis of existence. Marzec exposes the self-destructive nature of this increasingly accepted worldview and offers alternatives that counter the blind alleys of national and global security.
Author: Nicole Graham
Publisher: Routledge
Published: 2010-07-07
Total Pages: 240
ISBN-13: 1136939377
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAddressing law's relationship to land and natural resources through its property regime, Lawscape: Property, Environment, Law considers the ways in which property law transforms both natural environments and social economies.
Author: Rebecca A. Martusewicz
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Published: 2011-05-20
Total Pages: 362
ISBN-13: 1136860789
DOWNLOAD EBOOKThis text offers a powerful model for cultural ecological analysis and pedagogy of responsibility, providing educators with information and classroom practices they need to educate future citizens for diverse, democratic, and sustainable communities.
Author: Silvia Nagy-Zekmi
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
Published: 2010
Total Pages: 192
ISBN-13: 9780739131763
DOWNLOAD EBOOKThis book presents new scholarship on the subject of imperial expansion through colonization and globalization from a variety of postcolonial perspectives. The chapters in this volume, grouped in three sections, scrutinize imperial expansion within the context of national identities and imageries-deconstructing the modernist and utopian idea of a nation as a site of homogeneity, and reviewing the importance of the concept in the different phases of colonization. Hence the first section, entitled Neo-Imperial Traces or Premonitions in Modernism. The postclassical phase of colonialism is examined through the representation of the colonized and the once-colonized. Applying postcolonial theories and often moving beyond them, scholars scrutinize such textual and filmic representations as exemplified in Asia. These make up section 2, Interference of the Imperial Tradition in Asia, which allows for the rearticulations of cultural heritage in the region within the different and ever-renewed schemes of imperial expansion Section 3, Reformulations of the Imperial Project, seeks to explore the questions surrounding inclusion in, and exclusion from, the realm of power as the founding principle of empire, suggesting that they are discursive and deliberate. Postcolonial societies inherit the trauma of colonialism that subjected people to a cultural displacement that is exacerbated by renewed efforts of imperial Influence through globalization. Book jacket.
Author: Brett Christophers
Publisher: Verso Books
Published: 2018-12-04
Total Pages: 385
ISBN-13: 178663158X
DOWNLOAD EBOOKHow public land has been stolen from us. Much has been written about Britain's trailblazing post-1970s privatization program, but the biggest privatization of them all has until now escaped scrutiny: the privatization of land. Since Margaret Thatcher took power in 1979, and hidden from the public eye, about 10 per cent of the entire British land mass, including some of its most valuable real estate, has passed from public to private hands. Forest land, defence land, health service land and above all else local authority land- for farming and school sports, for recreation and housing - has been sold off en masse. Why? How? And with what social, economic and political consequences? The New Enclosure provides the first ever study of this profoundly significant phenomenon, situating it as a centrepiece of neoliberalism in Britain and as a successor programme to the original eighteenth-century enclosures. With more public land still slated for disposal, the book identifies the stakes and asks what, if anything, can and should be done.
Author: R. Marzec
Publisher: Springer
Published: 2015-12-11
Total Pages: 205
ISBN-13: 0230604374
DOWNLOAD EBOOKThis book argues that humanity's relationship to the land has undergone a fundamental and calamitous change. Marzec reveals how the historical phenomenon known as the 'enclosure movement' has effected not only the ecosystems and the geopolitics of the Twenty-First century, but on how we relate to the earth and conceive of ourselves as human.