Music, Performance and African Identities

Music, Performance and African Identities

Author: Toyin Falola

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2012-03-15

Total Pages: 357

ISBN-13: 1136830286

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Cutting across countries, genres, and time periods, this volume explores topics ranging from hip hop’s influence on Maasai identity in current day Tanzania to jazz in Bulawayo during the interwar years, using music to tell a larger story about the cultures and societies of Africa.


Everyday People

Everyday People

Author: Jennifer Baker

Publisher: Simon and Schuster

Published: 2018-08-28

Total Pages: 255

ISBN-13: 1501134957

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“A delight and highly recommended.” —Booklist “Showcases the truth and fullness of people of color.” —Book Riot In the tradition of Best American Short Stories comes Everyday People: The Color of Life, a dazzling collection of contemporary short fiction. Everyday People is a thoughtfully curated anthology of short stories that presents new and renowned work by established and emerging writers of color. It illustrates the dynamics of character and culture that reflect familial strife, political conflict, and personal turmoil through an array of stories that reveal the depth of the human experience. Representing a wide range of styles, themes, and perspectives, these selected stories depict moments that linger—crossroads to be navigated, relationships, epiphanies, and times of doubt, loss, and discovery. A celebration of writing and expression, Everyday People brings to light the rich tapestry that binds us all. The contributors are an eclectic mix of award-winning and critically lauded writers, including Mia Alvar, Carleigh Baker, Nana Brew-Hammond, Glendaliz Camacho, Alexander Chee, Mitchell S. Jackson, Yiyun Li, Allison Mills, Courttia Newland, Denne Michele Norris, Jason Reynolds, Nelly Rosario, Hasanthika Sirisena, and Brandon Taylor. Some of the proceeds from the sale of Everyday People will benefit the Rhode Island Writers Colony, a nonprofit organization founded by the late Brook Stephenson that provides space for speculation, production, and experimentation by writers of color.


Keurium

Keurium

Author: J S Lee

Publisher:

Published: 2018-05

Total Pages: 362

ISBN-13: 9781732094321

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Shay Stone lies in a hospital bed, catatonic-dead to the world. At the mercy of memories and visitations, she unearths secrets that may have led to her collapse. Will she remain paralyzed in denial? Or can she accept the unfathomable and break free?


Everyone Was Falling

Everyone Was Falling

Author: Js Lee

Publisher: Pent-Up Press

Published: 2020-09

Total Pages: 336

ISBN-13: 9781732094338

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EVERYONE WAS FALLING is a story about racism and gun violence on the verge of Trump's election, told by a queer transracial adoptee of color raised in racial isolation.


The Moral Psychology of Sadness

The Moral Psychology of Sadness

Author: Anna Gotlib

Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield

Published: 2017-11-30

Total Pages: 227

ISBN-13: 178348862X

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What does it mean to be sad? What difference does it make whether, how, and why we experience our own, and other people’s, sadness? Is sadness always appropriate and can it be a way of seeing more clearly into ourselves and others? In this volume, a multi-disciplinary team of scholars - from fields including philosophy, women’s and gender studies, bioethics and public health, and neuroscience - addresses these and other questions related to this nearly-universal emotion that all of us experience, and that some of us dread. Somewhat surprisingly, sadness has been largely ignored by philosophers and others within the humanities, or else under-theorized as a subject worthy of serious and careful attention. This volume reverses this trend, presenting sadness as not merely a feeling or affect, but an emotion of great moral significance that in important ways underwrites how we understand ourselves and each other.


Ghost Letters

Ghost Letters

Author: Baba Badji

Publisher: Parlor Press LLC

Published: 2021-01-01

Total Pages: 106

ISBN-13: 1643171984

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In Ghost Letters, one emigrates to America again, and again, and again, though one also never leaves Senegal, the country of one’s birth; one grows up in America, and attends university in America, though one also never leaves Senegal, the country of one’s birth; one wrestles with one’s American blackness in ways not possible in Senegal, though one never leaves Senegal, the country of one’s birth; and one sees more deeply into Americanness than any native-born American could. Ghost Letters is a 21st century Notebook of a Return to the Native Land, though it is a notebook of arrival and being in America. It is a major achievement. —Shane McCrae


Regimes of Description

Regimes of Description

Author: John B. Bender

Publisher: Stanford University Press

Published: 2005

Total Pages: 312

ISBN-13: 9780804747424

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Regimes of Description responds to the perception—however imprecise—that forms of knowledge in every sector of contemporary culture are being fundamentally reshaped by the digital revolution: music, speech, engineering diagrams, weather reports, works of visual art, even the words most of us write are now subject, as Lyotard points out in The Inhuman, to a logic of the bit, the elemental unit of electronic information. It is now possible to slice, graft, and splice this knowledge in ways never before imagined using technologies that treat vast bodies of information as a stream of data bits. Programs and technical algorithms specify the criteria for discriminating between the data stream of a Mozart string quartet and the CAT scan of a diseased organ. But are these machine instructions and design parameters descriptions, or merely mechanical filters? And if the latter, what constitutes a description of digitally encoded knowledge? As a group, the essays in this volume pose that question as a first attempt to write the archaeology of the nature and history of description in the digital age.


Deltora Quest

Deltora Quest

Author: Emily Rodda

Publisher: Apple Paperbacks

Published: 2008

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13: 9780545056496

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For the first time, all eight books of Rodda's epic series are presented in a single action-packed deluxe volume. Includes a ribbon bookmark. Illustrations.


Famous Adopted People

Famous Adopted People

Author: Alice Stephens

Publisher:

Published: 2018

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13: 9781944700744

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Stephens' darkly comic, sharply irreverent, undeniably wise 'Great Adoption Novel' is an unexpectedly timely, not-to-be-missed, epic wild ride. --Booklist, *Starred Review* Lisa Pearl is an American teaching English in Japan and the situation there--thanks mostly to her spontaneous, hard-partying ways--has become problematic. Now she's in Seoul, South Korea, with her childhood best-friend Mindy. The young women share a special bond: they are both Korean-born adoptees into white American families. Mindy is in Seoul to track down her birth mom, and wants Lisa to do the same. Trouble is, Lisa isn't convinced she needs to know about her past, much less meet her biological mother. She'd much rather spend time with Harrison, an almost supernaturally handsome local who works for the MotherFinder's agency. When Lisa wakes up inside a palatial mountain compound, the captive of a glamorous, surgically-enhanced blonde named Honey, she soon realizes she is going to learn about her past whether she likes it or not. What happens next only could in one place: North Korea.