Jellyfish, with their undulating umbrella-shaped bells and sprawling tentacles, are as fascinating and beautiful as they are frightening and dangerous. They are found in every ...
Continue Reading →Charts the history of women’s liberation and calls for a revitalized feminism. Nancy Fraser’s major new book traces the feminist movement’s evolution since the 1970s ...
Continue Reading →An exploration of the emergence of a new psychedelic spirituality in the work of Philip K. Dick, Terence McKenna, and Robert Anton Wilson. A study ...
Continue Reading →Harold Hart Crane was an American poet. Provoked and inspired by T. S. Eliot, Crane wrote modernist poetry that was difficult, highly stylized, and ambitious ...
Continue Reading →Death of the PostHuman undertakes a series of critical encounters with the legacy of what had come to be known as ‘theory,’ and its contemporary ...
Continue Reading →Michael W. Clune is an American writer and critic. His creative and critical writing has appeared in Harper’s, Salon, Granta, PMLA, the New Yorker, and ...
Continue Reading →In this major work, sociologists Boltanski and Chiapello ask why anti-capitalist critique seems so impotent in the face of new forms of market-oriented business practice, ...
Continue Reading →Margaret Cavendish, the Duchess of Newcastle-upon-Tyne, was a groundbreaking writer—a utopian visionary, a scientist, a science-fiction pioneer. She moved in philosophical circles that included Thomas ...
Continue Reading →Like us, the ancient Greeks and Romans came to know and understand the world through their senses. Yet sensory experience has rarely been considered in ...
Continue Reading →In Bodies That Matter, Judith Butler further develops her distinctive theory of gender by examining the workings of power at the most “material” dimensions of ...
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