This “magisterial account” explores the fear of witchcraft across the globe from the ancient world to the notorious witch trials of early modern Europe (The ...
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 →Acclaimed for his intricate, incisive, and often controversial explorations of art, literature, and society, Leo Bersani now addresses homosexuality in America. Hardly a day goes ...
Continue Reading →Georges Albert Maurice Victor Bataille was a French philosopher and intellectual working in philosophy, literature, sociology, anthropology, consumerism, and history of art. His writing, which ...
Continue Reading →Jean Genet (1910–1986) resonates, perhaps more than any other canonical queer figure from the pre-Stonewall past, with contemporary queer sensibilities attuned to a defiant non-normativity. ...
Continue Reading →Promoting the revolutionary socialist project of equality and dignity for all, the slogan ¡Venceremos! (We shall overcome!) appears throughout Cuba, everywhere from newspapers to school ...
Continue Reading →From the beginning of history to the present, a sweep of the world’s oceans and seas and how they have shaped the course of civilization. ...
Continue Reading →Daughters of Hecate unites for the first time research on the problem of gender and magic in three ancient Mediterranean societies: early Judaism, Christianity, and ...
Continue Reading →If the Anthropocene represents a new epoch of thought, it also represents a new form of materiality and historicity for the human as strata and ...
Continue Reading →The Souls of Black Folk is a 1903 work of American literature by W. E. B. Du Bois. It is a seminal work in the ...
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