Die folgenden Links führen aus den jeweiligen lokalen Bibliotheken zum Volltext:
Alternativ können Sie versuchen, selbst über Ihren lokalen Bibliothekskatalog auf das gewünschte Dokument zuzugreifen.
Bei Zugriffsproblemen kontaktieren Sie uns gern.
2682454 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
In: SUNY Series, Trans-Indigenous Decolonial Critiques Series
Cover -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Table of Contents -- List of Abbreviations -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction: Religious Liberty, Free Inquiry, and the Problem of Orthodoxy -- 1. The Crisis of Liberalism and the Return to Orthodoxy -- 2. Toward a Theology of Liberalism: Locke's Reasonableness of Christianity -- 3. Benjamin Franklin and the Hemphill Affair: Making Good Citizens, Not Good Presbyterians -- 4. James Madison and the Ambition of Making Laws for the Human Mind -- 5. Diamonds from Dunghills: Jefferson's Materialism, Free Inquiry, and Religious Reform -- Conclusion -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Index -- Back Cover.
Cover -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Table of Contents -- List of Illustrations -- Preparing the Battlespace: A House Older Than Canada, a Skirmish on the Trail -- The Army is No Place for a Solider": Captain Louis Crawford Goes Looking for a War -- The Final Seal: Colonel William Crawford and the Battle for the Philippines -- Waiting for the Storm: Major A. R. Woods and the World of the Secret War -- After Action Report: Rumors and Random Intelligence -- Notes and Acknowledgments -- Back Cover.
In: Landmark Law Cases and American Society
Cover -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Table of Contents -- Editors' Preface -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- 1. "We Are Coming -- 2. The ACLU, the Supreme Court, and the First Amendment -- 3. Why Free Speech Is Not Always Free -- 4. Judges, Lawyers, and Legislatures -- 5. Speech, Symbols, and Suffering -- 6. The Price of Battle -- 7. Verbal Cacophony -- 8. The Critics -- 9. The View from Abroad -- 10. "Freedom for the Thought That We Hate -- Chronology -- Relevant Cases -- Bibliographical Essay -- Index -- Back Cover.
In: CultureAmerica
The first book to focus specifically on the women of the counterculture movement reveals how hippie women launched a subtle rebellion by rejecting their mothers' suburban domesticity in favor of their grandmothers' agrarian ideals, which assigned greater value to women's contributions.
Intro -- 1Praise for Play -- 2Praise for Jess Taylor -- 15Now -- 17How It Happened -- The Lighted City -- 19Now -- 24How It Happened -- May 2016 -- 28Now -- 42How It Happened -- May 2016 -- 46Now -- 50How It Happened -- May 2016 -- 53How It Happened -- The Lighted City -- 56How It Happened -- May 2016 -- 64Now -- 67How It Happened -- The Lighted City -- 69How It Happened -- May 2016 -- 84Now -- 86How It Happened -- May 2016 -- 92How It Happened -- The Lighted City -- 99How It Happened -- May 2016 -- 105Now -- 107How It Happened -- May 2016 -- 112Now -- 121How It Happened -- May 2016 -- 141How It Happened -- The Lighted City -- 144How It Happened -- May 2016 -- 160How It Happened -- The Lighted City -- 161How It Happened -- May 2016 -- 165How It Happened -- The Lighted City -- 168Now -- 173How It Happened -- May 2016 -- 185Now -- 188How It Happened -- May 2016 -- 205Now -- 210How It Happened -- 2016 -- 237Now -- 240How It Happened -- May 2016 -- 251How It Happened -- The Lighted City -- 254How It Happened -- June 2016 -- 264Now -- 272How It Happened -- June 2016 -- 282How It Happened -- The Lighted City -- 286How It Happened -- June 2016 -- 297Now -- 303How It Happened -- June 2016 -- 315How It Happened -- The Lighted City -- 319How It Happened -- 2016 -- 329Now -- 336How It Happened -- June 2016 -- 342Now -- 349Acknowledgements.
In: Suny series, humanities to the rescue
"An undergraduate textbook offering a comprehensive, up-to-date, and critical examination of the role that race plays in American politics. It shows students how to bring empirical analysis to bear on deeply divided topics and makes a sustained argument that racial considerations are central to understanding America's political system writ large"--
"The battle over Brett Kavanaugh's Supreme Court nomination was described by the media as a "turning point' in America's history of female witnessing" (Time), a "tale of two internets" (Wired), and a "duel with tears and fury" (NYT). Each of these headlines highlighted a significant aspect of what the hearings revealed about American culture: the triumph of women's voices in the age of #MeToo; anxieties around echo chambers that divide political communication; and the hyperemotional nature of politics in the era of far-right populism. None, however, captured the deepest, and perhaps most insidious, character of this event as a battle over who is a victim. While these accounts describe or explain victimhood as a dominant discourse of Western cultures at large, they do not address what kind of world is a world of proliferating victims where two sides compete to establish their suffering as more legitimate than that of others? How did it come to be as it is today? What are the benefits of living in it? And, more importantly, what are the costs? In Wronged!, Lilie Chouliaraki's grapples how the proliferation of victims produces its own victims by obfuscating truth itself, and populating public discourse with too many voices of pain while selectively authorizing some of those voices over others. Just like the spread of fake news blurs the boundary between fact and rumor, competing claims to pain blur the line between systemic and tactical suffering. Chouliaraki examines this distinction to navigate the difference "between fighting for victimized people," which demands an account of the conditions of their suffering, and "promoting a victimhood culture," which encourages claims to pain. Fighting for the victimized is the moral drive of her argument, while promoting a victimhood culture is the object of her analysis"--