Intro -- CONTENTS -- PREFACE Dessau: The City in Green -- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS -- INTRODUCTION -- 1: The War Years, 1914-1918 -- 2: The Russian Affair, 1918-1924 -- 3: Diverging Paths, 1921-1926 -- GALLERY OF PHOTOS -- 4: On the Edge, 1927-1932 -- 5: Twilight and Eclipse, 1932-1935 -- NOTES -- BIBLIOGRAPHY -- INDEX.
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Preliminary Material -- Introduction: Encountering Friendship with Francesco Alberoni /Harry Blatterer and Sveva Magaraggia -- The Meanings of Friendship -- Friendship as Encounter -- The Times of Love and Friendship -- Friendship as Ethical Form of Love -- Preferences, Impartiality and Friendship -- Friendship and Power -- Three Social States -- Friendship and Love's Paradise Lost -- Friendship and Group Solidarity -- Childhood, Adulthood and Friendly Company -- Self, Friends and Benefactors -- Eroticism and Friendship -- Power and Ambivalence, Envy and Desire -- Morality and the Logics of Market and Organization -- Friendship and Creative Action -- Spiritual Friendship -- Familiar Friendship -- Ideal and Reality: Brothers, Friends, Caritas -- Bibliography.
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Cover -- Editorial advisory board -- Editorial -- A practice perspective on strategic communication -- How dominant coalition members' values and perceptions impact their perceptions of public relations participation in organizational decision making -- Strategic predisposition in communication management -- Message strategies in smartphone patent battles
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Which public and whose space? The understanding of public space as an arena where individuals can claim full use and access hides a reality of constant negotiation, conflict and surveillance. This collection uses case studies concerning the management, use, and transgression of public space to invite reflection on the way in which everyday social interaction is framed and shaped by the physical environment and vice versa. International experts from fields including geography, criminology, sociology and urban studies come together to debate the concepts of order and conflict in public space.
In Friendship , Francesco Alberoni offers a wide-ranging analysis of intimacy. Traversing disciplines, he untangles the meanings of friendship from family and friendly relations, from love and passion and the everyday experiences of coupledom. Friendship is the just relationship. Rather than based on exchange, it is an encounter between two intimates that repudiates the logics of the market, the depersonalizing norms of modern bureaucracy and the objectives of collectivities whether they be couples or social movements. Intimate and just, friendship partakes of the world while resisting its dehumanizing drift. Marrying philosophical poetics with social science sensibility, Alberoni shows that the extent to which we live up to the ideals of friendship marks our capacities to realize the republican virtues in concrete everyday life.
"Building the Atlantic Empires explores the relationship between state recruitment of unfree labor and capitalist and imperial development. In contrast to much imperial and labor history, this collection of essays shows Western European states as an agent of capitalist expansion. Extending the prolific literature on racial slavery, these essays help transcend imperial, colonial, geographic, and historiographic boundaries through comparative insights into multiple forms and ideologies of unfree labor as they evolved over the course of four centuries in the Dutch, French, English, Spanish, and Portuguese empires. The book raises new questions for scholars seeking connections between the history of servitude and slavery and the ways in which capitalism and imperialism transformed the Atlantic world and beyond. Contributors are: Pepijn Brandon, Rafael Chambouleyron, James Coltrain, John Donoghue, Karwan Fatah-Black, Elizabeth Heath, Evelyn P. Jennings, and Anna Suranyi"--Provided by publisher