Women, space, and utopia, 1600 - 1800
In: Women and gender in the early modern world
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In: Women and gender in the early modern world
In: Contributions to Economics
The book aims at creating the foundations for a broad framework of a "theory of mobility in space and time". Starting from a confrontation between mainstream international economics and empirical observation, the approach takes into account the heterogeneity of more or less mobile agents, forms of interaction that go beyond price interaction as well as the dimensions of space and time. It is emphasized that only an interdisciplinary approach that is open to new methods will be able to offer explanations for the spatial dynamics of our times. This approach goes beyond the traditional distinction of national versus international transactions. It is a completely new conceptual framework that makes the integration of traditional approaches as well as future theoretical developments possible
In: Utopian studies, Volume 31, Issue 2, p. 235-236
ISSN: 2154-9648
In: Utopian studies, Volume 30, Issue 2, p. vi-vi
ISSN: 2154-9648
In: Utopian studies, Volume 30, Issue 1, p. 112-114
ISSN: 2154-9648
In: Utopian studies, Volume 27, Issue 3, p. 632-635
ISSN: 2154-9648
In: Utopian studies, Volume 27, Issue 3, p. 493-504
ISSN: 2154-9648
ABSTRACT
This article traces the history of the translation of Thomas More's Utopia into German from the first seventeenth-century translations to the translations and reception of Utopia in the German Democratic Republic and reunited Germany.
In: Utopian studies, Volume 27, Issue 1, p. vii-viii
ISSN: 2154-9648
In: Utopian studies, Volume 26, Issue 2, p. 402-404
ISSN: 2154-9648
In: Utopian studies, Volume 25, Issue 1, p. 217-220
ISSN: 2154-9648
In: Utopian studies, Volume 25, Issue 1, p. 255-258
ISSN: 2154-9648
In: Utopian studies, Volume 22, Issue 2, p. 396-402
ISSN: 2154-9648
In: Utopian studies, Volume 21, Issue 1, p. 172-176
ISSN: 2154-9648
In: Utopian studies, Volume 21, Issue 2, p. 336-338
ISSN: 2154-9648
ABSTRACT
The golden age has not passed; it lies in the future.
—Paul Signac
In: Contributions to economics