Peuples méditerranéens: revue trimestrielle = Mediterranean peoples
ISSN: 0399-1253
24960 Ergebnisse
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ISSN: 0399-1253
In: Mittelmeerstudien Band 21
In: Schöningh and Fink Literature and Culture Studies E-Books, Collection 2019, ISBN: 9783657100163
Preliminary Material /Medardus Brehl, Andreas Eckl and Kristin Platt --Preface /Medardus Brehl, Andreas Eckl and Kristin Platt --The Mediterranean Other: Introduction /Medardus Brehl, Andreas Eckl and Kristin Platt --Constructing the Idea of "Identity" in the Mediterranean: Patterns and Practices /Kristin Platt --Routes, Migrations, Stories. Counter-Cultural Discourses from Multicultural Theatre in Italy /Cristina Balma-Tivola --Moving Stories – Roma and the Oral Tradition of a Transnational People /Julia Blandfort --Cosmopolitanism: The Mediterranean Archives /Paolo Giaccaria --The 'Other' in the Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem. The Crusaders and their Varying Images of the Muslims in the Eastern Mediterranean Basin /Shlomo Lotan --Zingarella or how Mediterranean and Gypsy Merged. The Story of a Certain Musical Genre /Anna G. Piotrowska --Ithaca Revisited – Homer's Odyssey and the (Other) Mediterranean Imagination /Christopher Schliephake --Thinking through the Diaspora: Anthropologies of Mobility across the Mediterranean /Paul A. Silverstein --The Mediterranean Cult of the Seven Sleepers: Counter-Narrative vs Official Representation in Islamic Devotion /Anna Tozzi di Marco --Narrating the History of the Other(s). The Near East in European Historiographical Accounts of the 19th and 20th Centuries /Felix Wiedemann --Bibliography /Medardus Brehl, Andreas Eckl and Kristin Platt.
Sustainable Fisheries in the Mediterranean Note: This publication may be partially or completely reproduced for educational and non-profit purposes without express consent of the Regional Activity Centre for Cleaner Production (CP/RAC), always citing the source of the information. CP/RAC would appreciate receiving a copy of any publication where this material was used as a source. It is prohibited to use this information for commercial purposes or for sale without written consent from CP/RAC. The denominations used in this publication and the presentation of material in the same do not imply the expression of any opinion by CAR/PL relating to legal status of a country, territory or area, or its authorities or respecting its borders and limits. If there is any study point which can be improved or if there is any inaccuracy, please let us know. The CP/RAC, based in Barcelona-Spain, was established in 1996. Its mission is to promote mechanisms leading to sustainable consumption and production patterns and sound chemicals management in Mediterranean countries. The CP/RAC activities are financed by the Spanish Government once they have been submitted and approved by the Contracting Parties to the Barcelona Convention and by the Bilateral Monitoring Commission made up of representatives from the Spanish and Catalan Governments. ; N/A
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In: Mittelmeerstudien Ser.
World Affairs Online
In: South European society & politics, Band 5, Heft 1, S. 145-157
ISSN: 1360-8746
A review essay on books by (1) Jeffrey Cole, The New Racism in Europe: A Sicilian Ethnography (Cambridge: Cambridge U Press, 1997); (2) Juan Jose Lahuerta, Le Corbusier y Espana ([Le Corbusier and Spain] Barcelona: Centre Cultura Contemporania Barcelona, 1997); (3) Donald McNeill, Urban Change and the European Left: Tales from the New Barcelona (London & New York, Routledge, 1999); (4) Jean-Luc Pinol, Atlas historico de ciudades europeas: Francia ([Historical Atlas of European Cities: France] Barcelona: Centre Cultura Contemporania Barcelona/Salvat, 1999); (5) Joan Pujola, De que vas, tio? ([What's Happening, Dude?] Barcelona: Empuries, 1997); & (6) Rosemary Wakeman, Modernizing the Provincial City, Toulouse 1945-47 (Cambridge: Harvard U Press, 1997). These works address the status of European Mediterranean cities as new types of global cities, highlighting their potential as models of sustainable development & environmental planning. They cover a broad base of perspectives from architects, historians, anthropologists, & linguists on issues of urban planning, policy, & social change. Cole offers ethnographic evidence collected 1988-1990 to document the persistence of classist & racist stereotypes regarding immigrants among the working & middle classes of Palermo, Italy, centered around new immigrants arriving in Sicily from the South. The politicization of immigration issues is noted. Lahuerta's edited collection of essays chronicles the contributions of urban architect Le Corbusier to the development of Barcelona, Spain, in the early 20th century, bringing to light new political influences on his work. McNeill moves ahead to the period following Francisco Franco's dictatorship to examine political factors in the urban discourses of Barcelona. He critiques the New Left & its urban reforms under socialist mayor Pasqual Maragall, extending the analysis to other socialist urban discourses throughout Europe. In another analysis of Barcelona, Pujolar examines language use & identity among working-class adolescents, focusing on changes to the Catalan language & its conflicts with Castilian as examples of the politics of language & national identity. Pinol's collection provides a comprehensive, illustrated guide to France & makes an excellent reference atlas that also manages to link various urban architectures to political & economic factors. Wakeman focuses on the city of Toulouse & its development as both an aerospace & cultural center in Europe in the immediate post-WWII era, placing this path of urban modernization within the context of political & economic changes across different decades in the city & in France as a whole. 21 References. K. Hyatt Stewart
In: REVIEW OF INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS, Band 33, Heft 771, S. 29-31