The Cambridge Companion to Human Rights and Literature
Herausgeber: Parikh, Crystal
The Cambridge Companion to Human Rights and Literature
Herausgeber: Parikh, Crystal
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This Companion considers what theoretical and practical possibilities emerge at the crossroads of human rights and literature.
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This Companion considers what theoretical and practical possibilities emerge at the crossroads of human rights and literature.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 272
- Erscheinungstermin: 11. Juli 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 226mm x 151mm x 20mm
- Gewicht: 404g
- ISBN-13: 9781108722209
- ISBN-10: 1108722202
- Artikelnr.: 55181096
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 272
- Erscheinungstermin: 11. Juli 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 226mm x 151mm x 20mm
- Gewicht: 404g
- ISBN-13: 9781108722209
- ISBN-10: 1108722202
- Artikelnr.: 55181096
Chronology of major works and events, 1215-2018 Saronik Bosu and Heba
Jahama; Introduction Crystal Parikh; Part I. Genealogies and Contexts: 1.
Recounting history, locating precursors for human rights Sarah Winter; 2.
Humanitarianism's way in the world: on missionary and emergency imaginaries
Kerry Bystrom and Eleni Coundouriotis; 3. Literature, human rights and the
Cold War Andrew Hammond; 4. Human rights in the vernacular: translating and
inventing rights outside the state David Palumbo-Liu; Part II. Fashioning
Methods: 5. Law and literature, the procedural and the performative Audrey
J. Golden; 6. Human rights modes and media Lieve Gies; 7. Remembering the
forgetting: human rights literature and memory work Cathy J. Schlund-Vials;
8. Queering human rights: the transgender child Wendy S. Hesford and Rachel
A. Lewis; Part III. Generic Representations: 9. Narrating the human person
Sunny Xiang; 10. The dramas of human rights: documentary theater and
performance Brenda S. Werth; 11. Poetic justice and the idea of poetic
redress Rajeev S. Patke; 12. Truth-telling: reportage and creative
nonfiction James Dawes; 13. Visualizing the world: graphic novels, comics,
and human rights Charlotte Salmi; Part IV. Writing Human Rights: 14.
Perpetrators, victims, and beneficiaries: the subjects of human rights
Elizabeth Swanson; 15. Routing emotions, forming humans: affect,
aesthetics, rhetoric Greg A. Mullins; 16. Beyond sovereignty: reimagining
vulnerability and security Alexandra S. Moore; Bibliography Saronik Bosu
and Heba Jahama.
Jahama; Introduction Crystal Parikh; Part I. Genealogies and Contexts: 1.
Recounting history, locating precursors for human rights Sarah Winter; 2.
Humanitarianism's way in the world: on missionary and emergency imaginaries
Kerry Bystrom and Eleni Coundouriotis; 3. Literature, human rights and the
Cold War Andrew Hammond; 4. Human rights in the vernacular: translating and
inventing rights outside the state David Palumbo-Liu; Part II. Fashioning
Methods: 5. Law and literature, the procedural and the performative Audrey
J. Golden; 6. Human rights modes and media Lieve Gies; 7. Remembering the
forgetting: human rights literature and memory work Cathy J. Schlund-Vials;
8. Queering human rights: the transgender child Wendy S. Hesford and Rachel
A. Lewis; Part III. Generic Representations: 9. Narrating the human person
Sunny Xiang; 10. The dramas of human rights: documentary theater and
performance Brenda S. Werth; 11. Poetic justice and the idea of poetic
redress Rajeev S. Patke; 12. Truth-telling: reportage and creative
nonfiction James Dawes; 13. Visualizing the world: graphic novels, comics,
and human rights Charlotte Salmi; Part IV. Writing Human Rights: 14.
Perpetrators, victims, and beneficiaries: the subjects of human rights
Elizabeth Swanson; 15. Routing emotions, forming humans: affect,
aesthetics, rhetoric Greg A. Mullins; 16. Beyond sovereignty: reimagining
vulnerability and security Alexandra S. Moore; Bibliography Saronik Bosu
and Heba Jahama.
Chronology of major works and events, 1215-2018 Saronik Bosu and Heba
Jahama; Introduction Crystal Parikh; Part I. Genealogies and Contexts: 1.
Recounting history, locating precursors for human rights Sarah Winter; 2.
Humanitarianism's way in the world: on missionary and emergency imaginaries
Kerry Bystrom and Eleni Coundouriotis; 3. Literature, human rights and the
Cold War Andrew Hammond; 4. Human rights in the vernacular: translating and
inventing rights outside the state David Palumbo-Liu; Part II. Fashioning
Methods: 5. Law and literature, the procedural and the performative Audrey
J. Golden; 6. Human rights modes and media Lieve Gies; 7. Remembering the
forgetting: human rights literature and memory work Cathy J. Schlund-Vials;
8. Queering human rights: the transgender child Wendy S. Hesford and Rachel
A. Lewis; Part III. Generic Representations: 9. Narrating the human person
Sunny Xiang; 10. The dramas of human rights: documentary theater and
performance Brenda S. Werth; 11. Poetic justice and the idea of poetic
redress Rajeev S. Patke; 12. Truth-telling: reportage and creative
nonfiction James Dawes; 13. Visualizing the world: graphic novels, comics,
and human rights Charlotte Salmi; Part IV. Writing Human Rights: 14.
Perpetrators, victims, and beneficiaries: the subjects of human rights
Elizabeth Swanson; 15. Routing emotions, forming humans: affect,
aesthetics, rhetoric Greg A. Mullins; 16. Beyond sovereignty: reimagining
vulnerability and security Alexandra S. Moore; Bibliography Saronik Bosu
and Heba Jahama.
Jahama; Introduction Crystal Parikh; Part I. Genealogies and Contexts: 1.
Recounting history, locating precursors for human rights Sarah Winter; 2.
Humanitarianism's way in the world: on missionary and emergency imaginaries
Kerry Bystrom and Eleni Coundouriotis; 3. Literature, human rights and the
Cold War Andrew Hammond; 4. Human rights in the vernacular: translating and
inventing rights outside the state David Palumbo-Liu; Part II. Fashioning
Methods: 5. Law and literature, the procedural and the performative Audrey
J. Golden; 6. Human rights modes and media Lieve Gies; 7. Remembering the
forgetting: human rights literature and memory work Cathy J. Schlund-Vials;
8. Queering human rights: the transgender child Wendy S. Hesford and Rachel
A. Lewis; Part III. Generic Representations: 9. Narrating the human person
Sunny Xiang; 10. The dramas of human rights: documentary theater and
performance Brenda S. Werth; 11. Poetic justice and the idea of poetic
redress Rajeev S. Patke; 12. Truth-telling: reportage and creative
nonfiction James Dawes; 13. Visualizing the world: graphic novels, comics,
and human rights Charlotte Salmi; Part IV. Writing Human Rights: 14.
Perpetrators, victims, and beneficiaries: the subjects of human rights
Elizabeth Swanson; 15. Routing emotions, forming humans: affect,
aesthetics, rhetoric Greg A. Mullins; 16. Beyond sovereignty: reimagining
vulnerability and security Alexandra S. Moore; Bibliography Saronik Bosu
and Heba Jahama.