"This book collects diverse perspectives from scholars in literature and the arts, theater and performance, anthropology, sociology, and law about the value of the humanities. It grew out of Cornell's Mellon Diversity Seminar in 2016-17 where fifteen public humanists met for a series of self-directed weekly seminars in which they could be open about their fears and desires, challenges, and hopes. The essays provide a practical and intellectual model for how humanists deepen their scholarship through rigorous engagement with their own humanity"--
"This book collects diverse perspectives from scholars in literature and the arts, theater and performance, anthropology, sociology, and law about the value of the humanities. It grew out of Cornell's Mellon Diversity Seminar in 2016-17 where fifteen public humanists met for a series of self-directed weekly seminars in which they could be open about their fears and desires, challenges, and hopes. The essays provide a practical and intellectual model for how humanists deepen their scholarship through rigorous engagement with their own humanity"--Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Introduction, by Anna Sims Bartel and Debra A. Castillo Part I: Humanizing Scholars 1. Humans as Scholars,Scholars as Humans, by Anna Sims Bartel 2. To Be, or To Become? On Reading and Recognition, by Shawn McDaniel 3. Present: Humanity in the Humanities, by A. T. Miller Part II: Engaging Artifacts 4. Humans Remain: Engaging Communities and Embracing Tensions in the Study of Ancient Human Skeletons, by Matthew Velasco 5. Forgotten Faces, Missing Bodies: Understanding "Techno-Invisible" Populations and Political Violence in Peru, by José Ragas 6. A Ride to New Futures with Rosa Parks: Producing Public Scholarship and Community Art, by Riché Richardson Part III: Considering Resistance 7. Finding Humanity: Social Change on Our Own Terms, by Christine Henseler 8. Performing Democracy: Bad and Nasty Patriot Acts, by Sara Warner 9. Making Law, by Gerald Torres 10. What's It All Meme?, by Ella Diaz Part IV: Using Humanity/ies 11. Performing the Past, Rehearsing the Future: Transformative Encounters with American Theater Company's Youth Ensemble, by Caitlin Kane 12. "From the Projects to the Pasture": Navigating Food Justice, Race, and Food Localism, by Bobby J. Smith II 13. "I Heard You Help People": Grassroots Advocacy for Latina/os in Need, by Debra A. Castillo and Carolina Osorio Gil Afterword: The Prophetic Aspiration of the Scholar as Human, by Scott J. Peters
Introduction, by Anna Sims Bartel and Debra A. Castillo Part I: Humanizing Scholars 1. Humans as Scholars,Scholars as Humans, by Anna Sims Bartel 2. To Be, or To Become? On Reading and Recognition, by Shawn McDaniel 3. Present: Humanity in the Humanities, by A. T. Miller Part II: Engaging Artifacts 4. Humans Remain: Engaging Communities and Embracing Tensions in the Study of Ancient Human Skeletons, by Matthew Velasco 5. Forgotten Faces, Missing Bodies: Understanding "Techno-Invisible" Populations and Political Violence in Peru, by José Ragas 6. A Ride to New Futures with Rosa Parks: Producing Public Scholarship and Community Art, by Riché Richardson Part III: Considering Resistance 7. Finding Humanity: Social Change on Our Own Terms, by Christine Henseler 8. Performing Democracy: Bad and Nasty Patriot Acts, by Sara Warner 9. Making Law, by Gerald Torres 10. What's It All Meme?, by Ella Diaz Part IV: Using Humanity/ies 11. Performing the Past, Rehearsing the Future: Transformative Encounters with American Theater Company's Youth Ensemble, by Caitlin Kane 12. "From the Projects to the Pasture": Navigating Food Justice, Race, and Food Localism, by Bobby J. Smith II 13. "I Heard You Help People": Grassroots Advocacy for Latina/os in Need, by Debra A. Castillo and Carolina Osorio Gil Afterword: The Prophetic Aspiration of the Scholar as Human, by Scott J. Peters
Es gelten unsere Allgemeinen Geschäftsbedingungen: www.buecher.de/agb
Impressum
www.buecher.de ist ein Internetauftritt der buecher.de internetstores GmbH
Geschäftsführung: Monica Sawhney | Roland Kölbl | Günter Hilger
Sitz der Gesellschaft: Batheyer Straße 115 - 117, 58099 Hagen
Postanschrift: Bürgermeister-Wegele-Str. 12, 86167 Augsburg
Amtsgericht Hagen HRB 13257
Steuernummer: 321/5800/1497