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Where They Would Never be Invited
  • Language: en

Where They Would Never be Invited

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2016
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  • Publisher: Unknown

Poetry. "Jesse Nissim writes: 'I am freely quoting a fantasy for less. / I call it a capitalism of the low roof, it is located / along the river with the continual pay per view.' Jesse Nissim's poems burn with a hard, gemlike flame; they call on us to become better and better and seeing and thinking and feeling. 'I heard the suburbs found likable our business. / I dream of persons and pets. A family of staircases / measures space.' How to be alone (how to be most alive), how to be with others (how to be most alive). Her poems inspire us to create emotion fused with analysis fused with despair fused with hope fused with power: 'What notoriously American fashion is back in power / as neighbori...

Day Cracks Between the Bones of the Foot
  • Language: en

Day Cracks Between the Bones of the Foot

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2015
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  • Publisher: Unknown

Poetry. "Where sinew and bone lapse into shadow, Jesse Nissim suggests that the body is 'the constant motion of being.' This poet's entanglement with embodiment is impassioned, perplexed, intent. With each iteration, the 'body replicates / the body / unfolding.' Opening toward resolution? No. When Nissim asks for the body's address, she is not seeking a location so much as a means of speaking, a directionality that creates relation. The real, in this poetry, is not the empirical. Here, instead, is a tour de force of desire in which the body transcends its mortal limits to become a form of testimony."—Elizabeth Robinson "To have to work toward embodiment, to have to use language to do so—...

Contemporary Arab-American Literature
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 256

Contemporary Arab-American Literature

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2014-05-30
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  • Publisher: NYU Press

The last couple of decades have witnessed a flourishing of Arab-American literature across multiple genres. Yet, increased interest in this literature is ironically paralleled by a prevalent bias against Arabs and Muslims that portrays their long presence in the US as a recent and unwelcome phenomenon. Spanning the 1990s to the present, Carol Fadda-Conrey takes in the sweep of literary and cultural texts by Arab-American writers in order to understand the ways in which their depictions of Arab homelands, whether actual or imagined, play a crucial role in shaping cultural articulations of US citizenship and belonging. By asserting themselves within a US framework while maintaining connections...

Nesting Instinct
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 24

Nesting Instinct

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2014
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  • Publisher: Unknown

None

Self Named Body
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 19

Self Named Body

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2012-10-26
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  • Publisher: Unknown

None

Political Power and Social Theory
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 349

Political Power and Social Theory

As economic stagnation freezes the globe; capitalism is increasingly questioned; war, revolution and political instability unsettles the Middle East; and President Obama's campaign for the Presidency looms, Volume 23 of Political Power and Social Theory reflects on these and related issues and whether the concept of "capitalism" should be problemat

The Toughest Beat
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 308

The Toughest Beat

  • Categories: Law

The Toughest Beat uses the rise of the California Correctional Peace Officers Association, the state's powerful prison officers' union, to explore the actors and interests that have created, shaped, and protected the Golden State's sprawling, dysfunctional penal system -- and how it might yet be transformed.

Boats, Borders, and Bases
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 320

Boats, Borders, and Bases

"Discussions on U.S. border enforcement have traditionally focused on the highly charged U.S.-Mexico boundary, inadvertently obscuring U.S.-Caribbean relations and the concerning asylum and detention policies unfolding there. Boats, Borders, and Bases offers the missing, racialized histories of the U.S. detention system and its relationship to the interception and detention of Haitian and Cuban migrants. It argues that the U.S. response to Cold War Caribbean migrations actually established the legal and institutional basis for contemporary migration and detention, and border-deterrent practices in the United States. This book promises to make a significant contribution to a truer understanding of the history and geography of the U.S. detention system overall."--Provided by publisher.

Women in Place
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 172

Women in Place

While much has been written about the impact of the 1979 Islamic revolution on life in Iran, discussions about the everyday life of Iranian women have been glaringly missing. Women in Place offers a gripping inquiry into gender segregation policies and women’s rights in contemporary Iran. Author Nazanin Shahrokni takes us onto gender-segregated buses, inside a women-only park, and outside the closed doors of stadiums where women are banned from attending men’s soccer matches. The Islamic character of the state, she demonstrates, has had to coexist, fuse, and compete with technocratic imperatives, pragmatic considerations regarding the viability of the state, international influences, and...

Mothering While Black
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 270

Mothering While Black

Mothering While Black examines the complex lives of the African American middle class—in particular, black mothers and the strategies they use to raise their children to maintain class status while simultaneously defining and protecting their children’s “authentically black” identities. Sociologist Dawn Marie Dow shows how the frameworks typically used to research middle-class families focus on white mothers’ experiences, inadequately capturing the experiences of African American middle- and upper-middle-class mothers. These limitations become apparent when Dow considers how these mothers apply different parenting strategies for black boys and for black girls, and how they navigate different expectations about breadwinning and childrearing from the African American community. At the intersection of race, ethnicity, gender, work, family, and culture, Mothering While Black sheds light on the exclusion of African American middle-class mothers from the dominant cultural experience of middle-class motherhood. In doing so, it reveals the painful truth of the decisions that black mothers must make to ensure the safety, well-being, and future prospects of their children.