Tag: Hold

We Hold These Truths Updating the Framers’ Vision of American Democracy


Free Download We Hold These Truths: Updating the Framers’ Vision of American Democracy
English | 2024 | ISBN: 1108845703 | 415 Pages | PDF | 3 MB
The Federalist remains the best single account of how American democracy is supposed to work. That said, it remains incomplete. While generations of scholars from Alexis de Tocqueville to Anthony Downs have worked hard to fill these gaps, America’s constantly-changing society and political institutions continue to encounter new puzzles and challenges. We Hold These Truths provides a comprehensive survey of recent scholarship about the Framers’ vision, stressing how long-established political patterns can abruptly change as voters become more polarized, and even lead to feedbacks that amplify public anger still further. Developing a theory of American democracy for the age of the internet, Trump, and polarization, this study mixes modern social science with a detailed knowledge of history, asking where the Framers’ scheme has gone wrong – and what can be done to fix it.

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Hold Still A Memoir with Photographs


Free Download Sally Mann, "Hold Still: A Memoir with Photographs"
English | 2016 | pages: 496 | ISBN: 0316247758 | EPUB | 42,5 mb
This National Book Award finalist is a revealing and beautifully written memoir and family history from acclaimed photographer Sally Mann.

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Power to the Middle Why Managers Hold the Keys to the Future of Work


Free Download Power to the Middle: Why Managers Hold the Keys to the Future of Work
English | 2023 | ISBN: 1647824850 | 270 Pages | EPUB (True) | 4 MB
"Middle manager." The term evokes a bygone industrial era in which managers functioned like cogs in a vast bureaucratic machine. In recent decades, midlevel managers became a favorite target for the chopping block-underappreciated, often considered a superfluous layer of the organization.

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The Center Must Not Hold White Women Philosophers on the Whiteness of Philosophy


Free Download George Yancy, Barbara Applebaum, Susan E. Babbitt, "The Center Must Not Hold: White Women Philosophers on the Whiteness of Philosophy"
English | 2010 | pages: 299 | ISBN: 0739138812, 0739138820 | PDF | 4,4 mb
The Center Must Not Hold: White Women Philosophers on the Whiteness of Philosophy functions as a textual site where white women philosophers engage boldly in critical acts of exploring ways of naming and disrupting whiteness in terms of how it has defined the conceptual field of philosophy. Within this text, white women philosophers critique the field of philosophy for its complicity with whiteness as a structure of power, as normative, and as hegemonic. In this way, the authority of whiteness to define what is philosophically worthy is seen as reinforcing forms of philosophical narcissism and hegemony. Challenging the whiteness of philosophy in terms of its hubristic tendencies, white women philosophers within this text assert their alliance with people of color who have been both marginalized within the field of philosophy and have had their philosophical and intellectual concerns and traditions dismissed as particularistic. Aware that feminist praxis does not necessarily lead to anti-racist praxis, the white women philosophers within this text refuse to telescope as a site of critical inquiry one site of hegemony (sexism) over another (racism). As such, the white women philosophers within this text are conscious of the ways in which they are implicated in perpetuating whiteness as a site of power within the domain of philosophy.

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The Center Cannot Hold Decolonial Possibility in the Collapse of a Tanzanian NGO


Free Download Jenna N. Hanchey, "The Center Cannot Hold: Decolonial Possibility in the Collapse of a Tanzanian NGO"
English | ISBN: 1478019972 | 2023 | 248 pages | PDF | 1085 KB
In The Center Cannot Hold Jenna N. Hanchey examines the decolonial potential emerging from processes of ruination and collapse. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork in rural Tanzania at an internationally funded NGO as it underwent dissolution, Hanchey traces the conflicts between local leadership and Western paternalism as well as the unstable subjectivity of Western volunteers-including the author-who are unable to withstand the contradictions of playing the dual roles of decolonializing ally and white savior. She argues that Western institutional and mental structures must be allowed to fall apart to make possible the emergence of decolonial justice. Hanchey shows how, through ruination, privileged subjects come to critical awareness through repeated encounters with their own complicity, providing an opportunity to delink from and oppose epistemologies of coloniality. After things fall apart, Hanchey posits, the creation of decolonial futures depends on the labor required to imagine impossible futures into being.

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