Tag: Imagining

Imagining Harmony Poetry, Empathy, and Community in Mid-Tokugawa Confucianism and Nativism


Free Download Imagining Harmony: Poetry, Empathy, and Community in Mid-Tokugawa Confucianism and Nativism by Peter Flueckiger
English | October 19, 2010 | ISBN: N/A | ASIN: B005HG51OC | 304 pages | PDF | 3.09 Mb
Many intellectuals in eighteenth-century Japan valued classical poetry in either Chinese or Japanese for its expression of unadulterated human sentiments. They also saw such poetry as a distillation of the language and aesthetic values of ancient China and Japan, which offered models of the good government and social harmony lacking in their time. By studying the poetry of the past and composing new poetry emulating its style, they believed it possible to reform their own society. Imagining Harmony focuses on the development of these ideas in the life and work of Ogyu Sorai, the most influential Confucian philosopher of the eighteenth century, and that of his key disciples and critics.

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Imagining Global Futures


Free Download Imagining Global Futures by Adom Getachew
English | January 17th, 2023 | ISBN: 1946511749 | 216 pages | True EPUB | 0.33 MB
What does a just world look like? This volume begins with a planet beset by accumulating crises-environmental, social, and political-and imagines how we can move beyond them.

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Imagining Serengeti A History of Landscape Memory in Tanzania from Earliest Times to the Present


Free Download Jan Bender Shetler, "Imagining Serengeti: A History of Landscape Memory in Tanzania from Earliest Times to the Present"
English | 2007 | ISBN: 0821417509, 0821417495 | EPUB | pages: 392 | 4.3 mb
Many students come to African history with a host of stereotypes that are not always easy to dislodge. One of the most common is that of Africa as safari grounds-as the land of expansive, unpopulated game reserves untouched by civilization and preserved in their original pristine state by the tireless efforts of contemporary conservationists. With prose that is elegant in its simplicity and analysis that is forceful and compelling, Jan Bender Shetler brings the landscape memory of the Serengeti to life. She demonstrates how the social identities of western Serengeti peoples are embedded in specific spaces and in their collective memories of those spaces. Using a new methodology to analyze precolonial oral traditions, Shetler identifies core spatial images and reevaluates them in their historical context through the use of archaeological, linguistic, ethnographic, ecological, and archival evidence. Imagining Serengeti is a lively environmental history that will ensure that we never look at images of the African landscape in quite the same way.

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Re-imagining Teaching Improvement From Early Childhood to University


Free Download David Lynch, "Re-imagining Teaching Improvement: From Early Childhood to University"
English | ISBN: 9819977452 | 2023 | 388 pages | PDF | 7 MB
This research-based book focuses on re-imagining how to improve pedagogical and environmental approaches to teaching and teacher education, across the early childhood to higher education sectors. It motivates educators, academics and researchers to stimulate thinking around the use of research to transform professional teaching and teacher education in imaginative ways. It showcases insights into the design and implementation of successful approaches to teaching improvement at the direct level of practice. This book provides a clear ‘how to’ approach that identifies the general principles by which teaching improvement can be planned, monitored and evaluated, as well as guidelines for contextualising these principles within specific educational levels and situations.

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Imagining the Perfect Society in Muslim Brotherhood Journals An Analysis of al-Da’wa and Liwa’ al-Islam


Free Download Kiki M. Santing, "Imagining the Perfect Society in Muslim Brotherhood Journals: An Analysis of al-Da’wa and Liwa’ al-Islam"
English | ISBN: 3110632950 | 2020 | 520 pages | PDF | 4 MB
The investigation of the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood during the presidencies of Anwar Sadat and the early years of Hosni Mubarak is based on the movement’s main journals, al-Da’wa and Liwā’ al-‘Islām, presenting its history during two relevant periods: 1976-1981, 1987-1988. These journals show that, contrary to the focus in modern research (e.a. sharia laws, gender relations, or ideas of democracy), the Brotherhood is a much more broadly oriented, social-political opposition movement, taking Islam as its guideline. The movement’s own versatile discourse discusses all aspects of daily and spiritual life. An important adage of the Brotherhood is Islam as a niẓām kāmil wa-shāmil, ‘a perfect and all-encompassing system’. Faith should play a role in every aspect of daily life, from cooking dinner and housekeeping to education, holidays, enemy images, legislation, and watching television. Islam is everything, and everything is Islam. In its journals the Brotherhood provided its unique reflection of the spirit of the age. The movement presented itself as a highly reactive group that responded to current events and positioned itself as a moral, religious and political opposition to the Egyptian regime.

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Imagining Caribbean womanhood Race, nation and beauty competitions, 1929-70


Free Download Rochelle Rowe, "Imagining Caribbean womanhood: Race, nation and beauty competitions, 1929-70"
English | 2013 | ISBN: 1526150336, 0719088674 | EPUB | pages: 224 | 3.3 mb
Over fifty years after Jamaican and Trinidadian independence, Imagining Caribbean womanhood examines the links between beauty and politics in the Anglophone Caribbean, providing a first cultural history of Caribbean beauty competitions, spanning from Kingston to London. It traces the origins and transformation of female beauty contests in the British Caribbean from 1929 to 1970, through the development of cultural nationalism, race-conscious politics and decolonisation. The beauty contest, a seemingly marginal phenomenon, is used to illuminate the persistence of racial supremacy, the advance of consumer culture and the negotiation of race and nation through the idealised performance of cultured, modern beauty. Modern Caribbean femininity was intended to be politically functional but also commercially viable and subtly eroticised.

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