Tag: Reclaiming

Reclaiming Art in the Age of Artifice A Treatise, Critique, and Call to Action (Manifesto) [Audiobook]


Free Download Reclaiming Art in the Age of Artifice: A Treatise, Critique, and Call to Action (Manifesto) (Audiobook)
English | ASIN: B0CHZ3X9F7 | 2024 | 4 hours and 38 minutes | M4B@128 kbps | 258 MB
Author: J.F. Martel, Donna Tartt
Narrator: J.F. Martel, Donna Tartt

With a new Introduction by Donna Tartt, exclusive to the audiobook. Part treatise, part critique, part call to action, Reclaiming Art in the Age of Artifice is a journey into the uncanny realities revealed to us in the great works of art of the past and present. Received opinion holds that art is culturally determined and relative. We are told that whether a picture, a movement, a text, or sound qualifies as a "work of art" largely depends on social attitudes and convention. Drawing on examples ranging from Paleolithic cave paintings to modern pop music and building on the ideas of James Joyce, Oscar Wilde, Gilles Deleuze, Carl Jung, and others, J.F. Martel argues that art is an inborn human phenomenon that precedes the formation of culture and even society. Art is free of politics and ideology. Paradoxically, that is what makes it a force of liberation wherever it breaks through the trance of humdrum existence. Like the act of dreaming, artistic creation is fundamentally mysterious. It is a gift from beyond the field of the human, and it connects us with realities that, though normally unseen, are crucial components of a living world.

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Reclaiming Archaeology Beyond the Tropes of Modernity


Free Download Reclaiming Archaeology: Beyond the Tropes of Modernity By Alfredo González-Ruibal
2013 | 392 Pages | ISBN: 0415673925 | PDF | 10 MB
Archaeology has been an important source of metaphors for some of the key intellectuals of the 20th century: Sigmund Freud, Walter Benjamin, Alois Riegl and Michel Foucault, amongst many others. However, this power has also turned against archaeology, because the discipline has been dealt with perfunctorily as a mere provider of metaphors that other intellectuals have exploited. Scholars from different fields continue to explore areas in which archaeologists have been working for over two centuries, with little or no reference to the discipline. It seems that excavation, stratigraphy or ruins only become important at a trans-disciplinary level when people from outside archaeology pay attention to them and somehow dematerialize them. Meanwhile, archaeologists have been usually more interested in borrowing theories from other fields, rather than in developing the theoretical potential of the same concepts that other thinkers find so useful. The time is ripe for archaeologists to address a wider audience and engage in theoretical debates from a position of equality, not of subalternity. Reclaiming Archaeology explores how archaeology can be useful to rethink modernity’s big issues, and more specifically late modernity (broadly understood as the 20th and 21st centuries). The book contains a series of original essays, not necessarily following the conventional academic rules of archaeological writing or thinking, allowing rhetoric to have its place in disclosing the archaeological. In each of the four sections that constitute this book (method, time, heritage and materiality), the contributors deal with different archaeological tropes, such as excavation, surface/depth, genealogy, ruins, fragments, repressed memories and traces. They criticize their modernist implications and rework them in creative ways, in order to show the power of archaeology not just to understand the past, but also the present. Reclaiming Archaeology includes essays from a diverse array of archaeologists who have dealt in one way or another with modernity, including scholars from non-Anglophone countries who have approached the issue in original ways during recent years, as well as contributors from other fields who engage in a creative dialogue with archaeology and the work of archaeologists.

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The Red Leather Diary Reclaiming a Life Through the Pages of a Lost Journal (P.S.)


Free Download Lily Koppel, "The Red Leather Diary: Reclaiming a Life Through the Pages of a Lost Journal (P.S.)"
English | 2009 | pages: 471 | ISBN: 0061256781, 0061256773 | PDF | 5,4 mb
"A world straight from the pages of an F. Scott Fitzgerald novel. . . . An extraordinary story about coming of age, following your dreams and discovering (or rediscovering) who you are, were and want to be." -Parade

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Reclaiming Freedom


Free Download Aziz Rana, "Reclaiming Freedom"
English | ISBN: 194651179X | 2024 | 196 pages | EPUB | 3 MB
"A curious thing has happened within American culture," Aziz Rana writes. "The language of freedom has been claimed almost entirely by the political right." Can it be reclaimed?

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Reclaiming UGLY! A Radically Joyful Guide to Unlearn Oppression and Uplift, Glorify, and Love Yourself [Audiobook]


Free Download Reclaiming UGLY!: A Radically Joyful Guide to Unlearn Oppression and Uplift, Glorify, and Love Yourself (Audiobook)
English | ASIN: B0C3MX29YQ | 2024 | 11 hours and 44 minutes | M4B@64 kbps | 338 MB
Author: Vanessa Rochelle Lewis
Narrator: Sanya Simmons

Flip the script on how you think about UGLY-what it means, what it is, and how to reclaim it to Uplift, Glorify, and Love Yourself in an uglified world. Blending joyful self-help magic with incisive social analysis and personal narrative, Vanessa Rochelle Lewis empowers listeners to heal, connect, and revolt against uglification. Uglification is "ugly" weaponized: a tool, ideology, and type of oppression that designates some bodies as more or less worthy of love, respect, access, and dignity. It defines who’s accepted in what spaces, which identities are marginalized, and how we all move through the world-and is part and parcel of systems like white supremacy, ableism, sizeism, sexism, and queer- and transphobia.

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Reclaiming Our Democracy Every Citizen’s Guide to Transformational Advocacy, 2024 Edition [Audiobook]


Free Download Sam Daley-Harris (Author, Narrator), "Reclaiming Our Democracy: Every Citizen’s Guide to Transformational Advocacy, 2024 Edition"
English | ISBN: 9781953943507, 1953943500 | 2024 | M4B@64 kbps | ~10:30:00 | 307 MB
Almost everyone shies away from advocacy as a way to make a difference. We donate to climate change organizations, but we don’t meet with a member of Congress or write a letter to the editor. We donate to groups working to end gun violence, anti-hunger organizations, groups dedicated to racial justice, and many others, but we don’t become advocates on those issues beyond signing an online petition or going to an occasional rally.
Why? Because most of us see advocacy as too hard or too frustrating, too complicated, or too partisan, too dirty or too time-consuming, too ineffective or too costly.
But what if that’s all wrong? What if deep engagement dissolves discouragement and can actually bring joy? What if you can become an advocate for a cause you care about and feel fulfilled, not frustrated? And what if engaging as an advocate is essential to protecting our democracy?

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