weather and climate change in Germany and across the world would have strengthened this quintessential environmentalist party. Then again, all mainstream parties have thematized related issues so that the Greens no longer “own” this policy area as they
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Stephan Jaeger
. They also told specific stories of military and technological success. These narratives tended to thematize aspects of mobilization, the strategies and events of specific campaigns and battles, military leadership, and the heroism of soldiers. At times
Acts Is Acts
Tautology and Theopolitical Form
Maria José de Abreu
recursive relation exists between medium and message, form and content, such that Charismatic speech partakes in the very tautological structure it thematizes. Such a self-referential power arrangement is symptomatic of regimes whose model of sovereignty
A World in the Making
Discovering the Future in the Hispanic World
Javier Fernández-Sebastián
Translator : Mark Hounsell
century, in fact, was the future thematized as such, becoming a specific object of analysis and speculation, which would give rise to a body of literature focused on questions related to time and temporality. A large proportion of these publications
Karen Hébert, Joshua Mullenite, Alka Sabharwal, David Kneas, Irena Leisbet Ceridwen Connon, Peter van Dommelen, Cameron Hu, Brittney Hammons, and Natasha Zaretsky
intimated but rarely thematized in much existing political ecology, that “the history of capitalism is one of successive historical natures” (19). It is in Moore’s dogged insistence on “historical nature” over against “nature in general” that he gains some
Modern Women in a Modern State
Public Discourse in Interwar Yugoslavia on the Status of Women in Turkey (1923–1939)
Anđelko Vlašić
presents a qualitative analysis of the discourse embedded in books and newspaper articles published in Yugoslavia between 1923 and 1939 and thematizes the position of Turkish women during the interwar years. I argue that the breadth of interest of the
Michael Boyden, Ali Basirat, and Karl Berglund
Over the last two decades, a vast body of scholarship has sprung up thematizing the complexities of climate knowledge-making. The impetus behind this research is straightforward: In order to meet the challenges posed by a warming planet, we need
Birgitta Bader-Zaar, Evguenia Davidova, Minja Bujaković, Milena Kirova, Malgorzata Fidelis, Stefano Petrungaro, Alexandra Talavar, Daniela Koleva, Rochelle Ruthchild, Vania Ivanova, Valentina Mitkova, Roxana L. Cazan, Sylwia Kuźma-Markowska, and Nadia Danova
representations of old age in literature, folklore, and popular culture. Rafaela Božić discusses the thematization of age in Soviet utopias and dystopias from the period before World War II. Since the body in this literature is an “ideological sign” (238), its
Johanna Gehmacher, Svetla Baloutzova, Orlin Sabev, Nezihe Bilhan, Tsvetelin Stepanov, Evgenia Kalinova, Zorana Antonijevic, Alexandra Ghit, Chiara Bonfiglioli, Ana Luleva, Barbara Klich-Kluczewska, Courtney Doucette, Katarzyna Stańczak-Wiślicz, Valentina Mitkova, Vjollca Krasniqi, Pepka Boyadjieva, Marina Hughson, and Rayna Gavrilova
as well as to cultivate women’s awareness of the value of their own gender. Henriette Partzsch, in “Connecting People, Inventing Communities in Faustina Sáez de Melgar’s Magazine La Violeta (Madrid, 1862–1866),” in turn, thematizes women’s press