for at udvide
kategorilisten.
Søgning på underkategorier- og emner:
From the 1940s to the 1980s, Yoruba popular theatre was one of the most spectacularly successful theatres in Africa. This title recounts the... Læs mere
The first comprehensive examination of Middle Eastern immigrants in Mexico, from the open-door policy of the nineteenth century to contemporary multiculturalism.
Cannibal Tours and Glass Boxes poses a number of probing questions about the role and responsibility of museums and anthropology in the contemporary world.
Moran argues that democracy is not a foreign import into Africa, but that essential aspects of what we in the West consider democratic values are part of the indigenous traditions of legitimacy and political process.
Provides an important entrée into the current thinking and rethinking on Caribbean heritage. Included are several topics that represent the rich plurality of the Caribbean experience,... Læs mere
This book explains how global corporations manage their own greenhouse gas emissions and the emissions from their supply and value chains, and explains how stakeholders such as investors, NGOs and governments might drive significant reductions in these emissions.
This concise volume explores how creatives operate within the cultural ecology of the Caribbean, and the diverse range of tactics they use to mediate state and global policies to define cultural production and consumption in post-colonial small island states.
This book provides an overview of nation branding in the Americas, an often neglected continent(s) in debates about the creation,... Læs mere
This book critically examines how brands determine the visibility of social issues through their advertising practices, informing the ways we are persuaded to feel, think, and act as consumers and citizens.
The Museum Movement provides the first systematic overview of the ‘museum movement’ of the early twentieth century, which encouraged museums to play a greater role in education and civic uplift.
This book introduces a new theory of national identity, arguing that the nation does not only represent an abstract “imagined community”, but that it also represents embodied cultural and discursive practices.