A vividly illustrated family memoir told in the voices of father and daughter, The Art of Being a Stranger grapples with the challenges of displacement and historical memory across generations in the wake of the Holocaust.
A poignant blend of memoir and history, Stained Glass explores Jewish identity in post-Holocaust Europe, confronting memory, belonging, and the persistence of antisemitism across generations and continents.
Written by the two preeminent voices in the field, this book is a guide to the fundamentals of institutional ethnography.
Readers will find that the book remains recognizably Klaeber's work, but with altered and added features designed to render it as useful today as it has ever been.
Kristeva explores the philosophical aspects of Hannah Arendt’s work: her understanding of such concepts as language, self, body, political space, and life.
A study of politics and religion during a key era (AD 284 - 337) when Christianity established itself as the dominant force shaping government and civilization. Reprinted from the 1962 edition, first published in 1948.
This book analyses tensions that arise between the principles of social justice and the need for cooperation to advance collective goals.
Drawing on First Peoples Principles of Education, this book highlights the ways in which Indigenous learning and pedagogies parallel the western notion of Slow pedagogy.
In the ongoing quest to protect animals from exploitation, this book discusses "beingness," as an alternative to "personhood," as the more impactful and animal-centered legal status that recognizes and values animals for who they are.
The Complete Short Stories of Natalia Ginzburg encourages a deeper understanding of Ginzburg's life's work and compliments those other collections and individual works which are already widely available in English.
Cases of Conflict focuses on times of dispute as important moments in the development of international environmental law. Conflict tests international law-both its content and its relevance become clearer in times of controversy-but conflict can also help shape the law.
Based on original ethnographic research in Brazil, this rich graphic narrative follows several local women as they negotiate the terms of their intimate relationships with foreign tourists and seek a different life for themselves.