Stanford University Press
The Power of Economists within the State
Verlag
Passage to manhood : youth migration, heroin, and AIDS in Southwest China
Verlag
Lage
List of Illustrations . . ix
Preface . . xi
Introduction: Bringing Peripheries to the Center . . 1
1 The Meandering Road to Modernity . . 27
2 Manhood, Migration, and Heroin . . 51
3 Multivocal Drug Control . . 81
4 Contentious Individuality on the Rise . . 104
5 Failed State AIDS Intervention . . 130
6 AIDS and Its Global Stigmatization . . 162
Conclusion . . 187
Notes . . 199
Bibliography . . 207
Index . . 225
A community under Siege : the Jews of Breslau under Nazism
Verlag
Acknowledgments . . ix
Introduction . . 1
1. Jews Settle in Breslau . . 27
2. "Creeping Persecution", 1933-1934 . . 69
3. Calm Before the Storm . . 112
4. Kristallnacht . . 166
5. Tightening the Screws, 1939-1941 . . 204
6. The End . . 230
Conclusion . . 275
Reference Matter
Notes . . 283
Glossary . . 301
Bibliography . . 303
Index . . 312
Photographs follow page 148
Paris, 1200
Verlag
Preface to the American Edition . . ix
Prologue: Paris in the Year 1200 . . 1
CHAPTER 1 The City and its Bourgeoisie . . 17
CHAPTER 2 The Faces of Pierre the Chanter and Philip Augustus and the Hidden Visages of Women . . 63
CHAPTER 3 King Philip and His Government . . 94
CHAPTER 4 The Church, Clergy and Religious Life . . 128
CHAPTER 5 The Schools . . 175
CHAPTER 6 Delight and Pain . . 214
Epilogue: Raising the Roof . . 245
Notes . . 251
Selected Bibliography . . 259
Index . . 281
European Feminisms 1700-1950 : a political history
Verlag
Preface xi
Chronology: A Framework for the Study of European
Feminisms xix
Prologue: History, Memory, and Empowerment 1
I. Thinking About Feminism in European History 19
PART I: The Eighteenth Century 27
1. Reclaiming the Enlightenment for Feminism 31
3. Challenging Masculine Aristocracy: Feminism and the
French Revolution 50
PART II: The Nineteenth Century 77
4. Rearticulating Feminist Claims, 1820-1848 87
5. Birthingthe "Woman Question" 1848-1870 108
6. Internationalizing Feminism, 1870-1890 144
7. Feminist Challenges andAntifeminist Responses, 1890-1914 182
8. Nationalizing Feminisms and Feminizing Nationalisms,
1890 - 1914 213
PART III: TheTwentiethCentury 251
9. Feminism Under Fire: World War I, the Russian Revolution,
and the Great Backlash, 1914-1930 S 257
10. Feminist Dilemmas in Postwar National Political Cultures:
England, Italy, Austria, Hungary, and Germany 277
11. More Feminisms in National Settings: Portugal, Ireland,
Spain, and Sweden 311
I 2. Globalizing and Politicizing European Feminist International
Activity, 1919-1945 341
Epilogue: Reinventing the Wheel? 379
Notes 399
Bibliography 509
Index 521
Critical excess : overreading in Derrida, Deluze, Levinas, Žižek and Cavell
Verlag
Acknowledgments . . vii
Preface . . ix
1 The Ancient Quarrel: Philosophy and Literature . . 1
2 Derrida, Hermeneutics and Deconstruction . . 26
3 Deleuze: Against Interpretation . . 56
4 Levinas and the Resistance to Reading . . 81
5 Zizek's Idiotic Enjoyment . . 108
6 Cavell and the Claim of Reading . . 135
7 Conclusion: In Praise of Overreading . . 164
Notes . . 189
Bibliography . . 200
Index . . 215
Values in translation : human rights and the culture of the World Bank
Verlag
Foreword . . ix
Acknowledgments . . xiii
Introduction . . 1
1 Behind the Curve: Institutional Resistance to Human Rights . . 23
2 Political and Legal Constraints: The Board of Executive Directors and the Articles of Agreement . . 51
3 Bureaucratic Obstacles: A Clash of Expertise Within the Organizational Culture . . 75
4 Reconciling Interpretive Gaps: Economizing Human Rights . . 107
5 Conclusion . . 133
Notes . . 157
Bibliography . . 169
Index . . 183
Philip Selznick : ideals in the world
Verlag
Acknowledgments . . ix
Introduction . . 1
Part I: First Thoughts
1. The "Tragedy of Organization" . . 15
2. The Ideal and the Real . . 29
Part II: Organizations and Institutions
3. Organizations and Ideals . . 45
4. Institutional Leadership . . 66
5. Pathos and Politics . . 92
Part III: Law
6. Jurisprudential Sociology . . 105
7. The Rule of Law: Expansion . . 129
8. The Rule of Law: Transformation . . 163
9. Values, Conflict, Development . . 197
Part IV: Social Philosophy
10. Morality and Modernity . . 213
11. Communitarian Liberalism . . 248
Conclusion: Missing What Matters . . 275
Notes . . 285
Index . . 321