Showing 1 - 20 results of 46 for search 'No One Writes to the Colonel~', query time: 3.55s Refine Results
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    Rethinking the <i>Unio Mystica</i>: From McGinn to Ibn ʿArabī by Arjun Nair

    Published 2025-01-01
    “…By unpacking the primary terms involved in such an account—“God”, the “human being/self”, and “union”—from within the conceptual and theoretical horizons of that tradition, it problematizes the prevailing understanding of the <i>unio mystica</i> constructed from the writings of specialists in Christian mysticism. …”
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    Can’t Help Lovin’:David Chidester’s Pop Culture Colonialism by Kathryn Lofton

    Published 2018-07-01
    “… This article examines the likability ofhip-hop star Kanye West and The Voicechampion Jordan Smith to explain the colonial terms for our pop culture taste. The writings of David Chidester establish the tie between religion and colonialism as an axiomatic one; he also argues that popular culture is a rich site for formations of religion. …”
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    The Politics of Knowledge Production and Decolonisation: An Appraisal of Mahmood Mamdani’s Contributions by Sifiso Ndlovu

    Published 2024-05-01
    “…From the vantage point of the present, Mahmood Mamdani, is one of the scholars who have given an account of colonial rule, its main characteristics and consequences of colonial conquests in a telling manner that renders transparent how the universalising structure of political modernity produced the colonised as subjects of difference. …”
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    L’échelon manquant ? Les archives municipales en Algérie : histoire de fonds et possibilités historiographiques by Thierry Guillopé

    Published 2024-12-01
    “…More generally, it follows in the footsteps of a growing body of work that closely combines archival and historical considerations. On the one hand, thinking about archives and colonial or imperial dynamics together has been the subject of particularly stimulating research, both across the board and in more specific fields. …”
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    Le JATBA et ses ancêtres by Catherine Hoare

    Published 2012-06-01
    “…Botanist Auguste Chevalier, explorer in Africa in the early 20th century, founded the Revue de Botanique appliquée et d’Agriculture coloniale in 1921. Just after WW1, European countries launched policies to “call attention” to the colonies and sought new cost-effective products. …”
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    Performance Methodologies in Suicide Prevention Research: Queerness, Colonization, and Co-Performative Witnessing in Indigenous Community by Antonia R. G. Alvarez

    Published 2024-12-01
    “…This study sought to understand connections between suicide risk and experiences of colonization among Native Hawaiians and among LGBTQ Native Hawaiians. …”
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    Bagnards, « arabes » et porte-clefs en Guyane : Naissance et usages d’un rôle pénal et colonial (1869-1938) by Marine Coquet

    Published 2019-06-01
    “…Far from constituting a homogeneous category, the entity of the “convict” is fragmented according to administrative categorizations which organize social relations inside and outside camp walls. One such category, based on “race,” remains understudied. …”
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    Chief Isaac Oluwole Delano: A Legend and His Legacy by Toyin Falola

    Published 2021-12-01
    “…The head of a lazy person is not comparable to the nail of the strong; shame follows the pride of the lazy.2 Chief Isaac Delano discovered his intellectual mission during the colonial moment. The nature of the colonial state influenced his writings. …”
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    The Journey of Adoption and Adaptation: A Reading of The Tight Game, Sola Owonibi’s Translation of Akinwumi Isola’s Ó Le Kú by Gifty Akua Nyarko, Rita Ndonibi

    Published 2022-07-01
    “… Language has long defined the discourse of African literature. Africa’s colonial experience has left its enduring legacy of colonial languages which have been imbibed to the detriment of the usage of indigenous African languages. …”
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    « Tu n’as rien vu à Constantinople » : Thackeray au pays des harems by Laurent Bury

    Published 2006-12-01
    “…In Notes..., the reader also finds the usual Thackerayan phenomenon of split personality, the narrator and the illustrator being one and the same person. Pictures play a central part in the book, hinting at the impossible immediacy of travel writing, a genre in which the traveller’s testimony is inevitably filtered by all kinds of obstacles, as opposed to the Victorian ideal of a direct transcription of reality.…”
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    Alàgbà Adébáyọ̀ Fálétí as a Yorùbá Novelist by Lere Adeyemi

    Published 2021-12-01
    “…They all come under ìtàn (Ogunsina, 1992). One Yorùbá novelist that has distinguished himself in the effective use of ìtàn (story) in novel writing is Adébáyò ̣ Fálétí. …”
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