Displaying: 61-80 of 88 documents

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61. Palimpsest: Volume > 9 > Issue: 1
Sami Schalk, Bodyminds Reimagined: (Dis)ability, Race, and Gender in Black Women’s Speculative Fiction
62. Palimpsest: Volume > 9 > Issue: 1
Omise’eke Natasha Tinsley, Ezili’s Mirrors: Imagining Black Queer Genders
63. Palimpsest: Volume > 9 > Issue: 1
Imaobong Umoren, Race Women Internationalists: Activist Intellectuals and Global Freedom Struggles
64. Palimpsest: Volume > 9 > Issue: 1
Frances E. W. Harper, Iola Leroy; Or, Shadows Uplifted
65. Palimpsest: Volume > 9 > Issue: 1
Anne Garland Mahler, From the Tricontinental to the Global South: Race, Radicalism, and Transnational Solidarity
66. Palimpsest: Volume > 9 > Issue: 1
Laila Amine, Postcolonial Paris: Fictions of Intimacy in the City of Light
67. Palimpsest: Volume > 9 > Issue: 1
Claire Eldridge, From Empire to Exile: History and Memory within the Pied-noir and Harki Communities, 1962–2012
68. Dialogue and Universalism: Volume > 15 > Issue: 7/8
Steven V. Hicks, Alan Rosenberg Nietzsche, Safranski, and the Art of Self-Configuration: A Critical Review
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In this critical review essay, we examine Rüdiger Safranski’s “philosophical biography” approach to interpreting Nietzsche. We analyze Safranski’s various attempts tobring the biographical facts of Nietzsche’s life to bear on the philosophical narration in order to shed light on the development of Nietzsche’s philosophical thinking. We argue that there are a number of limitations to Safranski’s “philosophical biography” approach to reading Nietzsche, such as Safranski’s tendency to focus almost exclusively on the earlier stages in the development of Nietzsche’s philosophical thinking. However, we also try to show that the one redeeming virtue of Safranski’s book is that it focuses on the intriguing, but often overlooked, concept of “self-configuration” or “selffashioning” (Selbstgestaltung), and it treats this concept as a unifying thread that runs throughout the maze of Nietzsche’s various multifarious writings. We argue, in conclusion, that Safranski successfully connects Nietzsche’s “highly personal philosophy” to the multifaceted “maneuvers of self-configuration” and to the overall Nietzschean project of “fashioning one’s own identity” in an otherwise meaningless world.
69. Dialogue and Universalism: Volume > 21 > Issue: 3
Czesław Głogowski From Logos to Trinity. Marian Hillar’s Attempt to Describe the Evolution of Religious Beliefs from Pythagoras to Tertullian
70. Dialogue and Universalism: Volume > 24 > Issue: 2
Peeter Müürsepp How Universities Can Help Create a Wiser World? The Urgent Need for an Academic Revolution (Societas: Essays in Political & Cultural Criticism) by Nicholas Maxwell
71. Dialogue and Universalism: Volume > 24 > Issue: 3
Grigori V. Paramonov Language and Philosophy of Education
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The modern Russian linguistics still accepts V. V. Ivanov’s idea that there cannot be a unified (“uniform”) language for everybody. This view has a direct bearing on problems of education, especially mass education. Peculiarities of language for our contem-poraries arise; the main features of their “language behavior” are determined not only by the education system. It is not necessarily school. The centuries-old language experi-ence of family life, cultural traditions outside families, and, in addition, the quality of “near” and “distant” socio-cultural interaction influence people. Therefore, trying to adjust the language consciousness of pupils to the adopted system of education, the “nominative” Etalon, teacher often gains the opposite effect—strengthening of the forms of language (active, ergative or multi-structured), which he is striving to prohibit. But a multi-systemic multicultural society does not require each person to be the bearer of all possible forms. This requires a philosophy of education based on the modern philosophy of language that supports unprofane training and education and provides safety for the person.
72. Palimpsest: Volume > 10 > Issue: 1
Akwugo Emejulu and Francesca Sobande London, To Exist Is to Resist: Black Feminism in Europe
73. Palimpsest: Volume > 10 > Issue: 1
Vincent Brown Boston, Tacky’s Revolt: The Story of an Atlantic Slave War
74. Palimpsest: Volume > 10 > Issue: 1
Robin Mitchell, Venus Noire: Black Women and Colonial Fantasies in Nineteenth-Century France
75. Palimpsest: Volume > 10 > Issue: 1
Jessica Marie Johnson, Wicked Flesh: Black Women, Intimacy, and Freedom in the Atlantic World
76. Palimpsest: Volume > 10 > Issue: 1
Mame-Fatou Niang Leiden Boston, Identités françaises: Banlieues, féminités et universalisme
77. Palimpsest: Volume > 10 > Issue: 1
Joshua Bennett, Cambridge, MA: Being Property Once Myself: Blackness and the End of Man
78. Palimpsest: Volume > 10 > Issue: 1
Nicole R. Fleetwood, Cambridge, MA, Marking Time: Art in the Age of Mass Incarceration
79. Palimpsest: Volume > 10 > Issue: 1
Hannah E. Britton Champaign-Urbana: Ending Gender-Based Violence: Justice and Community in South Africa
80. Palimpsest: Volume > 11 > Issue: 2
All Books Reviewed by the Palimpsest Editorial Collective