Perestroika and the Struggle for Politics
In: Perspectives on politics, Band 13, Heft 2, S. 425-426
ISSN: 1541-0986
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In: Perspectives on politics, Band 13, Heft 2, S. 425-426
ISSN: 1541-0986
In: Perspectives on politics, Band 9, Heft 3, S. 606-609
ISSN: 1541-0986
Jytte Klausen's The Cartoons That Shook the World offers an interesting political science account of the Danish cartoon controversy and of a broader set of tensions between multiculturalism, civility, and freedom of expression. The book is also a fascinating case study of how political science can itself become the object of dispute, due to Yale University Press' decision to publish the book without any reproductions of the controversial cartoons.We have thus asked a range of political scientists to comment on the Danish cartoon imbroglio, the book's analysis of it, and the controversy over the book itself.—Jeffrey C. Isaac, Editor
In: Constellations: an international journal of critical and democratic theory, Band 18, Heft 2, S. 262-263
ISSN: 1467-8675
In: Constellations: an international journal of critical and democratic theory, Band 18, Heft 3, S. 389-402
ISSN: 1467-8675
In: Constellations: an international journal of critical and democratic theory, Band 18, Heft 2, S. 262-263
ISSN: 1351-0487
In: Constellations, Band 18, Heft 3, S. 389-403
In: Constellations, Band 18, Heft 2, S. 262-264
In: Perspectives on politics: a political science public sphere, Band 9, Heft 3, S. 606-610
ISSN: 1537-5927
In: Political studies: the journal of the Political Studies Association of the United Kingdom, Band 58, Heft 2, S. 340-353
ISSN: 1467-9248
While physicists have advanced theories that directly challenged unidimensional theories of history, the social sciences have held on to older, linear conceptions of historical time, but all this should change. Politics entails the making and remaking of the past, the making and remaking of the future, the inheritance of imagined futures, the recognition of the cyclic and the repetitive, reversals of linear causality, and other strategies and effects at odds with dominant historical conventions. If we are to study politics then we must attend to the broader, less disciplined, relation of politics to history, which is the purpose of the current article.
In: Democracy, Religious Pluralism and the Liberal Dilemma of Accommodation; Studies in Global Justice, S. 65-75
In: Political studies, Band 58, Heft 2, S. 340-354
ISSN: 0032-3217
In: Journal of Palestine studies, Band 36, Heft 2, S. 89-90
ISSN: 1533-8614
In: Journal of Palestine studies: a quarterly on Palestinian affairs and the Arab-Israeli conflict, Band 36, Heft 2, S. 89
ISSN: 0377-919X, 0047-2654
In: Perspectives on politics, Band 4, Heft 4
ISSN: 1541-0986
In: The Good Society: a PEGS journal, Band 15, Heft 1, S. 26-30
ISSN: 1538-9731