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In: In common
Commons as systems -- Common goods -- Systems -- Elements -- From Elinor Ostrom to Karl Marx -- Commons governance -- The money nexus and the commons formula -- Commoning: the source of grassroots power -- Mobilising social labour for commoning -- The production of autonomy, boundaries and sense -- Social change -- Boundary commoning -- Commons and capital/state -- Towards postcapitalism.
In: Égypte, monde arabe
In: 3e série 12
In: Blackwell companions to the ancient world
Cover -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Maps -- Illustrations and Tables -- Abbreviations -- Notes on Contributors -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction: Greeks across the Ancient World -- Notes -- References -- Part I Approaches, Ancient and Modern -- Chapter 1 Mobility in the Ancient Greek World: Diversity of Causes, Variety of Vocabularies1 -- Categories of Mobility -- Mass Mobility -- Forced Migrations of Populations -- Personal Mobility -- Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- Chapter 2 English-Speaking Traditions and the Study of the Ancient Greeks outside their Homelands -- Motherlands, Colonies, and the Marginalization of Greeks on the Margins -- Apoikiai, Emporia, and the Polis -- Greeks and Non-Greeks -- Conclusion -- Note -- References -- Chapter 3 French-Speaking Traditions and the Study of Ancient Greeks outside their Homelands1 -- The Century When it all Began -- Victor and Jean Bérard, from the Sea to the Earth -- Ceramics and Commerce -- Southern France: The Birth of a Field Laboratory -- Roland Martin and Urban Spaces -- Between Apoikiai and Emporia -- Territories -- A History of Style -- Conclusion -- Note -- References -- Chapter 4 German-speaking Traditions (including the Habsburg Empire) and the Study of the Ancient Greeks outside their Homelands -- Changing Perspectives on "Colonization" -- The "Greek" People/Race/State(s)/Nation(s) -- Overpopulation versus Trade -- Texts and Pots -- A Postcolonial Epilogue -- Notes -- References -- Chapter 5 Italian-Speaking Traditions and the Study of the Ancient Greeks outside their Homelands -- Pre-unification Italy: Monarchies and Invasions -- Nationalism 1861-1945: The Rise and Fall of Ancient Rome -- The Postwar Internationalism: Greeks as Olive Branch? -- Conclusions -- References.
"From the moment we are born and through every day of our lives, each of us is traveling on a mysterious, relentless, passionate, and sometimes perplexing journey in search of the experience of Love. Love, however, isn't simply an emotion, a behavior, or even the bond you feel with another person--it's a supercharged, light-drenched, limitless vibrational field of infinite divine energy that is our essential nature.The true search for love, then, must inevitably direct us within, where we discover that the love we've been seeking in countless ways has been inside of us all along. The Choice for Loveis the inspiring and revelatory new book fromNew York Timesbest-selling author and renowned transformational teacherBarbara De Angelis, Ph.D.Known for helping millions of people make profound shifts in their relationship with themselves, others, and spirit,Dr. De Angelishas written an eloquent, illuminating, and deeply compassionate guide for transforming your relationship to love and bringing more of it into all aspects of your life. She offers you invaluable wisdom and practical tools for healing, opening, and expanding your emotionalandspiritual heart, and teaches you how to use love as the highest spiritual practice. What is thechoice for love?It is a revolutionary shift in your relationship with the energy of love itself. It invites you into a new, enlightened experience of love as a vibrational state of being.It isn't the choice for new thoughts about love, new attitudes about love, or a new philosophy about love. It's the choice to enter into the experience of your own unlimited love, and open to the unfathomable treasures that your heart holds. When we think that love originates from the outside, we mistakenly believe that we need to wait until something happens to give us an experience of love.Dr. De Angelis explains that love isn't something we can actually "get" from anyone else. No one can give you any love you don't already have. Love comes from the inside out. Now more than ever, in these unsettling times on our planet, we're each called to become a living remedy, to not fall in love, but torise in love.The Choice for Loveis a masterful and sacred pilgrimage of words whose enlivened wisdom will move you, awaken you, and liberate you to embrace, embody, and delight in more love than you ever imagined was possible"--
In: Sintesi e proposte 70
In: TiPubblica
In: Reti Medievali E-Book
A long eighteenth century - on the footsteps of the erudite tradition and of the Muratori's publishing method - and a very short nineteenth century, enclosed between the first post-unification decade and the threshold of the Great War, when the advent of a new and professionalised generation of scholars (Bonelli, Vittani, Torelli, Manaresi) would also impose a radical change in Lombardy in the field of palaeographic-diplomatic research. These are the coordinates (of a conceptual rather than a chronological nature) of the book, which for the first time analyses a significant period of medieval history under a historiographic perspective and retraces the careers, projects, the initiatives of the individuals and institutions that have animated that epoch. The editors and the editions of medieval documents coming from Lombardy are at the heart of the publication, although wider perspectives and many protagonists whose fame goes beyond the borders of regional culture revolve around them. The process of defining a modern diplomatic philology in the editions of Lombard sources is followed, marking its salient stages and turning points. However, in the background stand out the broader (as well as stronger and ideologically connoted) themes of Medieval studies before and after the Unification of Italy. These are the issue of the Longobards, the myth of the Commune civilisation in the Risorgimento culture, the identity of the Visconti-Sforza state. Analysing the editors and the editions of medieval documents in Lombardy between the nineteenth and twentieth century means shedding a significant light on the very dynamics of the organisation of regional historical research. Such analysis moves within a lively debate offering scientific and cultural implications between the hegemonic Milanese centre and the sometimes riotous municipalisms of the many suburbs.
In: Greeks overseas
"Ancient Greek migrants in Sicily produced societies and economies that both paralleled and differed from their homeland. Since the nineteenth century explanations for these similarities and differences have been heavily debated, with attention focusing in particular on the roles played on this frontier by locals and immigrants in Greek Sicily's remarkable cultural efflorescence. Polarized positions have resulted. On one side, scholars have viewed the ancient Greeks as one of a long line of incomers whom Sicily and its inhabitants shape. On the other side, the ancient Greeks have been viewed in a hierarchical manner with the Sicilian Greeks acting as the source of innovation and achievement in shaping their Sicily, while at the same being lesser to homeland Greece, the center of their world. Neither of these two extremes is completely satisfactory. What is lacking in this debate is a basic work on social and economic history that gathers the historical and archaeological evidence and deploys it to test the various historical models proposed over the past two hundred years. This book represents the first ever such systematic and comprehensive endeavor. It adopts a broadly based interdisciplinary approach that combines classical and prehistoric studies, texts, and material culture, and a variety of methods and theories to put the history of Greek Sicily on a completely new footing. While Sicily and Greece had conjoined histories right from the start, their relationship was not one of center and periphery or "colonial" in any sense, but of an interdependent and mutually enriching diaspora. At the same time, local conditions and peoples, including Phoenician migrants, also shaped the evolution of Sicilian Greek societies and economies. This book reveals and explains the similarities and differences with developments in Greece and brings greater clarity to the parts played by locals and immigrants in ancient Sicily's impressive achievements"--