In: Political geography: an interdisciplinary journal for all students of political studies with an interest in the geographical and spatial aspects, Band 111, S. 103094
Paul Robeson is one of the greatest yet most unknown figures of the 20th century. This article goes beyond the traditional bibliographic style of documenting this great life, toward constructing a usable philosophical framework from it. Utilizing Robeson's own works, and building on the small critical literature already in existence, I present his philosophical framework - comprised of anti-colonialism, socialism, and human rights. I present these dense, interconnected, and ever-expansive philosophical stances into a form of communication that can be easily understood, evaluated, taught, and compared. Understanding the philosophies, actions, and examples of his ideological framework will provide the appropriate contextual background for understanding (to play off the title of Robeson's 1958 book, Here I Stand) where Paul Robeson philosophically stood.
Cover -- Half Title -- Series -- Title -- Copyright -- Contents -- List of figures -- List of tables -- List of contributors -- Acknowledgments -- 1 Introduction: geographies of post-industrial memory, place, and heritage -- Part 1 Constructing post-industrial communities: place, memory, and practice -- 2 Notes from a shrinking market: 'anticipatory nostalgia' and place-making in the midst of change -- 3 Asansol: unfinished biography of a Raj Era railway town: explorations in heritage practice in post-India -- 4 Everyday resonances of industrial pasts: considering lived and affective memories in ex-coal mining landscapes in a South Wales valley -- Part 2 Post-industrial working landscapes -- 5 Unearthing community identities at the National Coal Mining Museums of Great Britain -- 6 Contamination as artifact: waste and the presence of absence at the Trout Lake concentrator, Coleraine, Minnesota -- 7 Geocreativity: place rooted social engagement in industrial ruins - the case of Konvent, Spain -- 8 Dramatising deindustrialisation: experiential authority, temporality and embodiment in a play about nuclear decommissioning -- Part 3 De-romanticizing industrial heritage -- 9 Agrarian ruins of the Khmer Rouge: the post-industrial landscapes of a rural economy -- 10 The cultural necrotechnologies of capital and the production of (post) industrial capital punishment -- 11 Industrial heritage in an era of climate catastrophe: contamination as heritage -- 12 Amgueddfa'r Gogledd: slate, slavery, and transatlantic labor in the National Slate Museum -- Index.
Zugriffsoptionen:
Die folgenden Links führen aus den jeweiligen lokalen Bibliotheken zum Volltext: