Top papers from your news feed from the last week | De flor do Lácio a língua global: uma análise da política linguística para a difusão do português no mundo globalizado by Diego Barbosa da Silva | | Download Bookmark | | School governance at a time of rapid de-/re-regulation by Andrew Wilkins | | Download Bookmark | | The Muslim Question by Hatem Bazian "Like the prisoner, questions about Muslims are not intended for the subject to arrive at a self-realization or self-discovery. On the contrary, the structure is directed at silencing and composing a constantly negated and deficient Muslim other that must admit inferiority. In other words, the Muslim subject is in constant need of a 12-step civilizational rehab intervention program, with an electric "shock and awe" therapy introduced to get them back on track every now and then." "The Muslim question" http://sabahdai.ly/88zApz | | Download Bookmark | | Call for Papers for a Multi- and Inter-disciplinary International Conference on 'From the Thirty Years' Crisis to Multi-polarity: The Evolution of the Geopolitical Economy of the 21st Century World' by Radhika Desai Call for Papers for a Multi- and Inter-disciplinary International Conference on 'From the Thirty Years' Crisis to Multi-polarity: The Evolution of the Geopolitical Economy of the 21st Century World' Abstracts should be 300 to 400 words. They should be single spaced and use 12 point Times New Roman font. They should include the author or authors' full name, affiliation, a brief biography, and e-mail address. We ask they be sent by May 15, 2015 to contact@gergconference.ca at the University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Canada 25-27 September 2015 | | Download Bookmark | | Steam its generation and use : Edition 41 by Erlet Shaqe The founders of our company, George Babcock and Stephen Wilcox, invented the safety water tube boiler. This invention resulted in the commercialization of large-scale utility generating stations. Rapid increases in generation of safe, dependable and economic electricity literally fueled the Industrial Revolution and dramatically increased the standard of living in the United States and industrialized economies worldwide throughout the twentieth century. Advancements in technology to improve efficiency and reduce environmental emissions have continued for nearly 140 years, creating a... | | Download Bookmark | | Fighting A Resurgent Hyper-Positivism In Education is Music to My Ears by Hakim Mohandas Amani Williams In this article, I argue that one of the gifts of the Age of Enlightenment, the ability to measure, to experiment, to predict—turned rancid by hyper-positivism—is re-asserting itself globally in the field of education (including music education). I see a neoliberal, neocolonial connection—in terms of the ideologies that fuel them—between some of the homogenizing, epistemologically/culturally imperialist aspects of globalization and this resurgent hyper-positivism that has been accompanied by a corporatization of education. I posit that critical education, including critical music education,... | | Download Bookmark | | INEQUALITY AS MERITOCRACY: The use of the metaphor of diversity and the value of inequality in Singapore's meritocratic education system by Richard Fitzgerald and Nadira Talib This paper examines the way the metaphor of diversity provides a moral basis for inequality in Singapore's meritocratic education system. Based upon a collection of policy texts from 2002 to 2012, our analysis illustrates that the metaphor of diversity in policy texts provides ways for systemic discrimination within the education system and that this inequality is given legitimacy as necessary through various moral discourses. The paper employs a critical discourse analysis that draws upon the relationship between language analysis, the philosophical study of valuation, and political... | | Download Bookmark | | Vygotsky's View of the Dialectical Relationship Between Thinking and Speech by Robert Lake This is a chapter from Vygotsky on Education Primer, published in 2012 by Peter Lang Publishers, New York, NY, USA, By Robert Lake. (CHAPTER THREE Pgs. 71-‐‑114). | | Download Bookmark | | The Aesthetic of Revolution, Chapter Four (Excerpt): Sectarianism and the New Woman Question in Naguib Mahfouz's Post-Revolutionary Film and Literature by Nathaniel Greenberg The socio-emotive capacity of a single woman's story in generating and relaying sectarian tension emerged, in the late 1950s and 60s, as a central narrative device among Egyptian writers and filmmakers. For Naguib Mahfouz, women became the counterpoint—sine qua non—to the fraternal order of the futūwa and the unspoken code of conduct he associated with the world of the ḥāra. Above all, the fate of Mahfouz's post-revolutionary heroines was integral to the aesthetic of a broader philosophical line of inquiry, namely: the meaning of individualism in the context of a so-called free society. | | Download Bookmark | | Corine Schleif: The Many Wives of Adam Kraft. Early Modern Workshop Wives in Legal Documents, Art-historical Scholarship, and Historical Fiction by Corine Schleif | | Download Bookmark | |
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