توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب Rethinking Social Movements after '68: Selves and Solidarities in West Germany and Beyond
نام کتاب : Rethinking Social Movements after '68: Selves and Solidarities in West Germany and Beyond
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : تجدید نظر در جنبش های اجتماعی پس از سال '68: خود و همبستگی در آلمان غربی و فراتر از آن
سری : Protest, Culture & Society; 31
نویسندگان : Belinda Davis (editor), Friederike Brühöfener (editor), Stephen Milder (editor)
ناشر : Berghahn Books
سال نشر : 2022
تعداد صفحات : 356
ISBN (شابک) : 9781800735668
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 2 مگابایت
بعد از تکمیل فرایند پرداخت لینک دانلود کتاب ارائه خواهد شد. درصورت ثبت نام و ورود به حساب کاربری خود قادر خواهید بود لیست کتاب های خریداری شده را مشاهده فرمایید.
فهرست مطالب :
Contents\nAcknowledgments\nList of Abbreviations\nIntroduction. Social Movements after ’68: Histories, Selves, Solidarities\nPart I. Working with—and against—the Past\nChapter 1. Leaving the Borderlands … but for Where? 1968 and the New Registers of Political Feeling\nChapter 2. Conceptions of Democracy and West German New Social Movement Activism\nChapter 3. New Social Movements and the New Role of the Intellectual: From the “’68ers’” Critique (of the Intellectual) to (the Typus of ) the “Specific Intellectual”\nChapter 4. Fighting with Feelings: Experiences of Protest and Emotional Practices in the Autonomous West German Women’s Movement during the 1970s and 1980s\nPart II. “Start Where You Are”\nChapter 5. “Break Down the Violence in a Place Where It Is Vulnerable”: The Urban ’68 and Its Aftermath—Expert Critique, “Tenant Campaigns,” and Squatter Movements\nChapter 6. Running Over Trees in Germany: Social Movements and the US Army, 1975–85\nChapter 7. Radical Change Close to Home: Transforming the Self and Relations in West German Alternative Politics\nChapter 8. Changing the World for the Better: Women Activists’ Redefinitions of Identities, Relationships, and Society\nChapter 9. From Self-Organization to Self-Management: Paradigms of Social Movements in West Germany from ’68 to the Early 1980s\nPart III. “Learn to Live in Solidarity”\nChapter 10. The Gay Movement in 1970s West Germany: Liberation in Its Multidimensional Context\nChapter 11. Radical Protest or Shadow Diplomacy? The Decolonization of Zimbabwe and West German Maoism, 1960–80\nChapter 12. Supporting a Revolution: West German Nicaragua Solidarity and Its Transnational Connections with the Nicaraguan Sandinistas\nChapter 13. East German Environmental Activism and the West: Connections, Common Ground, and Difference across the Iron Curtain\nChapter 14. Activists Divided? Continental Imaginations in West Germany’s 1968 and Beyond\nConclusion. Democracy in the Streets, Social Change in the Countryside: Grassroots Struggles, Solidarity Work, and Political Power after ’68\nIndex