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"In an increasingly hectic world, walking simulators provide a chance for a meditative online experience. Wandering Games will be the first book to explore this genre"--
Computer games / online games: strategy guides --- Virtual reality --- Popular beliefs & controversial knowledge --- walking simulator --- performance --- indie --- pilgrimage --- colonialism --- death --- gender --- work --- late capitalism --- interdisciplinary --- Return of the Obra Dinn --- Eastshade --- Ritual of the Moon --- 80 Days --- Heaven's Vault --- Death Stranding --- The Last of Us Part --- The Last of Us Part II --- Walking simulator games. --- Video games. --- GAMES & ACTIVITIES / Video & Mobile --- COMPUTERS / Virtual & Augmented Reality --- SOCIAL SCIENCE / Popular Culture --- Computer games --- Electronic games --- Internet games --- Television games --- Videogames --- Games --- Video wandering games --- Walking --- Wandering games, Video --- Video games
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With an introduction on how to redefine our thinking about religion and theatrical drama, these nine essays on contemporary and classic plays rehabilitate the link between theatrical performance and dramatic stories for the study of religion. These new and distinctively interdisciplinary perspectives will be of interest to scholars working in the fields of religion, theology, theatre and performance studies, literary studies, and philosophy.
heaven --- hell --- purgatory --- Jesuits --- Salesians --- drama --- education --- Italy --- musical --- gender --- queer --- Butler --- Tracy --- embodiment --- theology --- anthropology --- John Paul II --- martyrdom --- early modern --- Jacobean --- masculinity --- virgin --- metatheatre --- limit experience --- religious dimensionality --- Wilder --- Sondheim --- Lapine --- Measure for Measure --- Cheek By Jowl --- performance --- the body --- the trinity --- Christology --- rhetoric --- repetition --- triadic logic --- semiotics --- American avant-garde theater --- Gertrude Stein --- metaphysical religion --- Syria --- witness --- theatrical drama --- Romeo and Juliet --- Frans van der Lugt --- comparative theology --- William Shakespeare --- Ibsen --- Doll’s House --- Nora --- Torvald --- Helmer --- Christianity --- Christ --- religion --- sacrifice --- idealism --- Calvin --- Balthasar --- improvisation --- time --- death --- theatrical hermeneutics --- n/a --- Doll's House
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The essays in this collection aim to waken contemporary discussions of ethos(and of rhetoric generally) from their Western, classical-Aristotelian slumbers.Western rhetoric was never univocal in its theory or practice of ethos: the essaysin this collection provide proof of this. The contributors aimed to shake rhetoricout of its Eurocentrism: the traditions of Africa, the Middle East, and Asia sustaintheir own models of ethos and lead us to reconsider rhetoric in its richvariety—what ethos was, is, and will become. This collection is groundbreakingin its attempt to outline the diversity of argument, trust, and authority beyonda singular, dominant perspective.This collection offers readers a choice of itineraries: thematic, geographic, andhistorical. Essays may be read individually or cumulatively, as exercises incomparative rhetoric. In taking a world perspective, Histories of Ethos willprove a seminal discussion. Its comparative approach will help readers appreciatethe commonalities and the distinctions in competing cultural-discursivepractices—in what brings us together and what drives us apart as communities.Additionally, it is the editors’ hope that, out of this historical, multiculturaldialogue, some new perspectives on ethos may come forward to broaden ourdiscussion and reach of understanding.
ethos --- selfhood --- identity --- authenticity --- authority --- persona --- positionality --- postmodernism --- haunt --- iatrology --- trust --- storytelling --- Archer --- Aristotle --- Bourdieu --- Corder --- Foucault --- Geertz --- Giddens --- Gusdorf --- Heidegger --- African American literature --- slave narratives --- Phillis Wheatley --- Martin Luther King --- Malcolm X --- W.E.B. Du Bois --- Booker T. Washington --- Oglala Lakota --- wound --- ecology --- ecological --- Wounded Knee --- American Indian --- cultural wound --- hip hop --- black aesthetics --- New York --- flow --- layering --- rupture --- productive consumption --- hype --- entrepreneurship --- politics --- counter-knowledge --- class --- social class --- working class --- habitus --- social capital --- GLBT/LGBTQ --- queer --- normativity --- homonormativity --- polemic --- futurity --- undecidability --- re/disorientation --- legitimacy --- rhetorical agency --- outness --- Islamic ethos --- nonwestern rhetorics --- Islamophobia --- The Qur’an --- Sunnah --- Ijtihad --- Islamic State --- Muslim community (Ummah) --- Caliphate --- disability --- invention --- rehabilitation --- accessibility --- inclusion --- intersectionality --- cross-disability identity --- actant --- cyborg --- COVID-19 --- deep ecology --- pandemic --- posthumanism --- skeptron --- technoculture --- Braidotti --- Haraway --- Latour --- African slave trade --- trauma --- visual rhetorics --- wolof language --- Dakar --- Door of No Return --- Gorée Island --- House of Slaves --- Senegal --- contemporary ethos --- Ghana --- dialogic --- heteroglossia --- postmodern discourses --- proverbs --- sexual identity --- sexual presentation --- conservative values --- tradition --- Chinese ethos --- rhetoric --- early Chinese rhetoric --- Heaven --- cultural heritage
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