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Durant l’été 2017, Fabian Göranson a fait le tour de l’Europe en compagnie de son ami Daniel Berg, désireux de comprendre, au plus près des populations, pourquoi tout un continent semble s’effondrer sous le double poids de la crise migratoire et du chômage grandissant, et pourquoi il se révèle impuissant face à la montée du racisme et de la xénophobie, portés par des mouvements fascisants. De Stockholm à Berlin, de Bruxelles à Nantes ou encore de Marseille à Gênes, le voyageur va à la rencontre d’artistes et d’activistes, de chercheurs et de journalistes, sans jamais oublier de s’immerger dans le flot vital qui parcourt le continent. À Belgrade, il découvre une singulière collection de bâtons témoins ; il a la gueule de bois à Budapest et fait une crise de panique à Rome ; à Varsovie, il se retrouve au milieu d’une manifestation violente… Étape après étape, à force d’observation, d’écoute et d’interrogations, Göranson dresse un portait sans fard d’un continent coincé entre un héritage historique lourd à porter et un avenir qui se resserre. Honnête et lucide, mais aussi poétique et ironique, Un rêve d’Europe ébranle nos idées reçues et nos certitudes. Il invite à une remise en question globale sur l’Europe, aujourd’hui plus que jamais nécessaire.
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A partir d'enquêtes de terrain réalisées aux frontières entre le Maroc et l'Espagne, la Grèce et la Turquie, la France et l'Italie ou encore la Grande-Bretagne, l'ouvrage étudie les pratiques de la police des migrants dont le rôle est de filtrer les identités en s'appuyant sur un ensemble de technologies.
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In this spirited and eloquent book, Laura Claridge maintains that the extraordinary power of the male Romantic imagination stems in large part from the paradox that Romantic poets grounded their desire in the vicissitudes of language, a medium guaranteed to thwart their yearnings. Focusing on both canonical and less familiar poetry of Wordsworth, Shelley, and Byron, Claridge draws on Lacanian theory to explore Romantic desire in relationship to the infant's radical yearning for an Eden before the advent of language. The Romantics, she asserts, attempt the impossible: to transcend the medium of words and reattain that original paradise of silence, but with their poetic voices intact.Claridge perceives textual desire as a discursive strategy for staving off consummation and death. She suggests the ways in which Wordsworth, Shelley, and Byron made use of the philosophically marginalized position of women to support their attempt to locate an "essential" subjectivity. In spite of the highly personal linguistic models that each poet developed, Claridge finds a pervasive similarity of psychological contours: in every case, the poet writes of a freedom outside of language, even as he insists on the enduring need to write yet again.Romantic Potency will be challenging reading for literary theorists, scholars and students of English Romanticism and of eighteenth-century literature, and others interested in psychoanalytic approaches to literature.
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The anthology with contributions by prominent authors explores the questions of what today can be home and to what extent Europe can and should be considered as a home. The anthology approaches the terms "home" and "Europe" from a variety of perspectives. In times of global crisis and political upheaval, the question of what Europe really means is a new urgency. In which Europe do we want to live, what does homeland mean in a society increasingly characterized by mobility and migration, which ideas of a common Europe can be combined with the individual idea of homeland? In their contributions, authors describe what is home to them and how they position themselves in a Europe of change.
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"This volume takes a broad perspective on the recent debate on the role of German ordoliberalism in shaping European economic policy before and after the Eurozone crisis. It shows how ordoliberal scholars explain the institutional origins of the Eurozone crisis, and presents creative policy proposals for the future of the European economy. Ordoliberal discourse both attempts to offer political solutions to socioeconomic challenges, and to find an ideal market order that fosters individual freedom and social cohesion. This tension between realpolitik and economic utopia reflects the wider debate on how far economic theory shapes, and is shaped by, historical contingencies and institutions. The volume will be of interest to policy makers as well as research scholars, and graduate students from various disciplines ranging from economics to political science, history and philosophy"--
Liberalism --- Europe --- Europe
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