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Communism and society. --- Post-communism. --- Cynicism. --- Radicalism. --- Secularism. --- Communism and society --- Post-communism --- Cynicism --- Radicalism --- Secularism --- Socialism, Communism & Anarchism --- Political Science --- Law, Politics & Government --- Ethics --- Irreligion --- Utilitarianism --- Atheism --- Postsecularism --- Secularization (Theology) --- Extremism, Political --- Ideological extremism --- Political extremism --- Political science --- Pessimism --- Philosophy --- Psychology --- Skepticism --- Postcommunism --- World politics --- Communism --- Marxian sociology --- Society and communism --- Socialism and society --- Sociology
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This book investigates the role immigrant radicals have played in U.S. society from the mid-nineteenth century to the present. A valuable contribution to the history of the American Left, it makes use of a wealth of material from immigrants whose everyday speech and intellectual discourse were not in the English language. The social-history scholarship that informs the essays is innovative in method and purpose. Articles on Mexican-American, German, Jewish, Polish, Japanese, Chinese, Filipino, Italian, Ukrainian, Greek, Arab, and Haitian immigrants supply missing conceptual links between the immigration experience, the neighborhood and the workplace, and political, labor, and cultural institutions. Taken together, they offer a model study in transnational history, one the most important new fields of historical inquiry.
Radicalism --- Immigrants --- Socialism --- Right and left (Political science) --- Social Conditions --- Sociology & Social History --- Social Sciences --- Extremism, Political --- Ideological extremism --- Political extremism --- Political science --- Left (Political science) --- Left and right (Political science) --- Right (Political science) --- Political activity. --- Political activity --- United States
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C. Douglas Lummis writes as if he were talking with intelligent friends rather than articulating political theory. He reminds us that democracy literally means a political state in which the people (demos) have the power (kratia). The people referred to are not people of a certain class or gender or color. They are, in fact, the poorest and largest body of citizens. Democracy is and always has been the most radical proposal, and constitutes a critique of every sort of centralized power. Lummis distinguishes true democracy from the inequitable incarnations referred to in contemporary liberal usage. He weaves commentary on classic texts with personal anecdotes and reflections on current events. Writing from Japan and drawing on his own experience in the Philippines at the height of People's Power, Lummis brings a cross-cultural perspective to issues such as economic development and popular mobilization. He warns against the fallacy of associating free markets or the current world economic order with democracy and argues for transborder democratic action.Rejecting the ways in which technology imposes its own needs, Lummis asks what work would look like in a truly democratic society. He urges us to remember that democracy should mean a fundamental stance toward the world and toward one's fellow human beings. So understood, it offers an effective cure for what he terms "the social disease called political cynicism." Feisty and provocative, Radical Democracy is sure to inspire debate.
World politics. --- Radicalism. --- Democracy. --- Colonialism --- Global politics --- International politics --- Political history --- Political science --- World history --- Eastern question --- Geopolitics --- International organization --- International relations --- Self-government --- Equality --- Representative government and representation --- Republics --- Extremism, Political --- Ideological extremism --- Political extremism
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The story of the house that Mabel built, and the artists, dreamers, hippies, and freaks that followed.
Intellectuals --- Radicalism --- Subculture --- Subcultures --- Culture --- Ethnopsychology --- Social groups --- Counterculture --- Extremism, Political --- Ideological extremism --- Political extremism --- Political science --- Intelligentsia --- Persons --- Social classes --- Specialists --- Luhan, Mabel Dodge, --- Luhan, Mabel Ganson Dodge, --- Ganson, Mabel, --- Lujan, Mabel Dodge, --- Sterne, Mabel Ganson Evans Dodge, --- Dodge, Mabel, --- Homes and haunts --- Mabel Dodge Luhan House (Taos, N.M.) --- Taos (N.M.) --- Don Fernando de Taos (N.M.) --- Taos, N.M. --- Town of Taos (N.M.) --- Intellectual life.
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