Marcus Bullock
Showing 1-3 of 3 items.
After Capitalism
Horizons of Finance, Culture, and Citizenship
Edited by Kennan Ferguson and Patrice Petro
Rutgers University Press
After Capitalism brings together leading scholars from across the academy to offer competing perspectives on capitalism’s past incarnations, present conditions, and possible futures. Analyzing global trends from real estate bubbles to debt relief protests, this book also closely examines economic conditions in locales as varied as Cuba, India, and Latvia. Collectively, these essays raise provocative questions about how we should imagine capitalism in the twenty-first century.
- Copyright year: 2016
Aftermaths
Exile, Migration, and Diaspora Reconsidered
Edited by Marcus Bullock and Peter Y. Paik
Rutgers University Press
Aftermaths is a collection of essays offering compelling new ideas on exile, migration, and diaspora that have emerged in the global age. The ten contributors—well-established scholars and promising new voices—work in different disciplines and draw from diverse backgrounds as they present rich case studies from around the world. In seeking fresh perspectives on the movement of people and ideas, the essays included here look to the power of the aesthetic experience, especially in literature and film, to unsettle existing theoretical paradigms and enable the rethinking of conventionalized approaches.
- Copyright year: 2008
Rethinking Global Security
Media, Popular Culture, and the "War on Terror"
Edited by Andrew Martin and Patrice Petro; By Wendy Kozol, Marcus Bullock, James Castonguay, Mary Layoun, Rebecca Decola, Patricia Mellencamp, Tony Grajeda, Mike Allen, Robert Ricigliano, Doug Davis, and Lisa Parks
Rutgers University Press
In Rethinking Global Security , Andrew Martin and Patrice Petro bring together ten path-breaking essays that explore the ways that our notions of fear, insecurity, and danger are fostered by intermediary sources such as television, radio, film, satellite imaging, and the Internet. The contributors, who represent a wide variety of disciplines, including communications, art history, media studies, women's studies, and literature, show how both fictional and fact-based threats to global security have helped to create and sustain a culture that is deeply distrustful-of images, stories, reports, and policy decisions. Topics range from the Patriot Act, to the censorship of media personalities such as Howard Stern, to the role that Buffy the Vampire Slayer and other television programming play as an interpretative frame for current events.
- Copyright year: 2006
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