The paper explores the idea of settlement in each of its three major senses: as a place of human habitation; as a fixed and stable order of habitation; and as a political consensus reconciling fractious groups. Arguing that traditional accounts of settlement depend, with a kind of pastoral nostalgia, upon a view of abstraction and social complexity as in themselves harmful, it follows through the implications of the concept for ways of dealing with the stranger, and it uses a drawing by the nineteenth-century indigenous Australian artist Tommy McRae, done about 1890 and entitled Corroboree, or William Buckley and dancers from the Wathaurong people, to propose a counterfactual model through which a settlement with the stranger might be...
A review of Patrick Anderson, So Much Wasted: Hunger, Performance, and the Morbidity of ...
This paper focuses on the urban agglomeration that has gone growing up along the centuries on the we...
A review of Owen Jones, Chavs: The Demonization of the Working Class (Verso, 2012), Zygmunt Bauman, ...
One question that historical phonology should reasonably seek to answer is: are there impossible cha...
Cheryll Glotfelty's essay collection The Ecocriticism Reader: Landmarks in Literary Ecology was publ...
Emplacement and displacement can be presented as experiences that lie in direct opposition to each o...
The critical review of modern architectu re's city arisen at si...
This essay argues that Margaret Atwood’s Oryx and Crake participates in a vibrant debate among schol...
Daring predictions of the proximate future can establish shared discursive frameworks, mobilize capi...
This article explores the nature of temporality, entropy and negentropy, drawing contemporary fictio...
II Workshop on Identity, Memory and Experience. Getafe (Spain), March 1-4th, 2011In Shame and Neces...
There are thousands of forgotten archaeological archives hidden away in repositories all over the wo...
A review of Luc Boltanski, On Critique: A Sociology of Emancipation (Polity Press, Cambridge, 2011)
For approximately two thousand years, human thinkers have been attempting to define a behaviour, re...
Among the many retro-fittings achieved by Mad Men—Matthew Weinerʼs still unfurling television series...
A review of Patrick Anderson, So Much Wasted: Hunger, Performance, and the Morbidity of ...
This paper focuses on the urban agglomeration that has gone growing up along the centuries on the we...
A review of Owen Jones, Chavs: The Demonization of the Working Class (Verso, 2012), Zygmunt Bauman, ...
One question that historical phonology should reasonably seek to answer is: are there impossible cha...
Cheryll Glotfelty's essay collection The Ecocriticism Reader: Landmarks in Literary Ecology was publ...
Emplacement and displacement can be presented as experiences that lie in direct opposition to each o...
The critical review of modern architectu re's city arisen at si...
This essay argues that Margaret Atwood’s Oryx and Crake participates in a vibrant debate among schol...
Daring predictions of the proximate future can establish shared discursive frameworks, mobilize capi...
This article explores the nature of temporality, entropy and negentropy, drawing contemporary fictio...
II Workshop on Identity, Memory and Experience. Getafe (Spain), March 1-4th, 2011In Shame and Neces...
There are thousands of forgotten archaeological archives hidden away in repositories all over the wo...
A review of Luc Boltanski, On Critique: A Sociology of Emancipation (Polity Press, Cambridge, 2011)
For approximately two thousand years, human thinkers have been attempting to define a behaviour, re...
Among the many retro-fittings achieved by Mad Men—Matthew Weinerʼs still unfurling television series...
A review of Patrick Anderson, So Much Wasted: Hunger, Performance, and the Morbidity of ...
This paper focuses on the urban agglomeration that has gone growing up along the centuries on the we...
A review of Owen Jones, Chavs: The Demonization of the Working Class (Verso, 2012), Zygmunt Bauman, ...