textabstract“Don’t think of them as terrorist states. Think of them as terrorist markets.” Thus reads a cartoon published in The New Yorker in May 2003.1 The picture depicts a boardroom or seminar room. Seven people have gathered around a shiny conference table and brought notebooks, coffee, soft drinks, a cellular phone, and a laptop computer. Their attire is formal and office-like. The men are wearing jackets and ties, the women prim jerseys or dresses, and all have conventional haircuts. Almost all are donned with glasses. The room exudes power: its windows reach from floor to ceiling, there is art on the wall, the table is ostensibly big, the swivel chairs seem comfortable, and there is ample space. The person chairing the meeting is si...
Lakoff and Johnson (1980) claim that metaphors play a crucial role in systematically structuring con...
This paper examines a series of emerging utopian discourses that call for the creation of autonomous...
America’s ‘‘war on terror’ ’ and Al Qaeda’s ‘‘jihad’ ’ reflect mirror strategies of imperial politic...
Has the world changed since September 11, 2001? It has for at least one band of subversive operative...
This paper analyzes The New Yorker\u27s July 2008 cover, “The Politics of Fear”, as well as reader r...
Pentagon plan to create an on-line ‘market for terror’. Anonymous buyers and sellers would exchange ...
Terrorism and neoliberalism are connected in multiple, complex, and often camouflaged ways. This boo...
The attacks against Charlie Hebdo in Paris at the beginning of the year 2015 urged many cartoonists ...
The article does not only present the results of a study of the process of metaphorization in the fi...
Since the 2007/2008 global financial crisis, deregulated financial markets and debt-dependent growth...
In the contemporary United States apocalypse, dystopia, and catastrophe are commonplace. Indeed, bo...
It’s the Political Economy, Stupid brings together internationally acclaimed artists and thinkers, i...
The core claim of this paper is that mainstream political cartoons uniquely combine three features o...
The beginning of the new millennium (the year 2000 to 2010) has witnessed a dramatic increase in the...
We know from research in cognitive science that all thought is physical, with mostly unconscious men...
Lakoff and Johnson (1980) claim that metaphors play a crucial role in systematically structuring con...
This paper examines a series of emerging utopian discourses that call for the creation of autonomous...
America’s ‘‘war on terror’ ’ and Al Qaeda’s ‘‘jihad’ ’ reflect mirror strategies of imperial politic...
Has the world changed since September 11, 2001? It has for at least one band of subversive operative...
This paper analyzes The New Yorker\u27s July 2008 cover, “The Politics of Fear”, as well as reader r...
Pentagon plan to create an on-line ‘market for terror’. Anonymous buyers and sellers would exchange ...
Terrorism and neoliberalism are connected in multiple, complex, and often camouflaged ways. This boo...
The attacks against Charlie Hebdo in Paris at the beginning of the year 2015 urged many cartoonists ...
The article does not only present the results of a study of the process of metaphorization in the fi...
Since the 2007/2008 global financial crisis, deregulated financial markets and debt-dependent growth...
In the contemporary United States apocalypse, dystopia, and catastrophe are commonplace. Indeed, bo...
It’s the Political Economy, Stupid brings together internationally acclaimed artists and thinkers, i...
The core claim of this paper is that mainstream political cartoons uniquely combine three features o...
The beginning of the new millennium (the year 2000 to 2010) has witnessed a dramatic increase in the...
We know from research in cognitive science that all thought is physical, with mostly unconscious men...
Lakoff and Johnson (1980) claim that metaphors play a crucial role in systematically structuring con...
This paper examines a series of emerging utopian discourses that call for the creation of autonomous...
America’s ‘‘war on terror’ ’ and Al Qaeda’s ‘‘jihad’ ’ reflect mirror strategies of imperial politic...