French on Shifting Ground

French on Shifting Ground
Author: Nathalie Dajko
Publsiher: Univ. Press of Mississippi
Total Pages: 196
Release: 2020-11-24
Genre: History
ISBN: 9781496830968

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In French on Shifting Ground: Cultural and Coastal Erosion in South Louisiana, Nathalie Dajko introduces readers to the lower Lafourche Basin, Louisiana, where the land, a language, and a way of life are at risk due to climate change, environmental disaster, and coastal erosion. Louisiana French is endangered all around the state, but in the lower Lafourche Basin the shift to English is accompanied by the equally rapid disappearance of the land on which its speakers live. French on Shifting Ground allows both scholars and the general public to get an overview of how rich and diverse the French language in Louisiana is, and serves as a key reminder that Louisiana serves as a prime repository for Native and heritage languages, ranking among the strongest preservation regions in the southern and eastern US. Nathalie Dajko outlines the development of French in the region, highlighting the features that make it unique in the world and including the first published comparison of the way it is spoken by the local American Indian and Cajun populations. She then weaves together evidence from multiple lines of linguistic research, years of extensive participant observation, and personal narratives from the residents themselves to illustrate the ways in which language—in this case French—is as fundamental to the creation of place as is the physical landscape. It is a story at once scholarly and personal: the loss of the land and the concomitant loss of the language have implications for the academic community as well as for the people whose cultures—and identities—are literally at stake.

Shifting Grounds

Shifting Grounds
Author: Paul Quigley
Publsiher: OUP USA
Total Pages: 339
Release: 2011-11-24
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780199735488

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The American Civil War brought with it a crisis of nationalism. This text reinterprets southern conceptions of allegiance, identity, and citizenship within the contexts of antebellum American national identity and the transatlantic 'Age of Nationalism.'

Shifting Ground

Shifting Ground
Author: Bonnie Costello
Publsiher: Harvard University Press
Total Pages: 252
Release: 2003-03-30
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 0674008944

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Just as the look of the American landscape has changed since the 19th century, so has our idea of landscape, with a contemplation of wild nature giving way to an understanding of Nature as a human construction. Here Bonnie Costello reads six 20th-century American poets who have reflected and shaped this transformation and in the process renovated landscape by drawing new images from the natural world and creating new forms for imagining the earth and our relation to it. Showing how these poets' landscapes respond to the sense of constant change, and to the disruption and acceleration of life characteristic of modern experience, Costello's work reveals the special role of poetry in teaching us to dwell on shifting ground.

French Food

French Food
Author: Lawrence R. Schehr,Allen S. Weiss
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 269
Release: 2013-05-13
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9781135347048

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More than a book about food alone, French Food uses diet as a window into issues of nationality, literature, and culture in France and abroad. Outstanding contributors from cultural studies, literary criticism, performance studies, and the emerging field of food studies explore a wide range of food matters.

Shifting Grounds

Shifting Grounds
Author: Burak Kadercan
Publsiher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 321
Release: 2023
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 9780197686690

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"Shifting Grounds brings together the existing social constructivist research in International Relations (IR) and political geography, and examines the interactive relationship between territory and war from conceptual, theoretical, and historical perspectives. The central premise is the following: territory is what states and societies make of it. Put differently, states and societies have adhered to different forms of territoriality across time and space, and territory as well as territorial control meant different things in different time periods and regions. Shifting Grounds makes two claims. First, how state elites conceive territory within and beyond their domains affect their military objectives as well as methods and strategies for waging war. Second, adherence to different forms of territoriality lead to different modes and patterns of war, and wars themselves may affect how state elites and societies conceive territories. The impacts of different territorial ideas and practices on war are illustrated through a wide variety of cases including but not limited to Revolutionary France, the Ottoman Empire, British colonial expansion in South Asia, and ISIS. The transformative roles that wars can play in shaping the dominant territorial ideas and geopolitical assumptions, in turn, are examined in the context of "systemic" wars, with an emphasis on the diverging impacts of such wars on Western and non-Western geographies. Shifting Grounds sheds light on the shifting and shifty nature of the relationship between territorial ideas and armed conflict not only in the context of the distant the past, but also in present-day global politics"--

Celebrating 1895

Celebrating 1895
Author: John Fullerton
Publsiher: Indiana University Press
Total Pages: 310
Release: 1998
Genre: History
ISBN: 1864620153

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Includes 27 of the finest papers presented at The Centenary of Cinema conference in June 1995

The Seventh Member State

The Seventh Member State
Author: Megan Brown
Publsiher: Harvard University Press
Total Pages: 369
Release: 2022-04-19
Genre: BUSINESS & ECONOMICS
ISBN: 9780674251144

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For nearly two decades, including after its independence, Algeria was named as a part of the European Economic Community. Megan Brown unearths this forgotten history, showing that early visions of European unity were not limited to the "natural" geographic boundaries on which many today insist.

Exotic Subversions in Nineteenth century French Fiction

Exotic Subversions in Nineteenth century French Fiction
Author: Jennifer Yee
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 136
Release: 2017-07-05
Genre: Foreign Language Study
ISBN: 9781351567466

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In the course of the nineteenth century France built up a colonial empire second only to Britain's. The literary tradition in which it dealt with its colonial 'Other' is frequently understood in terms of Edward Said's description of Orientalism as both a Western projection and a 'will to govern' over the Orient. There is, however, a body of works that eludes such a simple categorisation, offering glimpses of colonial resistance, of a critique of imperialist hegemony, or of a blurring of the boundaries between the Self and the Other. Some of the ways in which the imperialist enterprise is subverted in the metropolitan literature of this period are examined in this volume through detailed case studies of key works by Chateaubriand, Hugo, Flaubert and Segalen.