Vi bøger
Levering: 1 - 2 hverdage
Forlænget returret til d. 31. januar 2025

Bøger af Laura Fisher

Filter
Filter
Sorter efterSorter Populære
  • - How a 1980's post-punk band called The Flying Shards Stomped Around Washington D.C. and Barely Left a Mark
    af Laura Fisher
    153,95 kr.

    Two women fondly and hilariously recall their wild days in a 1980's post-punk band in Washington D.C. A fun read for anyone who enjoyed the punk scene, complete with descriptions of venues that were popular at the time. (Some of the song lyrics are also included, which contain some language that may not be suitable for young children or those with delicate sensibilities.)

  • - Hope and Disenchantment
    af Laura Fisher
    455,95 - 1.238,95 kr.

    The Aboriginal art movement flourished during a period in which the Australian public were awakened to the implications of the state's decision to confront the legacies of colonisation and bring Aboriginal culture into the heart of national public life. Rather than seeing this radical political and social transformation as mere context for Aboriginal art's emergence, this study argues that Aboriginal art has in fact mediated Australian society's negotiation of the changing status of Aboriginal culture over the last century. This argument is illustrated through the analysis of Aboriginal art's volatility as both a high art movement and a phenomenon of visual and commercial culture. This analysis reveals the agendas to which Aboriginal art has been anchored at the nexus of the redemptive project of the settler state, Indigenous movements for rights and recognition, and the aspirations of progressive civil society.At its heart this study is concerned with the broader social and cultural insights that can be gleaned from conducting a sustained inquiry into Aboriginal art's contested meanings. To achieve this it focuses upon the hopeful and disenchanted faces of the Aboriginal art phenomenon: the ideals of cultural revitalisation and empowerment that have converged upon the art, and the countervailing narratives of exploitation, degradation and futility. Both aspects are traced through a range of settings in which the tensions surrounding Aboriginal art's aesthetic, political and significance have been negotiated. It is in this dialectic that the vexed ethical questions underlying Australia's settler state condition can most clearly be identified, and we can begin to navigate the paradoxes and impasses underlying the redemptive national project of the post-assimilation era.

Gør som tusindvis af andre bogelskere

Tilmeld dig nyhedsbrevet og få gode tilbud og inspiration til din næste læsning.