| Michelle Fine - 1992 - 292 páginas
...frontiers of difference. One confronts and accepts dispersal and fragmentation as part of the construction of a new world order that reveals more fully where we are, who we can become, an order that does not demand forgetting. "Our struggle is also a struggle of memory against... | |
| Janice L. Thompson, David Allen, Lorraine Rodrigues-Fisher - 1992 - 212 páginas
...of difference. One confronts and accepts dispersal and fragmentation as a part of the construction of a new world order that reveals more fully where we are, who we can become, an order that does not demand forgetting. Our struggle is also a struggle of memory against... | |
| Gillian Rose - 1993 - 214 páginas
...reterritorialization';17 'one confronts and accepts dispersal and fragmentation as part of the construction of a new world order that reveals more fully where we are, who we can become';18 'every outside is also an alongside; the distance between distance and proximity is sometimes... | |
| Doreen B. Massey - 1994 - 290 páginas
...where one discovers new ways of seeing reality, frontiers of difference. One confronts and accepts dispersal and fragmentation as part of the constructions...order that reveals more fully where we are, who we can become.. - 28 In other words, for the new complexities of the geography of social relations to produce... | |
| Jim Mac Laughlin - 1994 - 100 páginas
...frontiers of difference. One confronts and accepts dispersal and fragmentation as part of the construction of a new world order that reveals more fully where we are, who we can become.70 However the problem with these 'devaluations' of home and nation is not just that they naturalise... | |
| Alberto Sandoval-Sánchez - 1999 - 294 páginas
...frontiers of difference. One confronts and accepts dispersal and fragmentation as part of the construction of a new world order that reveals more fully where we are, who we can become, an order that does not demand forgetting. 23 In other words, for a new generation of Latinos/as,... | |
| Caroline Bettinger-López - 2000 - 324 páginas
...hooks' words echo loudly in our consideration of Alberts multiple positions; he "confronts and accepts dispersal and fragmentation as part of the constructions...order that reveals more fully where we are, who we can become" (hooks 1991: 149, cited in Massey 1992: 15). Dispersal and fragmentation are salient realities... | |
| Elizabeth Elkin Grammer - 2002 - 236 páginas
...words of bell hooks, "One confronts and accepts dispersal and fragmentation as part of the construction of a new world order that reveals more fully where we are, who we can become" (148). "When cultural definitions of the female life course are in dispute," as they were in... | |
| Sandra G. Harding - 2004 - 404 páginas
...frontiers of difference. One confronts and accepts dispersal and fragmentation as part of the construction of a new world order that reveals more fully where we are, who we can become, an order that does not demand forgetting. "Our struggle is also a struggle of memory against... | |
| Nathaniel Kohn - 2006 - 210 páginas
...frontiers of difference. One confronts and accepts dispersal and fragmentation as part of the construction of a new world order that reveals more fully where we are, who we can become, an order that does not demand forgetting. "Our struggle is also a struggle of memory against... | |
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