Home About us Contact | |||
Political Alliances (political + alliance)
Selected AbstractsLady Russell, Elizabeth I, and Female Political Alliances through PerformanceENGLISH LITERARY RENAISSANCE, Issue 2 2009Elizabeth Zeman Kolkovich The entertainment at Bisham Abbey in 1592 offers a rare example of female authorship and performance in a sixteenth-century dramatic text. Lady Elizabeth (Cooke Hoby) Russell wrote and staged this entertainment for Elizabeth I during a royal progress, and her two teenaged daughters performed speaking roles. The Bisham performance challenges assumptions about women's limitations, endorses a militant Protestant foreign policy, and revises conventions of Elizabethan progress entertainments to claim the genre as an appropriate arena for aristocratic women's political negotiations. In successful auditions to be maids of honor, the young Russell women urge the Queen to surround herself with capable female servants who can better assist her in religious and gender battles than her flawed male advisors. As they propose themselves as loyal alternatives to self-serving male courtiers, these young performers adopt elements of the Queen's image, revealing that they claim authority to engage in court performance and promote political agendas from her example. (E.Z.K.) [source] Reconstructing Culture in Historical Explanation: Narratives as Cultural Structure and PracticeHISTORY AND THEORY, Issue 3 2000Anne Kane The problem of how to access and deploy the explanatory power of culture in historical accounts has long remained vexing. A recent approach, combining and transcending the "culture as structure"/"culture as practice" divide among social historians, puts explanatory focus on the recursivity of meaning, agency, and structure in historical transformation. This article argues that meaning construction is at the nexus of culture, social structure, and social action, and must be the explicit target of investigation into the cultural dimension of historical explanation. Through an empirical analysis of political alliance during the Irish Land War, 1879,1882, I demonstrate that historians can uncover meaning construction by analyzing the symbolic structures and practices of narrative discourse. [source] New slavery, old binaries: human trafficking and the borders of ,freedom'GLOBAL NETWORKS, Issue 2 2010JULIA O'CONNELL DAVIDSON Abstract This article explores dominant discourse on ,trafficking as modern slavery' in relation to the many legal and social fetters that have historically been and are today imposed upon individuals who are socially imagined as ,free'. It argues that discourse on ,trafficking as modern slavery' revitalizes the liberal understandings of freedom and restriction that have historically allowed vigorous moral condemnation of slavery to coexist with the continued imposition of extensive, forcible restrictions on individuals deemed to be ,free'. In place of efforts to build political alliances between different groups of migrants, as well as between migrants and non-migrants, who share a common interest in transforming existing social and political relations, ,trafficking as modern slavery' discourse inspires and legitimates efforts to divide a small number of ,deserving victims' from the masses that remain ,undeserving' of rights and freedoms. [source] In the Shadows of Gompers: Lucy Robins and the Politics of Amnesty, 1918,1922PEACE & CHANGE, Issue 1 2000Kathleen Kennedy This essay examines Lucy Robins's contributions to the amnesty movement. A protégé of Emma Goldman, Robins undertook her amnesty campaign at Goldman's behest. Frustrated with what she defined as the left's lack of "constructive" solutions, Robins shifted her political alliances and joined the American Federation of Labor. Robins's choice to pursue amnesty within the A.F. of L., the essay argues, sheds important light on the early history of the civil liberties movement and its relationship to labor politics. [source] |