Tag: Return

A Return to Servitude Maya Migration and the Tourist Trade in Cancún


Free Download A Return to Servitude: Maya Migration and the Tourist Trade in Cancún By M. Bianet Castellanos
2010 | 296 Pages | ISBN: 0816656150 | PDF | 3 MB
As a free trade zone and Latin America’s most popular destination, Cancún, Mexico, is more than just a tourist town. It is not only actively involved in the production of transnational capital but also forms an integral part of the state’s modernization plan for rural, indigenous communities. Indeed, Maya migrants make up over a third of the city’s population.A Return to Servitude is an ethnography of Maya migration within Mexico that analyzes the foundational role indigenous peoples play in the development of the modern nation-state. Focusing on tourism in the Yucatán Peninsula, M. Bianet Castellanos examines how Cancún came to be equated with modernity, how this city has shaped the political economy of the peninsula, and how indigenous communities engage with this vision of contemporary life. More broadly, she demonstrates how indigenous communities experience, resist, and accommodate themselves to transnational capitalism.Tourism and the social stratification that results from migration have created conflict among the Maya. At the same time, this work asserts, it is through engagement with modernity and its resources that they are able to maintain their sense of indigeneity and community.

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Pilates’ Return to Life Through Contrology


Free Download Pilates’ Return to Life Through Contrology by Judd Robbins
English | July 3rd, 2012 | ISBN: 1928564909 | 112 pages | True EPUB | 3.18 MB
First published in 1945, Pilates’ Return to Life Through Contrology contains the authorized, legal, edited, and original Library of Congress version of Joseph H. Pilates and William J. Miller first complete fitness writings.

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The Return of the Polis The Use and Meanings of the Word Polis in Archaic and Classical Sources (Historia – Einzelschriften)


Free Download The Return of the Polis: The Use and Meanings of the Word Polis in Archaic and Classical Sources (Historia – Einzelschriften) by Mogens Herman Hansen
English | December 31, 2007 | ISBN: 3515090541 | 276 pages | PDF | 2.00 Mb
Polis, in plural poleis, is the word the ancient Greeks used to describe their principal type of state and community and the most common of all nouns in ancient Greek. In Archaic and Classical sources there are over 11,000 attestations of the word, and they show that it was used in two different senses: (1) town (sometimes including the hinterland) and (2) state (sometimes including the territory). Often it carries both senses simultaneously and denotes both the state and its urban centre. The Copenhagen Polis Centre (1993-2005) conducted a number of investigations into the use and meanings of the term polis in all Archaic and Classical sources to find out what the Greeks thought a polis was. The present volume is a thoroughly revised and updated comprehensive publication of all these studies, to which four new studies have been added. They show that the two different meanings of the word polis are connected through their reference: with very few exceptions every polis town was the urban centre of a polis state, and conversely: virtually every polis state had an urban centre called a polis in the sense of town.

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Comet Madness How the 1910 Return of Halley’s Comet (Almost) Destroyed Civilization [Audiobook]


Free Download Comet Madness: How the 1910 Return of Halley’s Comet (Almost) Destroyed Civilization (Audiobook)
English | ASIN: B0C5K3B48D | 2023 | 10 hours and 00 minutes | M4B@64 kbps | 289 MB
Author: Richard J. Goodrich
Narrator: Peter Lerman

Since the dawn of civilization, humans had believed comets were evil portents. In 1705, Edmond Halley liberated humanity from these primordial superstitions, proving that Newtonian mechanics rather than the will of the gods brought comets into our celestial neighborhood. Despite this scientific advance, when Halley’s Comet returned in 1910, newspapers gleefully provoked a global hysteria that unfolded with tragic consequences. In Comet Madness, author and historian Richard J. Goodrich examines the 1910 appearance of Halley’s Comet and the ensuing frenzy sparked by media manipulation, bogus science, and outright deception.

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