Tag: Ruptures

Ruptures in the Everyday Views of Modern Germany from the Ground


Free Download Andrew Stuart Bergerson, "Ruptures in the Everyday: Views of Modern Germany from the Ground "
English | ISBN: 1785335324 | 2017 | 342 pages | PDF | 37 MB
During the twentieth century, Germans experienced a long series of major and often violent disruptions in their everyday lives. Such chronic instability and precipitous change made it difficult for them to make sense of their lives as coherent stories―and for scholars to reconstruct them in retrospect. Ruptures in the Everyday brings together an international team of twenty-six researchers from across German studies to craft such a narrative. This collectively authored work of integrative scholarship investigates Alltag through the lens of fragmentary anecdotes from everyday life in modern Germany. Across ten intellectually adventurous chapters, this book explores the self, society, families, objects, institutions, policies, violence, and authority in modern Germany neither from a top-down nor bottom-up perspective, but focused squarely on everyday dynamics at work "on the ground."

(more…)

Ruptures in the Afterlife of the Apartheid City (EPUB)


Free Download Yousuf Al-Bulushi, "Ruptures in the Afterlife of the Apartheid City "
English | ISBN: 3031424328 | 2024 | 239 pages | EPUB | 6 MB
How are poor people in South Africa confronting the persistent legacy of apartheid spatial segregation and anti-blackness? And what can movements across the world engaged in a global struggle against racial capitalism learn from the South African experience? This book explores the relationship between shack dwellers and the municipal government in South Africa. Grounded in the local realities of the struggle for housing and basic survival, the project makes broader interventions in national, continental and global debates about urban geography, African studies, social movements and race. The author argues that the shack settlement is emblematic of a democratic South Africa still profoundly shaped by apartheid’s afterlife.

(more…)