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Diversity and Community: An Interdisciplinary Reader is a collection of essays exploring the notion of community in its many theoretical, practical, and cultural manifestations.
Diversity and Community: An Interdisciplinary Reader is a collection of essays exploring the notion of community in its many theoretical, practical, and cultural manifestations.
List of Contributors.
Preface.
Introduction: Diversity and Community: Philip Alperson (Temple University).
Part I: Community and Its Contestations:.
1. Communities and Community: Critique and Retrieval: Jean Bethke Elsthain (University of Chicago) and Christopher Beem (Johnson Foundation).
2. Community at the Margin: Crispin Sartwell (Maryland Institute College of Art).
3. Impure Communities: Maria Lugones (SUNY-Binghampton).
4. Identities: The Dynamical Dimensions of Diversity: Chuck Dyke (Temple University) and Carl Dyke (Methodist College).
5. From Village to Global Contexts: Ideas, Types, and the Making of Communities: D. A. Masolo (University of Louisville).
6. Obligation Across Generations: A Consideration in the Understanding of Community Formation: Lewis R. Gordon (Brown University).
Part II: Community, Constitutive Identities, and Resisting Subjects:.
7. Citizenship or Transgression?: Dilemmas of the US Movement for Lesbian/Gay Rights: Arlene Stein (Rutgers University).
8. Diversity, Inequality, and Community: African Americans and People of Color in the United States: J. Blaine Hudson (University of Louisville).
9. Renewing American Indian Nations: Cosmic Communities and Spiritual Autonomy: Duane Champagne (University of California at Los Angeles).
10. Nations and Nationalism: The Case of Canada/Quebec: Frank Cunningham (University of Toronto).
11. Love, Care, and Women’s Dignity: The Family as a Privileged Community: Martha Nussbaum (University of Chicago).
12. Community and Society, Melancholy and Sociopathy: Osborne Wiggins (University of Louisville) and Michael A. Schwartz (Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine).
Part III: Community, Culture, and Education:.
13. The Role of Art in Sustaining Communities: Marcia Muelder Eaton (University of Minnesota).
14. Images of Community in American Popular Culture: Eileen John (University of Louisville) and Nancy Potter (University of Louisville).
15. Virtual Communities: Chinatowns Made in America: Gary Y. Okihiro (Columbia University).
16. Villages, Local and Global: Observations on Computer-Mediated and Geographically Situated Communities: Samuel Oluoch Imbo (Hamline University).
17. The University as a Universe of Communities: Mary Hawkesworth (Rutgers University).
Index.
Philip Alperson is Professor of Philosophy at Temple University. He is the editor of several books including The Philosophy of the Visual Arts (1992), What Is Music? An Introduction to the Philosophy of Music (1994), and Musical Worlds: New Directions in the Philosophy of Music (1998). He is also the editor of The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism.
"A rich and wonderfully varied collection. These compelling essays
– fine examples of clear, politically engaged theorizing – explore
many dimensions of community and communal change. Further, the
authors challenge themselves and their readers to imagine concrete
actions and policies that might turn their visions of truly diverse
communities into reality." Martha Ackelsberg, Smith College
"This significant and original collection of essays enables
scholars from a wide range of disciplines to explore a set of vexed
yet centrally important questions about the meanings of community.
Alperson has edited an impressively coherent volume whose authors
refuse facile formulations, and instead develop insightful and
often profound analyses of the ideals and realities of community.
This is a must-read book." Judith Gerson, Rutgers University
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