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Emily McGiffin

Bio: Emily McGiffin is an academic researcher from York University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Working class & Praise. The author has an hindex of 2, co-authored 2 publications receiving 20 citations.

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Journal ArticleDOI
Emily McGiffin1
28 Nov 2017
TL;DR: In rural and peri-urban areas of South Africa's Eastern Cape, iimbongi, or praise poets, are artists with a gift for both language and healing who play an important and varied role in contemporary...
Abstract: In rural and peri-urban areas of South Africa’s Eastern Cape, iimbongi, or praise poets, are artists with a gift for both language and healing who play an important and varied role in contemporary ...

12 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Emily McGiffin1
TL;DR: The South African labour movement of the 1970s and 1980s was accompanied by the rise of a new working class poetry, which encoded the experiences of black labourers and gave voice to their struggles.
Abstract: The South African labour movement of the 1970s and 1980s was accompanied by the rise of a new working class poetry. Drawing on traditional literary forms, the ‘worker poets’ became a prominent voice of anti-apartheid and anti-capitalist resistance. Performed during union meetings and community gatherings, their poems encoded the experiences of black labourers and gave voice to their struggles. As union membership surged throughout the 1980s, oral poets played a pivotal role in representing an invisible working class, advancing common notions of democracy, galvanising labourers into action and promoting social cohesion in the pursuit of a common cause. In challenging the extractive theft inflicted on their communities and environments, the worker poets exemplify a version of African environmentalism that recognises the constitutive ties between capital, labour and landscape, resisting not only the exploitation of African labour under the apartheid regime but also the environmental injustice that th...

8 citations


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3,074 citations

Journal Article
Aaron Pollack1
TL;DR: This article argued that the British Empire was a " liberal" empire that upheld international law, kept the seas open and free, and ultimately benefited everyone by ensuring the free flow of trade.
Abstract: From a world history perspective, the most noticeable trend in the history of the late 19th century was the domination of Europeans over Non­Europeans. This domination took many forms ranging from economic penetration to outright annexation. No area of the globe, however remote from Europe, was free of European merchants, adventurers, explorers or western missionaries. Was colonialism good for either the imperialist or the peoples of the globe who found themselves subjects of one empire or another? A few decades ago, the answer would have been a resounding no. Now, in the wake of the collapse of the Soviet Union, the more or less widespread discrediting of Marxist and Leninist analysis, and the end of the Cold War, political scientists and historians seem willing to take a more positive look at Nineteenth Century Imperialism. One noted current historian, Niall Ferguson has argued that the British Empire probably accomplished more positive good for the world than the last generation of historians, poisoned by Marxism, could or would concede. Ferguson has argued that the British Empire was a \" liberal \" empire that upheld international law, kept the seas open and free, and ultimately benefited everyone by ensuring the free flow of trade. In other words, Ferguson would find little reason to contradict the young Winston Churchill's assertion that the aim of British imperialism was to: give peace to warring tribes, to administer justice where all was violence, to strike the chains off the slave, to draw the richness from the soil, to place the earliest seeds of commerce and learning, to increase in whole peoples their capacities for pleasure and diminish their chances of pain. It should come as no surprise that Ferguson regards the United States current position in the world as the natural successor to the British Empire and that the greatest danger the U.S. represents is that the world will not get enough American Imperialism because U.S. leaders often have short attention spans and tend to pull back troops when intervention becomes unpopular. It will be very interesting to check back into the debate on Imperialism about ten years from now and see how Niall Ferguson's point of view has fared! The other great school of thought about Imperialism is, of course, Marxist. For example, Marxist historians like E.J. Hobsbawm argue that if we look at the l9th century as a great competition for the world's wealth and …

2,001 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The spell of the sensuous perception and language in a more than human world digital book can be found in this paper and can be downloaded for free for any single topic for every single topic.
Abstract: Are you looking to uncover the spell of the sensuous perception and language in a more than human world Digitalbook. Correct here it is possible to locate as well as download the spell of the sensuous perception and language in a more than human world Book. We've got ebooks for every single topic the spell of the sensuous perception and language in a more than human world accessible for download cost-free. Search the site also as find Jean Campbell eBook in layout. We also have a fantastic collection of information connected to this Digitalbook for you. As well because the best part is you could assessment as well as download for the spell of the sensuous perception and language in a more than human world eBook

619 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
28 Oct 2014
TL;DR: In this article, Rist traverses through the path of development and concludes that "almost everyone is seduced by the aura of development" and "who would not want a better future for everyone on the planet?"
Abstract: Almost everyone is seduced by the aura of development. Who would not want a better future for everyone on the planet? Rist, in his brilliantly lucid book, traverses through the path of development,...

375 citations