10 libri per 10 euro qui
Bookbot

Ziauddin Sardar

    31 ottobre 1951

    Ziauddin Sardar è un prolifico autore la cui opera si muove all'intersezione tra studi islamici, scienza e relazioni culturali. La sua scrittura indaga le intricate dinamiche tra Oriente e Occidente, concentrandosi spesso sull'esperienza asiatica britannica e su come l'Islam plasmi l'identità contemporanea. Sardar è riconosciuto per il suo approccio scettico ma acuto alla religione e alla società, attingendo a una ricca tradizione intellettuale. I suoi contributi incoraggiano i lettori a contemplare gli incontri culturali e le possibilità di comprensione in un mondo sempre più interconnesso.

    Ziauddin Sardar
    Introducing Mathematics : A Graphic Guide
    The No-nonsense Guide to Islam
    American Dream. Global Nightmare
    Desperately Seeking Paradise
    Balti Britain
    Black skin, white masks
    • Black skin, white masks

      • 186pagine
      • 7 ore di lettura

      The explosion will not happen today. It is too soon ... or too late.First published in English in 1968, Frantz Fanon's seminal text was immediately acclaimed as a classic of black liberationalist writing. Fanon's descriptions of the feelings of inadequacy and dependence experienced by people of colour in a white world are as salient and as compelling as ever. Fanon identifies a devastating pathology at the heart of Western culture, a denial of difference, that persists to this day. His writings speak to all who continue the struggle for political and cultural liberation in our troubled times.

      Black skin, white masks
    • Sardar travels to Asian communities throughout the UK to tell the history of Asians in Britain - from the arrival of the first Indian in 1614, to the young extremists in Walthamstow mosque in 2006. He interweaves throughout an illuminating account of his own life, describing his carefree childhood in Pakistan, his family's emigration to racist 1950s Britain, and his adulthood straddling two cultures. Along the way he asks: are arranged marriages a good thing? Does the term 'Asian' obscure more than it conveys? Do vindaloo and balti actually exist? And is multiculturalism an impossible dream?

      Balti Britain
    • This title brings into sharp focus the merger of celebrity, corporate power, government and empire which has become an essential part of America's belief in itself as a nation.

      American Dream. Global Nightmare
    • This guide explains Islamic history, the Qur’an, sharia law, and Islam’s relationship with the West. It analyzes the struggle within the faith for a more humane interpretation of the religion, issues surrounding women, democracy, and economic development, and the outlook post-9/11 and the Iraq war. Merryl Wyn Davies is a writer, anthropologist, and TV producer. The author of Knowing One Shaping an Islamic Anthropology, she also co-authored the international bestseller Why Do People Hate America? Ziauddin Sardar is a writer, broadcaster, and cultural critic. His works include Postmodernism and the Other, Orientalism, and Why Do People Hate America?, written with Merryl Wyn Davies.

      The No-nonsense Guide to Islam
    • The media has become a condition of our existence. Introducing Media Studies explores media history and the complex relationship between the media, ideology, knowledge, and power, presenting a coherent view of the media industry, media theory, and methods in media research.

      Introducing Media Studies
    • "American corporations and popular culture affect the lives and infect the indigenous cultures of millions around the world. The foreign policy of the US government, backed by its military strength, has unprecedented global influence now that the USA is the world's only superpower - its first 'hyperpower'." "America also exports its value systems, defining what it means to be civilised, rational, developed and democratic - indeed, what it is to be human. Meanwhile, the US itself is impervious to outside influence, and if most Americans think of the rest of the world at all, it is in terms of deeply ingrained cultural stereotypes." "Many people do hate America, in the Middle East and the developing countries as well as in Europe. Ziauddin Sardar and Merryl Wyn Davies consider this hatred in the context of America's own perception of itself, and provide an important contribution to a debate which needs to be addressed by people of all nations, cultures, religions and political persuasions."--BOOK JACKET

      Why Do People Hate America?