01594oam 2200277z- 450 991076418800332120240312152030.01-68571-147-2(CKB)5600000000768314(EXLCZ)99560000000076831420240123c2023uuuu -u- -engFeminist solidarities after modulation /Sara Morais dos Santos Brusspunctum books1-68571-146-4 Feminist Solidarities after Modulation produces an intersectional analysis of transnational feminist movements and their contemporary digital frameworks of identity and solidarity. Engaging media theory, critical race theory, and Black feminist theory, as well as contemporary feminist movements, this book argues that digital feminist interventions map themselves onto and make use of the multiplicity and ambiguity of digital spaces to question presentist and fixed notions of the internet as a white space and technologies in general as objective or universal. Understanding these frameworks as colonial constructions of the human, identity is traced to a socio-material condition that emerges with the modernity/colonialism binary.FeminismInternational cooperationFeminismComputer network resourcesFeminismInternational cooperation.FeminismComputer network resources.305.42Santos Bruss Sara Morais dos1726674BOOK9910764188003321Feminist solidarities after modulation4132669UNINA02097oam 22005054a 450 991052470100332120230621140810.00-8018-0048-X1-4214-3697-3(CKB)4100000010461121(OCoLC)1133205772(MdBmJHUP)muse82408(oapen)https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/88997(MiAaPQ)EBC29139041(Au-PeEL)EBL29139041(oapen)doab88997(OCoLC)1526860157(EXLCZ)99410000001046112120700928d1968 uy 0engur|||||||nn|ntxtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierThe Dome and the RockStructure in the Poetry of Wallace Stevens1st ed.Johns Hopkins University Press2020Baltimore,Johns Hopkins Press[1968]©[1968]1 online resource (xxxi, 334 p.)1-4214-3698-1 1-4214-3699-X Bibliographical footnotes.Originally published in 1968. In The Dome and the Rock: Structure in the Poetry of Wallace Stevens, James Baird traces the process of Wallace Steven's Grand Poem and the total structure that it accomplished in language. In the words of Professor Baird, "The full art of Stevens is organized with architectural precision. The shape of the mind becomes a building, the framework of which is founded in a willed symmetry of design." In The Dome and the Rock, James Baird exposes the capacity of Wallace Stevens to design his poetry in a manner similar to an architect, and he "reveals the craftsmanship of [Wallace's] acts as builder."PoeticsHistory20th centuryElectronic books. PoeticsHistory811/.5/2Baird James465056MdBmJHUPMdBmJHUPBOOK9910524701003321The Dome and the Rock2781904UNINA