05282oam 2200661I 450 991097498240332120251117031754.01-317-34948-21-315-66456-910.4324/9781315664569 (CKB)3710000000479679(EBL)3570186(SSID)ssj0001636399(PQKBManifestationID)16388515(PQKBTitleCode)TC0001636399(PQKBWorkID)14950706(PQKB)10211204(MiAaPQ)EBC3570186(Au-PeEL)EBL3570186(CaPaEBR)ebr11086781(OCoLC)932324090(OCoLC)966398120(BIP)53488815(BIP)61864979(EXLCZ)99371000000047967920180706e20162005 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrCivil rights and liberties provocative questions and evolving answers /Harold J. SullivanSecond edition.London ;New York :Routledge,2016.1 online resource (220 p.)First published 2005 by Pearson Education, Inc.1-138-47395-2 0-13-117435-5 Includes bibliographical references and index.""Cover""; ""Title Page""; ""Copyright Page""; ""Dedication""; ""Table of Contents""; ""Preface""; ""Acknowledgments to the Second Edition""; ""Chapter One Introduction: Judicial Defense of Civil Liberties and Civil Rights""; ""What Courts Do""; ""How Do We Know What the Constitution Means?""; ""The Fourteenth Amendment and the "Incorporation" of the Bill of Rights""; ""A Hierarchy of Rights and Liberties""; ""The Checkered History of Judicial Defense of Rights and Liberties""; ""Legislative Protections for Rights and Liberties""; ""Continuing Controversy: Why So Many Questions?""""References""""Chapter Two The First Amendment and Freedom of Expression""; ""Introduction""; ""Question 1 What is "freedom of speech"?""; ""Question 2 How has the Court justified limits on the expression of ideas?""; ""Question 3 Shouldn't we ban dangerous ideas?""; ""Question 4 May the government punish those who engage in "hate speech"?""; ""Question 5 Why must society tolerate obscenity?""; ""Question 6 Why does the government permit sexually explicit material to invade our homes over the Internet?""; ""Question 7 Why not require that people in public debate tell the truth?""""Question 8 How is burning the American flag a form of free speech?""""Question 9 If flag burning is protected by the first Amendment, why is cross burning sometimes not protected?""; ""Question 10 Why should a democratic society tolerate the expression of views that are offensive to the majority?""; ""References""; ""Chapter Three Freedom of Religion""; ""Introduction""; ""Question 1 Why can't government help advance the religious values that the majority of Americans share?""; ""Question 2 Are there limits on a person's right to practice his or her religion?""""Question 3 Doesn't banning "voluntary prayer" in public schools interfere with children's freedom of religion?""""Question 4 If secular groups are allowed access to the schools, shouldn't religious groups have the same rights?""; ""Question 5 Doesn't teaching evolution in the schools amount to the establishment of secular religion?""; ""Question 6 Isn't government funding for social services provided by religious organizations endangering the constitutional separation of church and state?""; ""References""; ""Chapter Four Equality Under the Constitution""; ""Introduction""""Question 1 How does the Constitution make us equal?""""Question 2 If the Constitution commands "equal protection of the laws," why was racial segregation permitted for so long?""; ""Question 3 Why did the courts order "forced busing"?""; ""Question 4 Isn't "affirmative action" just another form of racial or sexual discrimination?""; ""Question 5 May government "discriminate" on the basis of race in order to advance the cause of racial diversity?""; ""Question 6 Do we still need a new Equal Rights Amendment (ERA) to secure gender equality?""""Question 7 How do you know if you are a victim of unconstitutional discrimination?""For undergraduate courses in Constitutional Law, Civil Rights & Liberties, Introduction to American Government,Introduction to Law and Legal Process, and Judicial Process & Politics. Examining contemporary and perennial constitutional issues in civil liberties and rights, this text engages students in an exploration of how and why U.S. Supreme Court Justices have interpreted the provisions of the U.S. Constitution relating to freedom of expression and religion, and equal protection and privacy.Civil rightsUnited StatesPopular worksCivil rights342.7308/5342.73085Sullivan Harold J(Harold Joseph),1868926MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910974982403321Civil rights and liberties4476990UNINA05671oam 2201177 c 450 991013624430332120260102090118.09783839434529383943452110.14361/9783839434529(CKB)3710000000915704(MiAaPQ)EBC4772649(DE-B1597)473105(OCoLC)979613052(DE-B1597)9783839434529(transcript Verlag)9783839434529(Perlego)1463391(EXLCZ)99371000000091570420260102d2016 uy 0gerurcnu||||||||rdacontentrdamediardacarrierPolitik der KunstÜber Möglichkeiten, das Ästhetische politisch zu denkenLeonhard Emmerling, Ines Kleesattel1st ed.Bielefeldtranscript Verlag20161 online resource (219 pages)ImageWhere participatory art projects today clearly oppose an autonomous aesthetic, the question of the relationship between art and society – which in European schools of thought has been the source of competing and often antagonistic arguments for over 200 years – takes on renewed relevance. Focusing on the present, this volume discusses this contentious subject from current philosophical and aesthetic perspectives. The diverse range of contributions grapple with the power and weakness of art, the timeliness of beauty, the (un)political nature of reflection and participation, and the role of the art critic, as well as the assertion of a politics of art.9783837634525 3837634523 Frontmatter 1 Inhalt 5 Vorwort 7 Politik der Kunst. Zur Einleitung 11 Kunst, Politik, Peinlichkeit 21 Die teilnahmslose Kunst 35 Dissensuelle Partizipation. Die Kunst des Scheiterns und die Stärke der Konfliktivität 51 Autonomie auf Probe 67 Das Paradox der Fähigkeit und der Wert des Schönen 85 Zur Ohnmacht der Kunst 101 Adorno über das Glück an den Kunstwerken 121 Zur Politik des Schönen, heute. Überlegungen zur aktuellen Ästhetik im Anschluss an Gadamer 143 Solidarische Mobilmachung. Kunst, Vokabularpolitik und Resolidarisierung nach Richard Rorty 157 Kunst und Kritik. Das Problem in Rancières politischer Kunsttheorie und eine Erinnerung an Adorno 175 Zwischen Diffusionspathos und Quintessentialismus. Über waghalsige Bestimmungen des Politischen der Kunst 191 Gegen Kunsttheorie. Zur Frage nach dem politischen Charakter von Kunst 199 Autorinnen und Autoren 211Wo partizipatorische Kunstprojekte heute klar der Autonomie der Kunst eine Absage erteilen, erhält die Frage nach dem Verhältnis von Kunst und Gesellschaft, das in europäischen Denktraditionen bereits seit über 200 Jahren Gegenstand einander widerstreitender Ansätze ist, neue Brisanz.Mit Blick auf die Gegenwart diskutiert der Band dieses Spannungsfeld aus aktuellen philosophischen und kunstwissenschaftlichen Perspektiven. Die heterogenen Beiträge streiten um Macht und Schwäche der Kunst, um die Aktualität von Schönheit, um das (Un-)Politische von Reflexion und Partizipation, um die Rolle der Kunstkritik sowie um die Behauptung einer Politik der Kunst.Besprochen in:Zitty, 50 (2016)Kunstbulletin, 5 (2017)Zeitschrift, 30 (2017)»Die Aufsätze leisten eine konzise Begriffsarbeit und tragen zu einer aktuellen wissenschaftlichen Auseinandersetzung einiges an nachvollziehbarer Kritik bei.«Kleesattel et al. (Hg.), Politik der KunstÜber Möglichkeiten, das Ästhetische politisch zu denkenKunstArtPoliticsPolitikGegenwartskunstContemporary ArtÄsthetische TheorieTheory of AestheticsPartizipationParticipationAutonomieAutonomyKunstkritikArt CriticismArtivismusArtivismAestheticsKunstheorieÄsthetikPolitical ArtPolitische KunstSociology of ArtKunstsoziologieArt TheoryKunsttheorieFine ArtsKunstwissenschaftKunstArtPoliticsPolitikGegenwartskunstContemporary ArtÄsthetische TheorieTheory of AestheticsPartizipationParticipationAutonomieAutonomyKunstkritikArt CriticismArtivismusArtivismAestheticsKunstheorieÄsthetikPolitical ArtPolitische KunstSociology of ArtKunstsoziologieArt TheoryKunsttheorieFine ArtsKunstwissenschaft111.85092EC 2450rvkEmmerling Leonhard<p>Leonhard Emmerling, Goethe-Institut New Delhi, Indien</p>edtKleesattel Ines<p>Ines Kleesattel, Zürich, Schweiz</p>edtDE-B1597DE-B1597BOOK9910136244303321Politik der Kunst2590304UNINA