LIBROS DEL AUTOR: dana rabin

5 resultados para LIBROS DEL AUTOR: dana rabin

  • Britain and its internal others, 1750-1800
    Dana Rabin / Dana Y. Rabin
    The rule of law, an ideology of equality and universality that justified Britain’s eighteenth-century imperial claims, was the product not of abstract principles but imperial contact. As the Empire expanded, encompassing greater religious, ethnic and racial diversity, the law paradoxically contained and maintained these very differences. This book revisits six notorious inciden...
    Disponible

    44,16 €

  • Islands and Empire
    Dana Rabin / Thomas Mockaitis / Vivien Dietz
    Islands and Empire: A History of Modern Britain situates the United Kingdom within a local, European, and global historical context. It examines the forces of imperialism, emphasizing the dynamic interaction between the colonies and the metropole. The book addresses questions of race, ethnicity, class, and gender and gives voice to the diversity of people who shaped and were sh...
    Disponible

    146,79 €

  • Islands and Empire
    Dana Rabin / Thomas Mockaitis / Vivien Dietz
    Islands and Empire: A History of Modern Britain situates the United Kingdom within a local, European, and global historical context. It examines the forces of imperialism, emphasizing the dynamic interaction between the colonies and the metropole. The book addresses questions of race, ethnicity, class, and gender and gives voice to the diversity of people who shaped and were sh...
    Disponible

    98,30 €

  • Britain and its internal others, 1750-1800
    Dana Rabin / Dana Y Rabin
    The rule of law, an ideology of equality and universality that justified Britain’s eighteenth-century imperial claims, was the product not of abstract principles but imperial contact. As the Empire expanded, encompassing greater religious, ethnic and racial diversity, the law paradoxically contained and maintained these very differences. This book revisits six notorious inciden...
    Disponible

    157,39 €

  • Identity, Crime and Legal Responsibility in Eighteenth-Century England
    Dana Rabin
    With their reputations or lives at stake, ordinary men and women in the Eighteenth Century presented their complex emotions and passions as grounds for acquittal or mitigation of punishment. To account for their criminal behaviour and to excuse it, they claimed a space between the coherent self and the insane self: the ’displaced’ self. This language had complicated implication...
    Disponible

    65,16 €