No. 2/2009 “Homo
Imperii in Space and Time: Settling and Unsettling Imperial Spaces”
Mappa mundi,
homo imperii · garden cities ·
a free port or a naval stronghold · humans and temporality in the capital
and in the provinces: a history of imperial cities · the rotation
of cadres, workforce migration, and travel · a new appointment: governors and
administrators changing workplaces · biography as the “interpretation of
travel” · Friday, Saturday, Sunday: when does
empire rest? · calendars and clocks ·
the many dimensions of empire: moving in space as traveling in time ·
the five-stage Marxist historical scheme: “the empire of history” ·
constructing the “spheres of vital interests” in the foreign policy of Russian empire
and Soviet Union · conception of individual, social,
generational, and political “age” · membership in a generation. |
East View
EBSCO
Kubon&Sagner
www.amazon.com |