Disintegrate Dissociate By Arielle Twist


Download Disintegrate Dissociate By Arielle Twist PDF/ePub or read online books in Mobi eBooks. Click Download or Read Online button to get Disintegrate Dissociate By Arielle Twist book now. This website allows unlimited access to, at the time of writing, more than 1.5 million titles, including hundreds of thousands of titles in various foreign languages.

Download

All Day I Dream About Sirens


All Day I Dream About Sirens

Author: Domenica Martinello

language: en

Publisher: Coach House Books

Release Date: 2019-04-10


DOWNLOAD





What started as a small sequence of poems about the Starbucks logo grew to monstrous proportions after the poet fell under a siren spell herself. All Day I Dream About Sirens is both an ancient reverie and a screen-induced stupor as these poems reckon with the enduring cultural fascination with siren and mermaid narratives as they span geographies, economies, and generations, chronicling and reconfiguring the male-centered epic and women’s bodies and subjectivities.

Shut Up You're Pretty


Shut Up You're Pretty

Author: Téa Mutonji

language: en

Publisher: arsenal pulp press

Release Date: 2019-06-11


DOWNLOAD





--Shut Up You’re Pretty by Téa Mutonji is the first book to be published by VS. Books, Arsenal’s series dedicated to new and emerging writers of color (under the age of 30). The series is curated and edited by writer-musician Vivek Shraya, author of 4 previous Arsenal titles (including The Boy & the Bindi and even this page is white) as well as the comic Death Threat, also publishing this season. --Téa Mutonji is a 23-year-old writer of Congalese descent based in Ontario. She was chosen to launch the VS. Books series for her disarming story collection in which she disrupts traditional white female tropes common in contemporary short fiction; her stories feature the same nameless Congalese American narrator, but Mutonji doesn’t center or foreground her narrator’s race. In this way, her stories “normalize” the traditional American short story that happen to feature a Black female protagonist. --In Téa’s own words: “The itch to write this book particularly came from reading Miranda July’s Nobody Belongs Here More Than You (2005). Though I enjoyed it, I couldn’t help but feel this great disconnect between myself and the characters. (Who’s to say that level of connectivity is what really makes a story a great story anyways?) But strangely enough, this disconnect came from the fact the collection seemed to be made up of the same story over and over again, just with different titles. It was also underwhelming that there were no characters of color. I think the need to have characters of color, and specifically women of color, as characters who are as multidimensional, complex, and annoying as any other character is what really made me want to explore stories through a perspective that may look more like mine. Character visibility is what drives this collection. I keep reading Bridget Jones-esque fiction, and none of these women resemble me. I was interested in writing stories through the eyes of a Black woman without centering her race: to make young, female, Black characters as ‘normal’ as the kind of white, cisgendered female protagonists who seem to feature in every epic coming-of-age narrative.” --We will promote Téa as an exciting new and young writer of color in conjunction with the debut of the VS. Books series.

Africanistan


Africanistan

Author: Serge Michailof

language: en

Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA

Release Date: 2018


DOWNLOAD





In Africa, progress can be seen across the board. Yet is this upturn sustainable? And is it comprehensive enough ? Every day, migrants are dying in the Mediterranean. Should we really believe that all is well ? The continent is in fact a powder keg. The powder is demographics. And the detonator is unemployment. By 2050, the number of young people of working age in Africa will be three times that of China's. What jobs will be available ? What is troubling for the continent is even more dramatic for the Sahel, a huge region of about 100 million inhabitants where insecurity is spreading like a bushfire.The mass unemployment of young people, far more than jihadist propaganda, is the primary explanation for the dramatic collapse of Afghanistan. Despite major differences in geography and culture, there are huge similarities between the Sahel and Afghanistan: a demographic impasse, stagnating agriculture, widespread rural misery, high unemployment, deep ethnic and religious fault lines, weak states, regional instability, drug trafficking, and the spread of radical Islam.