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Human Rights and Oppressed Peoples: Collected Essays and Speeches

Autor Georg Brandes Editat de William Banks
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 18 feb 2020
Georg Brandes was known as the "Father of the Modern Breakthrough" for his influence on Scandinavian writers in the late nineteenth century. A prominent writer, thinker, and speaker, he often examined intellectual topics beyond the literary criticism he was best known for. In this collection, William Banks has translated a number of Brandes's pieces that engage in the concerns of oppressed peoples. By collecting, annotating, and contextualizing these works, Banks reintroduces Brandes as a major progenitor of thinking about the rights of national minorities and the colonized.
Human Rights and Oppressed Peoples includes thirty-five essays and published speeches from the early twenty-first century on subjects as diverse as the Boxer Rebellion, displaced peoples from World War I, Finland's Jewish population, and imperialism. This collection will interest interdisciplinary scholars of human rights as well as those who study Scandinavian intellectual and literary history.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780299324100
ISBN-10: 0299324109
Pagini: 368
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.61 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: University of Wisconsin Press
Colecția University of Wisconsin Press

Recenzii

“This is a very useful anthology of essays by Georg Brandes on the rights of oppressed peoples, written for various occasions over the last three decades of his life. The selection of the essays is in itself an accomplishment, as no such compilation, highlighting Brandes’s contribution to the development of a modern understanding of human rights, exists in other languages.”
—Lasse Horne Kjældgaard, Roskilde University
“Many of the essays are very valuable for ‘eye witnessing’ the conflicts in Europe that were critical in shaping the continent for the rest of the century. These issues are still with us—which makes the historical value of the book very high indeed.”
—Bård Anders Andreassen, University of Oslo
Banks’s masterful translation of selected essays and published speeches illuminates a remarkable facet of Georg Brandes’s productivity in the first quarter of the twentieth century. . . . An engrossing and sobering view into the cultural and political conflicts of the early twentieth century—conflicts that still, a century later, haunt the European continent. . . . An auspicious publication and a valuable companion to anyone interested in the culture and politics of the early twentieth century.”—Scandinavian Studies

Notă biografică

William Banks is an independent scholar and a translator on the Digital Currents project from Roskilde University.

Cuprins

Contents
 Acknowledgments ix
 Note on the Source Texts xiii
 Introduction 3
1 The Hun Speech (1900) 51
2 Armenia (1900) 55
3 Missionaries (1901) 64
4 A Chinese Letter about the War (1901) 75
5 Chinese Letters (1901) 79
6 Contemporary Civilization (1901) 85
7 The Women of Poland (1901) 91
8 Macedonia (1902) 96
9 The Agony of a People and Utopias (1903) 101
10 Armenia and Europe (1903) 106
11 Mano Negra (1903) 117
12 The Georgian People (1903) 122
13 Transvaal (1903) 128
14 The Ruthenians (1904) 133
15 Finland (1904) 138
16 To the Students of Germany (1904) 143
17 The Rights and Duties of the Weaker (1905) 148
18 The Aryan Race (1905) 155
19 To the Schoolchildren of Russian Poland (1905) 161
20 The Future of Russian Poland (1905) 166
21 Zionism (1905) 170
22 The Jews in Finland (1908) 177
23 The Fourth Partition of Poland (1909) 188
24 Race Theories (1912) 194
25 Conditions in Russian Poland (1914) 203
26 Poland (1915) 221
27 The Great Era (1915) 228
28 The Great Nations’ Concern for the Small (1915) 233
29 Introductory Words for the Polish Evening in
Copenhagen (1916) 256
30 An Appeal (1916) 265
31 A Response to Mr. William Archer (1916) 270
32 Persia (1916) 282
33 The Armenians (1917) 296
34 Imperialism (1922) 307
35 Europe Now (1925) 328
 Bibliography 333
 Index of Named Persons 341