Japanese writers' engagement with kanshi unveils a journey from the Meiji era's mastery of Literary Sinitic poetry to a modern, exophonic practice shaped by educational reforms and cultural shifts. Each generation redefines this art form, adding layers of multicultural meaning and unique audience focus.
Explores national security challenges posed by new technologies and examines some ongoing efforts to understand and mitigate their potential negative effects. The authors, drawn from among a roster of international scholars, approach these issues from different yet ultimately complementary angles.
An incisive exploration traces how antinuclear activists reshaped the discourse around nuclear weapons, turning established narratives on power into debates over peril. Their persuasive arguments swayed public opinion and policy, paving the way for arms control and disarmament measures in global relations.
Edited by rising Tunisian literary scholar Hassen Zriba, this volume presents a collection of interdisciplinary essays arguing that the concept of ""erasure"" is an essential analytical tool/mode of thought in shaping conceptualizations of change and continuity in subjects of human knowledge.
Argues that privacy is an individual right and democratic value worth preserving, even in a cyberized world. Greater privacy protections for US citizens will come as long as Americans remember how democracy and privacy sustain one another, and demonstrate their commitment to them.