102 research outputs found
The last animal: cosmopolitanism in The Last Man
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Reading âFundamental British Valuesâ Through Childrenâs Gothic: Imperialism, History, Pedagogy
This paper reads the U.K. Governmentâs âfundamental British valuesâ project alongside two childrenâs Gothic novels, Coram Boy (2000) by Jamila Gavin and City of Ghosts (2009) by Bali Rai. In 2011 the U.K. Government outlined what it described as âfundamental British valuesâ (FBV), making it a requirement for U.K. schools to promote these values. Many critics have shown that the root of FBV lies in Islamophobia and imperialist nostalgia and suggested that the promotion of âBritishâ values in school will exclude minority groups already under siege from racist elements in contemporary Britain. Other critics argue that the promotion of FBV reduces opportunities to explore issues of belonging, belief, and nationhood in the classroom. This article argues that the Gothic fictions of Jamila Gavin and Bali Rai offer a space in which to critically examine British history (and so, its values) in a way that is acutely relevant to these education contexts. Coram Boy and City of Ghosts use the Gothic to interrogate aspects of British history elided by the FBV project. That is, they point to Britainâs imperial and colonial history and offer a rejoinder to the Governmentâs insistence that âBritish Valuesâ equate to democracy, respect for the rule of law and mutual respect and tolerance of those from different faiths and religions. Furthermore, Gavinâs and Raiâs use of the Gothic creates a space in which the ambiguities and contradictions inherent in FBV can be explored. However, their âgothicizedâ histories of Britain do not render the idea of shared values invalid. The diversity and interconnectedness of the characters offer an alternative version of identity to the patronising and arrogant FBV project, which is aimed at promoting a national identity based on sameness and assimilation. Rai and Gavin look to Britainâs past through the lens of the Gothic not only to refute nationalism and racism, but also to offer a productive alternative that gestures towards a more cosmopolitan vision of identity
The lives and opinions of eminent philosophers / by Diogenes Laertius ; literally translated by C.D. Yonge.
[...] Diogenes Laertius divides the philosophy of the Greeks into the Ionic, beginning with Anaximander, and ending with Theophrastus (in which class, he includes the Socratic philosophy and all its various ramifications) ; and the Italian, beginning with Pythagoras, and ending with Epicurus, in the Sceptics. From the minute consideration which he devotes to Epicurus and his system, it has been supposed that he himself belongs to that school. [...
L'Acerba
Reproduction of original in Biblioteca Nazionale Centrale di Firenze.Electronic reproduction
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