REVIEW ESSAY: BUILDING ON THE LADDER OF SUCCESS: THE LADDER OF SUCCESS IN IMPERIAL CHINA AND RECENT WORK ON SOCIAL MOBILITY

Ming Studies ◽  
1983 ◽  
Vol 1983 (1) ◽  
pp. 30-36 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ann Waltner
1975 ◽  
Vol 17 (4) ◽  
pp. 497-516
Author(s):  
Susan A. Soeiro

The recent literature on women in Latin America as yet forms a minute part of a necessary revision aimed at achieving a balanced and multidimensional view of the Ibero-American reality, past and present. Men, as the traditional transmitters of culture in society, have conveyed what they knew, understood, and judged to be important. Since women's activities differed considerably from those of men, they were regarded as insignificant and unworthy of mention. Scholars have further perpetuated the patriarchal and sexist assumptions of their own societies or those they have studied. As a fesult, more than four and a half centuries of history and all of the important ongoing processes of modernization, urbanization, professionalization, and even propagation seem to have occurred without the participation or even the presence of women. It was simply assumed that what was said of men held equally true for women. Hence the conception of reality perpetrated by social scientists and historians was that perceived by a dominant male group, who represented a partial construct as if it were a more complex whole.


boundary 2 ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 47 (1) ◽  
pp. 215-238
Author(s):  
Jap-Nanak Makkar

This review essay compares two early and two recent texts by N. Katherine Hayles and Mark B. N. Hansen. Considering their recent work in the context of Ruth Leys’s critique of the turn to affect, I argue that Hayles and Hansen use neuroscientific conclusions on a “missing half second” to propose theories of technology’s impact. These critics neglect to provide explanations of a social or political kind, a trend that appears to be related to the lesser importance accorded to intention. I show the value of giving social explanations and of differentiating between humans and things in analyses.


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