Results for 'paganisme slave'

981 found
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  1.  1
    Slavic (pseudo)Mythology. An Overview.Stamatis Zochios - 2025 - Iris 45.
    This article deals with Slavic pseudo-mythology, comprising myths and deities that do not exist in authentic mythology and folklore or whose existence is doubtful or refuted. It is typically an artificial construct and may be created by scholars who freely interpret scarce sources. This pseudo-mythology, as we will see, has created a false reality. The image we have of Slavic paganism is in fact very vague for lack of sources. On the contrary, today we are used to talking about a (...)
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  2. III.Roman Slave Market - forthcoming - Semiotics.
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  3.  42
    Judaïsme et paganisme chez Cohen, Rosenzweig et Levinas.Sophie Nordmann - 2007 - Archives de Philosophie 2 (2):227-247.
    Cet article met en évidence la manière dont H. Cohen, F. Rosenzweig et E. Levinas inaugurent, dans un même geste spéculatif, une forme nouvelle de « philosophie de la religion », où la religion ne constitue plus seulement un objet, mais un moteur de la rationalité philosophique. Chez chacun d’eux, ce geste passe par l’opposition du paganisme et du judaïsme, qui se prolonge dans l’opposition entre une tradition philosophique enfermée dans l’immanence, et une forme de rationalité philosophique nouvelle, qui (...)
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  4.  7
    Paganisme, christianisme et catholicisme chez René Girard: le vrai Dieu caché.Paul Dubouchet - 2017 - Paris: L'Harmattan.
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  5. Paganisme ou christianisme: étude sur l'athéisme moderne.Emile Rideau - 1954 - Tournai, Casterman.
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  6. Paganisme ou Christianisme, Étude sur l'athéisme moderne.Émile Rideau - 1959 - Revue de Métaphysique et de Morale 64 (1):114-114.
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  7. Platonisme et paganisme au XVIIIe siècle.Jean-Louis Vieillard-Baron - 1979 - Archives de Philosophie 42 (3):439.
     
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  8.  37
    L'affrontement entre le Christianisme et le Paganisme dans le Contre Celse d'Origène.Danièle Letocha - 1980 - Dialogue 19 (3):373-395.
    Soixante-dix ans environ séparent le Discours véritable contre les chrétiens du Contre l'écrit de Celse intitulé Discours véritable. Origène ne tient pas compte de cette distance historique: il discute au présent. Or, la situation de la culture païenne n'est plus exactement la même qu'au siècle précédent. La dynastie des Sévères s'effondre dans le désordre. La pensée s'appauvrit jusqu'à devenir «un Sahara littéraire» selon l'expression tranchante de Ferdinand Lot. De leur côté, les chrétiens ont gagné du terrain et leur recrutement s'est (...)
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  9.  13
    Dictionnaire du paganisme grec. Notions et débats autour de l’époque classique.Pierre Brulé - 2016 - Kernos 29:447-451.
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  10. Slaves of the passions.Mark Schroeder - 2007 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    Long claimed to be the dominant conception of practical reason, the Humean theory that reasons for action are instrumental, or explained by desires, is the basis for a range of worries about the objective prescriptivity of morality. As a result, it has come under intense attack in recent decades. A wide variety of arguments have been advanced which purport to show that it is false, or surprisingly, even that it is incoherent. Slaves of the Passions aims to set the record (...)
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  11.  11
    Carpe diem, o, El mirall del paganisme: un diari ideològic sobre filosofia, religió i homosexualitat.Oriol Colomer I. Carles - 2007 - Girona: CCG Edicions.
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  12.  9
    Les Nekudaimones et leurs errances nocturnes: du paganisme au christianisme.Carl Omer Deroux - 2004 - Paideia 59:97-114.
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  13.  37
    Penser le sens d'une humanité européenne à rebours du paganisme national et des incantations humanitaires.Étienne Haché - 2006 - Laval Théologique et Philosophique 62 (3):569-587.
  14.  12
    (1 other version)Franz Cumont, Les religions orientales dans le paganisme romain, édité par Corinne Bonnet et Françoise Van Haeperen avec la collaboration de Bastien Toune.Vinciane Pirenne-Delforge - 2008 - Kernos 21:362-363.
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  15. Slaves of the passions * by mark Schroeder.Mark Schroeder - 2009 - Analysis 69 (3):574-576.
    Like much in this book, the title and dust jacket illustration are clever. The first evokes Hume's remark in the Treatise that ‘Reason is, and ought only to be the slave of the passions.’ The second, which represents a cross between a dance-step and a clinch, links up with the title and anticipates an example used throughout the book to support its central claims: that Ronnie, unlike Bradley, has a reason to go to a party – namely, that there (...)
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  16. Les démons et la crise du paganisme gréco-romain.Robert Turcan - 2003 - Revue de Philosophie Ancienne 21 (2):33-54.
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  17.  26
    Slaves immersed in a liberal ideology.Leslie Kim Daly - 2012 - Nursing Philosophy 13 (1):69-77.
    Paradigm debates have been featured in the nursing literature for over four decades. There are at least two opposing paradigms specific to nursing that have remained central in these debates. Advocates of the unitary perspective (or simultaneity paradigm) consider their theories to be more philosophically advanced and contemporary alternatives when compared to the older more traditional ideas characteristic of models they describe as originating from the totality paradigm. In the context of these debates, I focus on some theoretical positions embedded (...)
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  18.  86
    Slave Revolt, Deflated Self-deception.Guy Elgat - 2015 - British Journal for the History of Philosophy 23 (3):524-544.
    The problem of self-deception lies at the heart of Nietzsche's account of the slave revolt in morality in the first essay of On the Genealogy of Morals. The viability of Nietzsche's genealogy of morality is thus crucially dependent on a successful explanation of the self-deception the slaves of the first essay are caught in. But the phenomenon of self-deception is notoriously puzzling. In this paper, after critically examining existing interpretations of the slaves’ self-deception, I provide, by drawing on Alfred (...)
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  19. Slaves, Prisoners, and Republican Freedom.Fabian Wendt - 2011 - Res Publica 17 (2):175-192.
    Philip Pettit’s republican conception of freedom is presented as an alternative both to negative and positive conceptions of freedom. The basic idea is to conceptualize freedom as non-domination, not as non-interference or self-mastery. When compared to negative freedom, Pettit’s republican conception comprises two controversial claims: the claim that we are unfree if we are dominated without actual interference, and the claim that we are free if we face interference without domination. Because the slave is a widely accepted paradigm of (...)
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  20.  57
    Colonial Slave Trade and Slavery and Structural Racial Injustice in France: Using Iris Young’s Social Connection Model of Responsibility.Magali Bessone - 2019 - Critical Horizons 20 (2):161-177.
    ABSTRACTThe incorrect conceptualization and evaluation of reparations for colonial slave trade and slavery within the legal, as opposed to the political, domain, produces an interpretation of the demands in France that views them as morally absurd and politically deleterious. I’ll use Iris Marion Young’s distinction between a liability model and a social connection model of responsibility to suggest that the moral claim according to which we can be held responsible today for redressing the structural injustices inherited from slave (...)
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  21.  39
    Slaves, Fetuses, and Animals.William David Hart - 2014 - Journal of Religious Ethics 42 (4):661-690.
    This essay is an exploration in ethical rhetoric, specifically, the ethics of comparing the status of fetuses and animals to enslaved Africans. On the view of those who make such comparisons, the fetus is treated as a slave through abortion, reproductive technologies, and stem cell research, while animals are enslaved through factory farming, experimentation, and as laborers, circus performers, and the like. I explore how the apotheosis of the fetus and the humanization of animals represent the flipside of the (...)
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  22.  17
    American slave narratives as autoethnographic paradigm.Paul Richard Blum - 2021 - Human Affairs 31 (2):236-245.
    Ever since the publication of the Narrative of the life of Frederick Douglass in 1845, autobiographical testimonies were a mainstay of the abolition movement in the United States. Being or having been held as slaves and all the attendant injury is the very theme of the documents in question, which are testimonies, rather than theoretical works, because the authors maintained the first-person point of view. Since autoethnography aims at overcoming the preset mentality of the researcher in order to gain insight (...)
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  23. (1 other version)Slave morality, socrates, and the bushmen: A reading of the first essay of on the genealogy of morals.Mark Migotti - 1998 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 58 (4):745-779.
    This paper raises three questions: (1) Can Nietzsche provide a satisfactory account of how the slave revolt could have begun to "poison the consciences" of masters? (2) Does Nietzsche's affinity for "master values" preclude him from acknowledging claims of justice that rest upon a sense of equality among human beings? and (3) How does Nietzsche's story fare when looked on as (at least in part) an empirical hypothesis? The first question is answered in the affirmative, the second in the (...)
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  24.  12
    Slave and sage: remarks on the stoic handbook of Epictetus.William Ferraiolo - 2020 - Winchester, UK: O-Book.
    In Slave and Sage William Ferraiolo distills and reanimates the original spirit of Epictetus' Enchiridion for a 21st century audience, and shows how the lessons Epictetus offered are more relevant than ever to modern life. Much like the original stoics, Ferraiolo's work prides itself on a combination of erudition and accessibility, to teach and counsel every reader."--Amazon.com.
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  25.  49
    Whores, Slaves and Stallions: Languages of Exploitation and Accommodation among Boxers.LoÏc Wacquant - 2001 - Body and Society 7 (2-3):181-194.
    This article draws on 35 months of ethnographic fieldwork and apprenticeship in a boxing gym located in Chicago's black ghetto to explicate how prizefighters apperceive and express the fact of being live commodities of flesh and blood, and how they practically reconcile themselves to ruthless exploitation in ways that enable them to maintain a sense of personal integrity and moral purpose. The boxer's experience of corporeal exploitation is expressed in three kindred idioms, those of prostitution, slavery and animal husbandry. The (...)
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  26.  66
    Pierre Chuvin: Chronique des derniers païns: la disparition du paganisme dans l'Empire romain, du règne de Constantin à celui de Justinien . Pp. 350. Paris: Les Belles Lettres/Fayard, 1991. Paper, 145 FF. [REVIEW]Michael Whitby - 1992 - The Classical Review 42 (2):471-471.
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  27.  94
    Ascetic Slaves: Rereading Nietzsche's On the Genealogy of Morals.Iain Morrisson - 1966 - Journal of Nietzsche Studies 45 (3):230-257.
    ABSTRACT Most Nietzsche scholars read the third essay of On the Genealogy of Morals as an account of the development of Christian asceticism after the slave revolution in morals. In this article, I argue that that is a misreading of Nietzsche's argument, the consequence of which is a failure to understand Nietzsche's treatment of the transition from noble morality to slave morality. I contend that we can track this transition only once we understand the role of the ascetic (...)
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  28.  38
    The Slaves and the Generals of Arginusae.Peter Hunt - 2001 - American Journal of Philology 122 (3):359-380.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:The Slaves and the Generals of ArginusaePeter HuntIn the second half of 406 B.C. the Athenians made two shocking decisions. They freed the slaves who had fought in the battle of Arginusae and gave them citizenship, and they condemned to death their victorious generals. I suggest that these two events were related. Specifically, I would like to argue, first, that the competition for rowers to man the huge navies (...)
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  29.  34
    Slave Self-Activity and the Bourgeois Revolution in the United States: Jubilee and the Boundaries of Black Freedom.Brian Kelly - 2019 - Historical Materialism 27 (3):31-76.
    For more than a generation, historical interpretations of emancipation in the United States have acknowledged that the slaves played a central role in driving that process forward. This is a critically important advance, and one worth defending. But it is also a perspective whose influence seems increasingly precarious. This article explores the complex relationship between the slaves’ ‘revolution from below’ and the bourgeois revolution directed from above, in part through an appraisal of W.E.B. Du Bois’s argument about the ‘slaves’ general (...)
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  30.  16
    The slave/master opposition as the driving force of history by Hegel, Kojève, Lacan.И. В Диль - 2024 - Philosophy Journal 17 (2):51-64.
    The subject of this paper is the comparison of the master-slave dialectic with the Marxist concept of class struggle. The master-slave dialectic is presented not only in its source – Hegel’s Phenomenology of Spirit – but also in its reception by later authors: Alexander Kojève and Jacques Lacan. Alexandre Kojève focuses on the resolution of the antago­nism between slave and master in Empire, the society of the Citizen, by which history ends. Lacan proposes considering this theoretical construct (...)
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  31.  24
    Slaves to Fashion?Lauren Ashwell & Rae Langton - 2011 - In Fritz Allhoff, Jessica Wolfendale & Jeanette Kennett (eds.), Fashion - Philosophy for Everyone: Thinking with Style. Wiley. pp. 135–150.
    This chapter contains sections titled: Objectification Physical Bonds? Moral Bonds? Epistemological Bonds? The Upshot.
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  32.  55
    Slave Emotion. Anger, Reason and Moral Responsibility in Aristotelian Ethics.Esteban Bieda - 2023 - Archai: Revista de Estudos Sobre as Origens Do Pensamento Ocidental 33:03322-03322.
    In the present work, I will review how Aristotle understood the connection between reason and emotion - particularly, angry actions - in order to demonstrate that it is due to the presence of intellectual factors that emotions become ethically relevant and not merely an uncontrolled reaction. Then, I will summarize Aristotle's repeated analogies between reason as the master and anger as the slave to explain their connection. My specific contribution to the topic will be to reverse this analogy and, (...)
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  33.  51
    Slave Narratives and Epistemic Injustice.Kevin M. Graham, Anaja Arthur, Hannah Frazer, Ali Griswold, Emma Kitteringham, Quinlyn Klade & Jaliya Nagahawatte - 2022 - Social Philosophy Today 38:83-97.
    Epistemic injustice is defined by Miranda Fricker as injustice done to people specifically in their capacities as knowers. Fricker argues that this injustice can be either testimonial or hermeneutical in character. A hearer commits testimonial injustice against a speaker by assigning unfairly little credibility to the speaker’s testimony. Hermeneutical injustice exists in a society when the society lacks the concepts necessary for members of a group to understand their social experiences. We argue that epistemic injustice is necessary to permit the (...)
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  34. Slave, Sister, Sexborg, Sphinx: Feminine Figurations in Nick Land's Philosophy.Vincent Le - 2019 - Hypatia 34 (2):329-347.
    Given that Nick Land is one of the central influences on certain strands of accelerationism, xenofeminism, and inhumanism, it is important to understand how he himself first developed and deployed the concepts of acceleration, the feminine, and the inhuman, which others would go on to appropriate for their own purposes. This article will trace the four feminine figures throughout Land's philosophical trajectory, which he sees as agents for accelerating the transcendental critique of both anthropocentrism and phallocentrism: the slave turned (...)
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  35. Slaves of the Passions (review). [REVIEW]Melissa Barry - 2010 - Hume Studies 36 (2):225-228.
    In Slaves of the Passions, Mark Schroeder provides a systematic, rigorously argued defense of a Humean theory of reasons for action, taking pains to respond to influential objections to the view. While inspired by Hume, Schroeder makes it clear that he aims to develop a Humean theory, not necessarily one that Hume himself embraced, and for this reason little is said about Hume in the book. One respect in which Schroeder takes himself to be departing from Hume is in developing (...)
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  36.  58
    Slaves in Plato's laws.Amir Meital & Joseph Agassi - 2007 - Philosophy of the Social Sciences 37 (3):315-347.
    Tel-Aviv University and York University, Toronto Plato suggested ways to regulate and integrate slaves within the legal system of his Utopian Cretan polis Magnesia as described in his work, Laws . This text alone invalidates most criticism of Popper's presentation of Plato's political views. His 50-year-old reading of Plato fits the text better than any other. To preserve the noble tradition of classical scholarship, classical scholars should acknowledge explicitly that he was correct, and that by now they have surreptitiously incorporated (...)
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  37. The Slave Trade and Development.Claude Meillassoux - 1997 - Diogenes 45 (179):23-29.
    When Captain Binger traveled the Niger bend between 1887 and 1889, he saw numerous villages that had been drained of their lifeblood or left in ruins by violent conflicts that had left their mark in the form of fortifications. Above all he was struck by the region's depopulation, which threatened to compromise the potential for colonial exploitation of the country. But these conditions did not prevail throughout the entire area. Prosperous towns were engaged in trade, war parties were living in (...)
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  38.  23
    Master—Slave.Janusz Dobieszewski - 2016 - Dialogue and Universalism 26 (2):141-147.
    The article concerns the problem of master and slave in Hegel’s Phenomenology of Spirit. Then I compare this problem with the issues discussed in the Hegel, Haiti and Universal History, an interesting book by Susan Buck-Morss, published in 2009.
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  39.  18
    Slaves, stories, and cults.Sara Forsdyke - 2015 - Common Knowledge 21 (1):19-43.
    This article examines a dramatic story about a slave rebellion on the island of Chios and argues that such stories were the medium through which masters and slaves negotiated compromise between the slaves' desire to be free and the masters' desire to control their slaves. This interpretation arises from a recognition of the complexity of a story that on the one hand celebrates the triumphs of a heroic slave over his masters, but on the other hand suggests that (...)
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  40.  2
    The Slave in Legal and Political Philosophy: Agamben and his Interlocutors.Tom Frost - 2025 - New York: Routledge.
    This book explores how the figure of the slave has been used to construct ideas of freedom in Western political and legal philosophy. The figure of the slave has supported philosophical and legal defences of colonialism, coloniality and the supremacy of the white subject. Yet for Giorgio Agamben, the slave stands (almost counterintuitively) as an exemplar of a potential form of future positive political existence. Developing this line of thought, the book reads key thinkers Agamben engages with (...)
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  41.  64
    Heterogeneities, slave-princes, and Marshall plans: Schmitt's reception in Hegel's france*: Stefanos geroulanos.Stefanos Geroulanos - 2011 - Modern Intellectual History 8 (3):531-560.
    This essay examines the French reception of the Carl Schmitt's thought, specifically its Hegelian strand. Beginning with the early readings of Schmitt's thought by Alexandre Kojève and Georges Bataille during the mid-1930s, it attends to the partial adoption of Schmitt's friend/enemy distinction and his theories of sovereignty and neutralization in Kojève and Bataille's Hegelian writings, as well as to their critical responses. The essay then turns to examine the reading of Kojève by the Jesuit Hegelian résistant Gaston Fessard during the (...)
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  42.  78
    Slave-Boson Mean-Field Theory of Spin- and Orbital- Ordered States in the Degenerate Hubbard Model.Hideo Hasegawa - 2000 - Foundations of Physics 30 (12):2061-2078.
    The mean-field theory with the use of the slave-boson functional method has been generalized to take account of the spin- and/or orbital-ordered state in the doubly degenerate Hubbard model. Numerical calculations are presented of the antiferromagnetic orbital-ordered state in the half-filled simple-cubic model. The orbital order in the present theory is much reduced compared with that in the Hartree–Fock approximation because of the large orbital fluctuations. From a comparison of the ground-state energy, the antiferromagnetic orbital state is shown to (...)
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  43.  75
    European Slave Trading in the Eighteenth Century.Jean-Michel Deveau - 1997 - Diogenes 45 (179):49-74.
    The history of the African slave trade, despite its importance and role in world development, was not scientifically studied until 1930, and even since then few books and papers have been devoted to the subject. Beginning in the nineteenth century, however, this history has been the focus of sensational publications that underline and broadly interpret a smattering of highly emotional events. A conspiracy of silence cloaks the subject, as though shame still weighs upon the shoulders of Western society. In (...)
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  44.  32
    Master, Slave and Merciless Struggle.Kate Kirkpatrick - 2019 - Sartre Studies International 25 (1):22-34.
    In his biography of Jean Genet, Sartre says his aim is ‘to demonstrate that freedom alone can account for a person in his totality’. Building on my reading of Being and Nothingness in Sartre on Sin, I examine the compatibility of Sartrean freedom and love in Saint Genet. Sartre’s account of Genet’s person is largely a loveless one in which there is no reciprocity, others are ‘empty shells’ and love is ‘only the lofty name which [Genet] gives to onanism’. I (...)
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  45.  19
    Public Slaves in Rome: ‘Privileged’ or Not?Franco Luciani - 2020 - Classical Quarterly 70 (1):368-384.
    In the Roman world, slavery played a crucial role. Besides private slaves, owned by individual masters, and—from the beginning of the Principate—imperial slaves, who were the property of the emperors, there were also the so-called public slaves: non-free individuals who were owned by a community, such as the Roman people as a whole in Rome (serui publici populi Romani), or the citizen body of a colony or a municipium in Italy or in the provinces (serui ciuitatum). Public slaves in Rome (...)
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  46.  26
    From slave revolts to social death.Renisa Mawani - 2019 - Theory and Society 48 (6):835-849.
    In this article, I situate Orlando Patterson’s magnum opus, Slavery and Social Death alongside his earlier writings on slavery and slave revolts in Jamaica. To appreciate fully Patterson’s contributions to sociology, comparative historical sociology, and the wider literature on slavery, readers must engage with the full corpus of his scholarly production. By reading his body of work all together, as part of a much larger whole, social death may take on new angles, depths, and dimensions. Patterson’s previous work on (...)
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  47. God, Slave and a Nun: A Case from Late Medieval Cyprus.Petra Melichar - 2009 - Byzantion 79:280-291.
    A draft of a will takes us back to the fifteenth century Cyprus introducing a strange case : a nun as an owner of a slave woman of foreign origin. While attempting to reconstruct the identities and circumstances of the two women, the primary sources offer a glimpse of the late medieval eastern Mediterranean with its quickly changing boundaries, multicultural context and complex interpersonal relationships.
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  48.  51
    Slave Religiosity in the Roman Middle Republic.Dan-el Padilla Peralta - 2017 - Classical Antiquity 36 (2):317-369.
    This article proposes a new interpretation of slave religious experience in mid-republican Rome. Select passages from Plautine comedy and Cato the Elder's De agri cultura are paired with material culture as well as comparative evidence—mostly from studies of Black Atlantic slave religions—to reconstruct select aspects of a specific and distinctive slave “religiosity” in the era of large-scale enslavements. I work towards this reconstruction first by considering the subordination of slaves as religious agents before turning to slaves’ practice (...)
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  49.  24
    Muslim Slaves and Freedmen in Medieval Portugal.François Soyer - 2007 - Al-Qantara 28 (2):489-516.
    El estudio de la esclavitud en el Portugal medieval ha sido dominado por estudios sobre los esclavos oriundos del África subsahariana que comenzaron a ser importados en aquel reino desde 1441. La obra de A. C. de C. M. Saunders, A Social History of Black Slaves and Freedmen in Portugal 1441-1555 (Cambridge University Press, 1982) ha sido particularmente importante a este respecto. En contraste con esta situación, se sabe relativamente poco de los esclavos musulmanes en el reino medieval de Portugal. (...)
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  50.  93
    Slaves and Citizens.Stephen R. L. Clark - 1985 - Philosophy 60 (231):27-.
    R. M. Hare has argued 1 that there are conceivable circumstances in which it would be right not to abolish the institution of slavery: in the imaginary land of Juba established slave-plantations are managed by a benevolent elite for the good of all, no ‘cruel or unusual ’ punishments are in use, and citizens of the neighbouring island of Camaica, ‘free ’but impoverished, regularly seek to become slaves. Hare adds that it is unlikely, given human nature, that ‘masters ’would (...)
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