Archiv für Februar 2016

EU Diplomacy and the EU–China strategic relationship: framing, negotiation and management

10.1080/09557571.2015.1118999<br/>Michael Smith

The functions of ‘strategic partnership’ in European Union foreign policy discourse

10.1080/09557571.2015.1126055<br/>Luis Fernando Blanco

War, education and state formation: problems of territorial and political integration in the United States, 1848–1912

10.1080/00309230.2015.1133672<br/>Nancy Beadie

MERCOSUR and the Brazilian Leadership Challenge in the Era of Chinese Growth: A Uruguayan Foreign Policy Perspective

Journal Name: New Global StudiesVolume: 10Issue: 1Pages: 1-25

Energy Security and Germany’s Response to Russian Revisionism: The Dangers of Civilian Power

10.1080/09644008.2015.1133607<br/>Tom Dyson

Rosenzweig’s Jesus (God, Corpse, Survivor)

<span class=“paragraphSection“>What, if anything, does Franz Rosenzweig have to say about survival? Does the question play a structural role in the architecture of the <span style=“font-style:italic;“>The Star of Redemption</span> (1921)? And, if so, how might Rosenzweig’s perspective contribute to contemporary debates about survival and the figure of the survivor? Beginning with a comparative look at Giorgio Agamben’s <span style=“font-style:italic;“>Remnants of Auschwitz</span> (1998), this paper argues that Rosenzweig’s <span style=“font-style:italic;“>Star</span> provides a theological corrective and supplement to the biopolitical genealogy of survival. Rosenzweig does not stage survival as a particularly Jewish question but instead offers an important lesson in the distinctively Christian history of survival as a theological-political predicament—one that captures within its categorical boundaries a certain anthropological paradox, a fluctuating antipodal movement that swings between the heights of the divine and the depths of the corpse. Through this figuration, Rosenzweig does nothing less than develop an image of human subjectivity as a legacy of <span style=“font-style:italic;“>imitatio Christi</span>. This is Rosenzweig’s Jesus.</span>

Plus ça change: trade unions, the military and politics in Burkina Faso, 1966 and 2014

10.1080/0023656X.2016.1140701<br/>Craig Phelan

HIS volume 59 issue 1 Cover and Back matter

Miscellaneous The Historical Journal, Volume 59 Issue 01, pp b1-b4Abstract

HIS volume 59 issue 1 Cover and Front matter

Miscellaneous The Historical Journal, Volume 59 Issue 01, pp f1-f3Abstract

THE RHINE EXODUS OF 1816/1817 WITHIN THE DEVELOPING GERMAN ATLANTIC WORLD

Research Articles JAMES BOYD, The Historical Journal, Volume 59 Issue 01, pp 99-123Abstract