There's a few articles I want off JSTOR so would anyone have a login I could borrow? Or can I post the links and get someone to grab the articles for me? Cheers.
Think someone's managed to get them. About the torrent, it's science papers I think and no one's been able to sort out a list to search though, so you'd have to download 30 gigs of stuff or sift through each file to find what you want.
I have a question about jstor.. I am trying to access it through my university's ip and still can't download the article I really need (it says that I should pay). Is it possible or am I doing something wrong?
Not all universities have access to all journals, articles, and years. I often run into this. You might try posting the URL of the article here – if it's something related to libcom, someone with the appropriate access rights could get it for you
Interested in this article:
Thomas T. Sekine The Necessity of the Law of Value
Science & Society
Vol. 44, No. 3 (Fall, 1980),
pp. 289-304
Also, if anyone got anything, looking for everything I can find by Kozo Uno and T. Sekine, their stuff is omg hard to find and not even my uni library got anything. :(
Ken Kubota: "Die dialektische Darstellung des allgemeinen Begriffs des Kapitals im Lichte der Philosophie Hegels". In: [i]Beiträge zur Marx-Engels-Forschung. Neue Folge 2009. Quellen- und Kapital-Interpretation – Manifest-Rezeption – Erinnerungen. Hamburg, Argument Verlag 2010.
It has a very interesting comparison of Rubin, Backhaus, Reichelt, Uno and Sekine.
Should be in a university library in Germany, I reckon. (I bought it though so if you don't find it I can add it to my scanning list.)
I find myself interested in the Japanese school lately as they seem to have developed a more rigorous (and mathematical) understanding of Marxian economics (though apparently a lot of it is lost either in dialectical or 'orthodox economist' bullshit). They seem to be a more reputable alternative to Analytic Marxism (which failed horribly) but to me it seems like they have constructed a new political economy out of Marx instead of pursuing his original agenda; overcoming capitalism.
Thanks for the recommendation on Kubota, my library got it so maybe I'll snipe this for digital publication - by the way Hilferding's Finanzkapital is coming along rather nicely but looking back at my earlier digitalizations like the first chapters of Rubin's essays I must have been drunk because the layout looks like ass...)
Due to the lack of translations and the difficult access to those that exist, I know next to nothing about Japanese marxism. But apparently the Unoist school arrived at many of the conclusions of the "neue Marx-Lektuere" independently and sooner (after WW2). Kubota shows this in that article. (BTW, all of the volumes of "Neue Folge" are worth checking out. In that particular volume I cited, there's a fascinating article on the importance of Adam Ferguson to Marx, written by Danga Vileisis, as well as a great article by Dieter Wolf on the method of proceeding from the abstract to the concrete.)
On the other hand, and similarly to Backhaus and Reichelt, they seem to have taken some of those conclusions to the extreme (in my view). Following Uno, Kubota argues, for example, that from a methodological point of view the introduction of the concept of value in the first chapter is premature and wrong (kind of like, IIRC, Reichelt's insistence on reconstruting the first three chapter on the concept of "validity", Geltung).
There are some interesting translations of Japanese works here: http://www.marxists.org/subject/japan/index.htm. Kozo Uno ain't there, but IIRC some of the texts by Samezo Kuruma are responses to Uno.
Also, for a general overview of Japanese marxism from the point of view of contemporary discussions, check out Jan Hoff's Marx global (there's a 20-page subsection on Japan). A useful book in itself BTW.
By the way, and sorry if it's offtopic to the original issue, but I just looked up the Japanese Marxist stuff on zbw.eu (the Deutsche Zentralbibliothek für Wirtschaftswissenschaften) which is located in the same city as my uni and supposedly one of the biggest libraries for economic writings.
And I was overwhelmed to see that they actually do have writings by Kozo Uno, T Sekine and Okishio (like, everything dude)! Considering Marxist economists are a fringe niche in the landscape of German economics, it's surprising to see the ZBW actually sports a huge library of socialist literature.
So once the first round of exams is over for me (last one on July 6) I'll go on a bit of a scanning binge starting with Kozo Uno's Principles of Political Economy.
This will be a glorious victory for the proletariat, comrades.
(As a bit of a side-side issue, have you ever picked up a book to find out it's not "what it says on the tin"? Yesterday I picked up Marxistische Wirtschaftstheorie by M. Burchardt thinking it would be kinda like Mandel's book but no... it was written by a professor of the bourgeois science trying to disprove Marx's value theory... of course he went all out with stuff like the guy dying of thirst in the sahara and the "utility of a glass of water" and the transformation problem and shit like that... it's astonishing to see how someone who has apparently read so much Marx (not just him, but also Hilferding, Mandel, Luxemburg, etc pp) understands absolutely nothing of it. If I had to compare it to languages, it was like he took a dictionary, and thought he learned a language. The section on dialectic is especially funny because the guy knows absolutely nothing about it)
Please can someone be so kind as to send me (any of) these?
- William Morris' Review of Bellamy's Looking Backward,
Larry D. Lutchmansingh, Utopian Studies, No. 4 (1991), pp. 1-5
- Sexual Harassment in the Nineteenth Century English Cotton Industry, Jan Lambertz, History Workshop,
No. 19 (Spring, 1985), pp. 29-61
- "A Receptacle for Papists and an Assilum": Catholicism and Disorder in Late Seventeenth-Century Wigan, Michael Mullett, The Catholic Historical Review, Vol. 73, No. 3 (Jul., 1987), pp. 391-407
- Tenant Mobilization and the 1907 Rent Strike in Buenos Aires, James A. Baer, The Americas, Vol. 49, No. 3 (Jan., 1993), pp. 343-368
- "El sainete porteño" and Argentine Reality: The Tenant Strike of 1907, Donald S. Castro, Rocky Mountain Review of Language and Literature, Vol. 44, No. 1/2 (1990), pp. 51-68
- Harlem's Rent Strike and Rat War: Representation, Housing Access and Tenant Resistance in New York, 1958-1964, Mandi Isaacs Jackson, American Studies,
Vol. 47, No. 1 (Spring 2006), pp. 53-79
- Rent Boycotts, the State, and the Transformation of the Urban Political Economy in South Africa,
Matthew Chaskalson, Karen Jochelson and Jeremy Seekings, Review of African Political Economy, No. 40, Southern Africa: The Crisis Continues (Dec., 1987), pp. 47-64
Hi, I'm wondering if someone can help me, I'm trying to get the following http://www.jstor.org/stable/20342603 article.
Unfortunately my university login doesn't give access to it, and I can't find it anywhere.
Can anyone help me find the article in the link below? I've exhausted all of the databases I have access to and I couldn't get a hold of it. Pretty please? :mrt:
Would appreciate getting this. It's on SAGE not JSTOR.
The Today programme and the banking crisis, Journalism magazine (SAGE Journals):
http://jou.sagepub.com/content/early/2012/09/25/1464884912458654.full.pdf
Just heard the sad news that Aaron Swartz committed suicide on Friday. His family said "Aaron's death is not simply a personal tragedy. It is the product of a criminal justice system rife with intimidation and prosecutorial overreach. Decisions made by officials in the Massachusetts US Attorney's office and at MIT contributed to his death. The US Attorney's office pursued an exceptionally harsh array of charges, carrying potentially over 30 years in prison, to punish an alleged crime that had no victims. Meanwhile, unlike JSTOR, MIT refused to stand up for Aaron and its own community's most cherished principles."
I checked the article about the relationship between the german "neue marxlektüre"
and japanese marxismo of the kozo uno-school some of you were talking.
if I understood well, the basic point is that they agree in that there is a logical problem
with Marx's derivation of "value/abstract labour" as the third thing behind exchange value, anticipating
determinations which are not proper of the commodity form.
now I agree with this point, and it does not seems to me really a big finding (Marx gives us a hint
talking about exchange values that have not been produced, eg, that are not really values.
nevertheless, it is possible to think that marx is not analyzing a "pure commodity form", but the commodity which contains some determinations of the capitalist production.
I would like to know whether someone can give me a short explication of the political consequences of this finding. does this mean that there is the possibility of de-linking commodity production from the "capital-form"?
On the other hand, does anybody have a digital version of kozo uno's, or t. sekines books?
finally, the mentioned article seems to argue that the "neue marx lektüre" and the uno-school were the only ones who tried a reconstruction of the logic of capital that considers the problematic introduction of value in das kapital. I once studied some semesters with Pablo Levin, at the economic faculty of the university of Buenos Aires, and it seems to me that he is engaged in a similar search. for those who read spanish, consider to check the page of the institute where he is working: http://www.econ.uba.ar/www/institutos/economia/Ceplad/libros.htm
Steven, GoHabsGo - the '19th century muslim anarchists'' article is here:
http://www.hs.ias.edu/files/Crone_Articles/Crone_Ninth_Century_Muslim_Anarchists.pdf
Sorry, but does anyone have access to "Minorities at large: New approaches to minority ethnicity in Vietnam" (apparently I don't have access for the content of the Journal of Vietnamese Studies before 2010...)
Don't know which is the best JSTOR thread to use, so I'm using this one.
I'm looking for an article called "Toilets of the Gods". It's not political at all, actually, and I think it might be slightly tongue-in-cheek. I'm not really sure whether it's an academic article or not, but I can't seem to find it freely online anywhere.
So, if any of you fine JSTOR-accessing folks want to do a little search for me, that'd be awesome.
Not jstor, but there's an article on academia edu about cosmopolitanism among workers in the uk fishing industry. I lost it and was hoping a kind soul could find it.... it's free/you don't need special access.
Wojtek, is it this one? If it is, please let me know and I can send it to you.
Penny McCall Howard
This article examines the “power and the pain of class relations“ (Ortner 2006) through the experience of Scottish men working in the global shipping, offshore oil, and fishing industries: industries in which the nationality of workers has changed significantly since the 1980s. It combines recent anthropological literature on subjectivity and cosmopolitanism with a Marxist understanding of class as generated through differing relationships to production. The article describes how British seafarers have experienced the cosmopolitanization of their workplaces, as workers from Portugal, Eastern Europe, and the Philippines have been recruited by employers in order to reduce wages, working conditions, and trade union organization. Drawing on Therborn (1980), it concludes that the experiences gained through this process have led to the development of multiple and often contradictory subjectivities, which people draw on as they choose how to act in moments of crisis, and as they imagine possible futures.
It was a female anthtopologist so i think so. no need to send me it, but thank you. :)
http://www.academia.edu/1773091/Workplace_cosmopolitanization_and_the_power_and_pain_of_class_relations_at_sea
If nobody has found it for you in a couple of days, bump this thread and I'll check if I can get it. Traveling at the moment otherwise I'd checked right away.
I can do it brah, what d'ya
I can do it brah, what d'ya need?
Yo, wojtek, I've got a
Yo, wojtek, I've got a shedload of jstor requests for libcom.. is it cool to send you them?
Yep, just PM me your email
Yep, just PM me your email address and what articles you want and I'll send them to you. x
I can also snag some articles
I can also snag some articles off Jstor while I am at school (which I am currently). So if you want to divide the workload given to Wojtek PM me.
I can also get stuff off of
I can also get stuff off of JSTOR
Hieronymous was kind enough
Hieronymous was kind enough to have a look for me but they were locked for him as they were Irish articles.
http://www.jstor.org/stable/20496124
http://www.jstor.org/stable/20720147
http://www.jstor.org/stable/25506105
http://www.jstor.org/stable/30005376
http://www.jstor.org/stable/20496176
you could always try the
you could always try the piratebay file where that dude took most of Jstor and stuck it online for free.
personally, i'd be careful
personally, i'd be careful about this. They aren't some left book publisher.
You could get into some
You could get into some serious shit for sharing a login. It's harder for them to do anything about it if you save the file and email it.
i wouldn't share a login
i wouldn't share a login anyway, daft
just email the files or download the 20000 jstor articles from piratebay and see if they're in the file first
Think someone's managed to
Think someone's managed to get them. About the torrent, it's science papers I think and no one's been able to sort out a list to search though, so you'd have to download 30 gigs of stuff or sift through each file to find what you want.
ah right, thought they'd at
ah right, thought they'd at least be easily searchable, unfortunate
I have a question about
I have a question about jstor.. I am trying to access it through my university's ip and still can't download the article I really need (it says that I should pay). Is it possible or am I doing something wrong?
Thanks!
Not all universities have
Not all universities have access to all journals, articles, and years. I often run into this. You might try posting the URL of the article here – if it's something related to libcom, someone with the appropriate access rights could get it for you
in light of the above can
in light of the above can anyone help me out with a copy of this essay?
http://www.jstor.org/stable/40403155
It's Costas Lapavitsas' "Theory of Credit Money"
Any help would be appreciated!
flaneur, did you get those
flaneur, did you get those Irish articles?
andy g, I know it's just a bit late but I couldn't access Costas Lapavitsas' essay. I don't think you can purchase it either... :(
I sent flan the articles.
I sent flan the articles. Andy I can see if I have access if you still need it.
Would be great if you could,
Would be great if you could, Khawaga.
Cheers, comrade
shute, my uni's only got
shute, my uni's only got access to that journal from 1994 onwards and the article's from 1991. sorry andy g.
no worries, Khawaga, thanks
no worries, Khawaga, thanks for looking.
A fellow libcommer has forwarded the article to me now - result!
Could someone get hold of
Could someone get hold of this?
Edward Andrew: Class in Itself and Class Against Capital: Karl Marx and His Classifiers, Canadian Journal of Political Science, 1983, vol. 16, no. 3, pp. 577-584.
PM me your email and I'll
PM me your email and I'll send it to you.
PM me your e-mail addy Jura.
PM me your e-mail addy Jura.
I sent the pdf of the article
I sent the pdf of the article to his e-mail.
Thanks to everyone, got it
Thanks to everyone, got it now – multiple times! :)
Interested in this
Interested in this article:
Thomas T. Sekine
The Necessity of the Law of Value
Science & Society
Vol. 44, No. 3 (Fall, 1980),
pp. 289-304
Also, if anyone got anything, looking for everything I can find by Kozo Uno and T. Sekine, their stuff is omg hard to find and not even my uni library got anything. :(
IIRC this is mostly from
IIRC this is mostly from Capital & Class. Don't have time to paste the proper titles right now, sorry :).
- Albritton-Dialectic_of_Capital_Jap_Contribution.pdf
- Clarke_on_Makoto_Itoh.pdf
- Itoh-Great_World_Crisis_Jap_Capitalism.pdf
- Itoh-Inflational_Crisis.pdf
- Itoh-Money_Credit_Soc_Economies.pdf
- Itoh-Skilled_Labour.pdf
https://rapidshare.com/files/2848386493/unoistas.zip
Mirrors:
http://depositfiles.com/files/7xvdhm6az
http://ifile.it/vu67i2s
You should also check out:
Ken Kubota: "Die dialektische Darstellung des allgemeinen Begriffs des Kapitals im Lichte der Philosophie Hegels". In: [i]Beiträge zur Marx-Engels-Forschung. Neue Folge 2009. Quellen- und Kapital-Interpretation – Manifest-Rezeption – Erinnerungen. Hamburg, Argument Verlag 2010.
It has a very interesting comparison of Rubin, Backhaus, Reichelt, Uno and Sekine.
Should be in a university library in Germany, I reckon. (I bought it though so if you don't find it I can add it to my scanning list.)
Thanks a lot Jura! I find
Thanks a lot Jura!
I find myself interested in the Japanese school lately as they seem to have developed a more rigorous (and mathematical) understanding of Marxian economics (though apparently a lot of it is lost either in dialectical or 'orthodox economist' bullshit). They seem to be a more reputable alternative to Analytic Marxism (which failed horribly) but to me it seems like they have constructed a new political economy out of Marx instead of pursuing his original agenda; overcoming capitalism.
Thanks for the recommendation on Kubota, my library got it so maybe I'll snipe this for digital publication - by the way Hilferding's Finanzkapital is coming along rather nicely but looking back at my earlier digitalizations like the first chapters of Rubin's essays I must have been drunk because the layout looks like ass...)
Due to the lack of
Due to the lack of translations and the difficult access to those that exist, I know next to nothing about Japanese marxism. But apparently the Unoist school arrived at many of the conclusions of the "neue Marx-Lektuere" independently and sooner (after WW2). Kubota shows this in that article. (BTW, all of the volumes of "Neue Folge" are worth checking out. In that particular volume I cited, there's a fascinating article on the importance of Adam Ferguson to Marx, written by Danga Vileisis, as well as a great article by Dieter Wolf on the method of proceeding from the abstract to the concrete.)
On the other hand, and similarly to Backhaus and Reichelt, they seem to have taken some of those conclusions to the extreme (in my view). Following Uno, Kubota argues, for example, that from a methodological point of view the introduction of the concept of value in the first chapter is premature and wrong (kind of like, IIRC, Reichelt's insistence on reconstruting the first three chapter on the concept of "validity", Geltung).
There are some interesting translations of Japanese works here: http://www.marxists.org/subject/japan/index.htm. Kozo Uno ain't there, but IIRC some of the texts by Samezo Kuruma are responses to Uno.
Also, for a general overview
Also, for a general overview of Japanese marxism from the point of view of contemporary discussions, check out Jan Hoff's Marx global (there's a 20-page subsection on Japan). A useful book in itself BTW.
By the way, and sorry if it's
By the way, and sorry if it's offtopic to the original issue, but I just looked up the Japanese Marxist stuff on zbw.eu (the Deutsche Zentralbibliothek für Wirtschaftswissenschaften) which is located in the same city as my uni and supposedly one of the biggest libraries for economic writings.
And I was overwhelmed to see that they actually do have writings by Kozo Uno, T Sekine and Okishio (like, everything dude)! Considering Marxist economists are a fringe niche in the landscape of German economics, it's surprising to see the ZBW actually sports a huge library of socialist literature.
So once the first round of exams is over for me (last one on July 6) I'll go on a bit of a scanning binge starting with Kozo Uno's Principles of Political Economy.
This will be a glorious victory for the proletariat, comrades.
(As a bit of a side-side issue, have you ever picked up a book to find out it's not "what it says on the tin"? Yesterday I picked up Marxistische Wirtschaftstheorie by M. Burchardt thinking it would be kinda like Mandel's book but no... it was written by a professor of the bourgeois science trying to disprove Marx's value theory... of course he went all out with stuff like the guy dying of thirst in the sahara and the "utility of a glass of water" and the transformation problem and shit like that... it's astonishing to see how someone who has apparently read so much Marx (not just him, but also Hilferding, Mandel, Luxemburg, etc pp) understands absolutely nothing of it. If I had to compare it to languages, it was like he took a dictionary, and thought he learned a language. The section on dialectic is especially funny because the guy knows absolutely nothing about it)
Railyon, looks like you're in
Railyon, looks like you're in for a nice and productive holiday this summer :).
Please can someone be so kind
Please can someone be so kind as to send me (any of) these?
- William Morris' Review of Bellamy's Looking Backward,
Larry D. Lutchmansingh, Utopian Studies, No. 4 (1991), pp. 1-5
- Sexual Harassment in the Nineteenth Century English Cotton Industry, Jan Lambertz, History Workshop,
No. 19 (Spring, 1985), pp. 29-61
- "A Receptacle for Papists and an Assilum": Catholicism and Disorder in Late Seventeenth-Century Wigan, Michael Mullett, The Catholic Historical Review, Vol. 73, No. 3 (Jul., 1987), pp. 391-407
- Tenant Mobilization and the 1907 Rent Strike in Buenos Aires, James A. Baer, The Americas, Vol. 49, No. 3 (Jan., 1993), pp. 343-368
- "El sainete porteño" and Argentine Reality: The Tenant Strike of 1907, Donald S. Castro, Rocky Mountain Review of Language and Literature, Vol. 44, No. 1/2 (1990), pp. 51-68
- Harlem's Rent Strike and Rat War: Representation, Housing Access and Tenant Resistance in New York, 1958-1964, Mandi Isaacs Jackson, American Studies,
Vol. 47, No. 1 (Spring 2006), pp. 53-79
- Rent Boycotts, the State, and the Transformation of the Urban Political Economy in South Africa,
Matthew Chaskalson, Karen Jochelson and Jeremy Seekings, Review of African Political Economy, No. 40, Southern Africa: The Crisis Continues (Dec., 1987), pp. 47-64
x
I've got them all now,
I've got them all now, thanks.
damn, those look interesting
damn, those look interesting Django.
I miss working in libraries, I could get everything.
The New York City Rent
The New York City Rent Strikes of 1963-1964, Joel Schwartz, Social Service Review, Vol. 57, No. 4 (Dec., 1983), pp. 545-564
Last one I promise! ;)
jef, did you mean me? I'll send you them if you want them...
wojtek wrote: jef, did you
wojtek
Yes I did, I'll pm you my email
Hi, I'm wondering if someone
Hi, I'm wondering if someone can help me, I'm trying to get the following http://www.jstor.org/stable/20342603 article.
Unfortunately my university login doesn't give access to it, and I can't find it anywhere.
Can anyone help me find the
Can anyone help me find the article in the link below? I've exhausted all of the databases I have access to and I couldn't get a hold of it. Pretty please? :mrt:
http://www.jstor.org/discover/10.2307/192235?uid=3739864&uid=2129&uid=2&uid=70&uid=4&uid=3739256&sid=21101472235857
http://s000.tinyupload.com/?f
http://s000.tinyupload.com/?file_id=02336427635383481247
http://s000.tinyupload.com/?file_id=07395153082576589671
both articles right here
EDIT: Sorted, thanks
EDIT: Sorted, thanks Hieronymous
Hello,
Is anyone able to get me Zachary Lockman's "The Left in Israel: Zionism vs. Socialism"?
http://www.jstor.org/stable/3011124
Hello, Would appreciate
Hello,
Would appreciate getting this. It's on SAGE not JSTOR.
The Today programme and the banking crisis, Journalism magazine (SAGE Journals):
http://jou.sagepub.com/content/early/2012/09/25/1464884912458654.full.pdf
hi I scanned the Kubota paper
hi
I scanned the Kubota paper you talked:
http://www.file-upload.net/download-7018882/ken-kubota.pdf.html
hope it works
Thanks, elsalinerito, it
Thanks, elsalinerito, it works. The paper is very well worth a read.
Hi Here are the articles
Hi
Here are the articles bazquux asked for.
http://www.file-upload.net/download-7024694/left-in-israel.pdf.html
http://www.file-upload.net/download-7024689/today-program.pdf.html
Could anyone get me this
Could anyone get me this article?
http://www.jstor.org/discover/10.2307/651252?uid=3737968&uid=2&uid=4&sid=21101506027883
elsalinerito: TYVM Just heard
elsalinerito: TYVM
Just heard the sad news that Aaron Swartz committed suicide on Friday. His family said "Aaron's death is not simply a personal tragedy. It is the product of a criminal justice system rife with intimidation and prosecutorial overreach. Decisions made by officials in the Massachusetts US Attorney's office and at MIT contributed to his death. The US Attorney's office pursued an exceptionally harsh array of charges, carrying potentially over 30 years in prison, to punish an alleged crime that had no victims. Meanwhile, unlike JSTOR, MIT refused to stand up for Aaron and its own community's most cherished principles."
Hi I checked the article
Hi
I checked the article about the relationship between the german "neue marxlektüre"
and japanese marxismo of the kozo uno-school some of you were talking.
if I understood well, the basic point is that they agree in that there is a logical problem
with Marx's derivation of "value/abstract labour" as the third thing behind exchange value, anticipating
determinations which are not proper of the commodity form.
now I agree with this point, and it does not seems to me really a big finding (Marx gives us a hint
talking about exchange values that have not been produced, eg, that are not really values.
nevertheless, it is possible to think that marx is not analyzing a "pure commodity form", but the commodity which contains some determinations of the capitalist production.
I would like to know whether someone can give me a short explication of the political consequences of this finding. does this mean that there is the possibility of de-linking commodity production from the "capital-form"?
On the other hand, does anybody have a digital version of kozo uno's, or t. sekines books?
finally, the mentioned article seems to argue that the "neue marx lektüre" and the uno-school were the only ones who tried a reconstruction of the logic of capital that considers the problematic introduction of value in das kapital. I once studied some semesters with Pablo Levin, at the economic faculty of the university of Buenos Aires, and it seems to me that he is engaged in a similar search. for those who read spanish, consider to check the page of the institute where he is working: http://www.econ.uba.ar/www/institutos/economia/Ceplad/libros.htm
greetings
http://muse.jhu.edu/login?aut
http://muse.jhu.edu/login?auth=0&type=summary&url=/journals/journal_of_the_history_of_youth_and_childhood/v004/4.2.getman-eraso.pdf
http://www.jstor.org/discover/10.2307/651252?uid=3737968&uid=2&uid=4&sid=21101506027883
If anybody could get me the
If anybody could get me the thing on Muslim Anarchists and the Lapavitsas paper on credit, that would be nice.
Can anyone get me
Can anyone get me this?
http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/09505430309008#.UeNCgKwReq8
Steven, GoHabsGo - the '19th
Steven, GoHabsGo - the '19th century muslim anarchists'' article is here:
http://www.hs.ias.edu/files/Crone_Articles/Crone_Ninth_Century_Muslim_Anarchists.pdf
Sorry, but does anyone have
Sorry, but does anyone have access to "Minorities at large: New approaches to minority ethnicity in Vietnam" (apparently I don't have access for the content of the Journal of Vietnamese Studies before 2010...)
I'd really appreciate it if
I'd really appreciate it if someone with access to jstor can get me a copy of these:
The collapse of the Federated Motion Picture Crafts: A case study of class collaboration in the motion picture industry.
Hollywood censored: The Production Code Administration and the Hollywood film industry, 1930-1940
Morality and entertainment: the origins of the motion picture production code
(If you can only get the one, for some reason, I'd much prefer the first one on the FMPC.)
Thanks! :D
omen wrote: I'd really
omen
Yo! If you PM me an email address I can send you a pdf of the first one.
Hello, I would be really
Hello,
I would be really grateful to anyone who can get these articles for me thanks:
http://www.jstor.org/stable/i358922
Or at least this article:
http://www.jstor.org/discover/10.2307/3174806?uid=3738256&uid=2134&uid=2481730573&uid=2&uid=70&uid=3&uid=2481730563&uid=60&sid=21104137222713
I need them for my research, thanks much. :)
Don't know which is the best
Don't know which is the best JSTOR thread to use, so I'm using this one.
I'm looking for an article called "Toilets of the Gods". It's not political at all, actually, and I think it might be slightly tongue-in-cheek. I'm not really sure whether it's an academic article or not, but I can't seem to find it freely online anywhere.
So, if any of you fine JSTOR-accessing folks want to do a little search for me, that'd be awesome.
Can you send us a link?
Can you send us a link?
Look at all these poor
Look at all these poor communists suffering because JSTOR doesn't want to give knowledge for free. Fcking librarian nzis
Not jstor, but there's an
Not jstor, but there's an article on academia edu about cosmopolitanism among workers in the uk fishing industry. I lost it and was hoping a kind soul could find it.... it's free/you don't need special access.
there's a hashtag for that
there's a hashtag for that (if you know the exact paper you're looking for):
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/blogs-trending-34572462
Wojtek, is it this one? If it
Wojtek, is it this one? If it is, please let me know and I can send it to you.
Penny McCall Howard
It was a female
It was a female anthtopologist so i think so. no need to send me it, but thank you. :)
http://www.academia.edu/1773091/Workplace_cosmopolitanization_and_the_power_and_pain_of_class_relations_at_sea
You know you can always use
You know you can always use sci hub which lets you access not only jstor but other academic repositories such as Taylor and Francis for free.
http://allanino.me/blog/everything-else/do-you-know-sci-hub/
http://sci-hub.io/
hurrah for pirating
A friend of mine is trying to
A friend of mine is trying to get a copy of Winter of Discontent by Tara Martin López
http://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt1gn6f3z
If nobody has found it for
If nobody has found it for you in a couple of days, bump this thread and I'll check if I can get it. Traveling at the moment otherwise I'd checked right away.
No luck, that sci hub works
No luck, that sci hub works but annoyingly the file I need is the one I can't access through it.
Bump
Bump
Reddebeck you got my PM,
Reddebeck you got my PM, right?
I did not, no.
I did not, no.
Weird. Anyway, neither me nor
Weird. Anyway, neither me nor my partner had access to the text you wanted to get hold of. Sorry.