Traitement en cours...
Fermer la notification

Le saviez-vous ?

SIDE a travaillé avec ses fournisseurs pour rendre ses colis respectueux de l'environnement.
Fini le plastique !
Le ruban adhésif qui sécurise la fermeture de nos colis et les chips de calage qui immobilisent les livres dans les cartons sont en matériaux recyclables et biodégradables.

Afficher la notification

Towards Ethics and Humanism

Collectif, Walla Paméssou
Date de parution 20/09/2025
EAN: 9783962034603
Disponibilité Disponible chez l'éditeur
This book on African, American and English literary criticism, intends to sensitize the audience on the importance of renewing with traditional humanistic principles and ethical values which advocate secular emancipation of mankind.The five interdisc... Voir la description complète
Nom d'attributValeur d'attribut
Common books attribute
ÉditeurGALDA VERLAG
Nombre de pages128
Langue du livreAnglais
AuteurCollectif, Walla Paméssou
FormatPaperback / softback
Type de produitLivre
Date de parution20/09/2025
Poids225 g
Dimensions (épaisseur x largeur x hauteur)0,80 x 15,50 x 23,00 cm
Cross Literary Perspectives
This book on African, American and English literary criticism, intends to sensitize the audience on the importance of renewing with traditional humanistic principles and ethical values which advocate secular emancipation of mankind.The five interdisciplinary essays of the book advocate moral consciousness and humanism as intellectual weapons to achieve the welfare of populations around the world in terms of modern sociopolitical and economic organizations of human communities worldwide. The first essay addresses Togolese sociopolitical challenges toward a democratic government. The second essay denounces hypocrisy and political corruption in Oscar Wilde's An Ideal Husband. The third essay scrutinizes the effects of intellectual pride of the King and the projectors of Laputa in their effort to create a scientific world which curiously rejects ethical consciousness and traditional moral values. The fourth essay examines slavery in American context as a phenomenon which victimizes both the slave and the slaveholder. The fifth essay explores the way John Steinbeck depicts the destructive impact of American capitalism during the Great Depression.