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Results for: Jay Burkette
Jay Burkette
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Article ItemThe view from America: Sister 2 Sister Exchange Program helps women from Pakistan broaden their horizons , article
Strangers at first, Midhat Urooj and Hamdah Munir traveled to Virginia Tech together to gain new perspectives on their future STEM careers. Through the support of the College of Liberal Arts and Human Sciences, they are gaining insights into how they can help inspire other women to traverse similar opportunities in their home country of Pakistan.
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Article ItemUpside-down Utopia: Directionality for the City of God , article
Recent scholarship on process-driven utopia exhibits two startling omissions. The first is a lack of practical methodology proposed. The second elision is more serious. Without a way to discriminate between utopian hope and ideological agendas, the target for utopia’s pursuit becomes equally suspect. In this groundbreaking, interdisciplinary investigation of processual theory and methodology, Jay Burkette argues that while situating utopia within prefigurative performance remains the best option, certain facets must be refined to ensure it remains the ‘good place.’ These include a necessary moral grounding for its directionality as well as recognizing that different performative vectors are required from different actors. Blending the thought of Ernst Bloch, St. Augustine, Ruth Levitas, Walter Benjamin, Cristina Sharpe, Kierkegaard, and others, Upside-Down Utopia: Directionality for the City of God demonstrates that determining an appropriate heading for utopian affect entails identifying its genesis within past loss, an initial catastrophe defining humankind’s nature and struggle, highlighting the need for divine aid to orient the quest for the city of God.