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  • Title: Poetry, Politics and Pictures

    Poetry, Politics and Pictures

    Culture and Identity in Europe, 1840–1914
    by Ingrid Hanson (Volume editor) Jack Rhoden (Volume editor) Erin Snyder (Volume editor) 2013
    ©2013 Edited Collection
  • Title: Otto Dix and Weimar Media Culture

    Otto Dix and Weimar Media Culture

    Time, Fashion and Photography in Portrait Paintings of the Neue Sachlichkeit
    by Anne Reimers (Author) 2022
    ©2022 Monographs
  • Title: Cities of the Lusophone World

    Cities of the Lusophone World

    Literature, Culture and Urban Transformations
    by Doris Wieser (Volume editor) Ana Filipa Prata (Volume editor) 2021
    Edited Collection
  • Title: Groups, Coteries, Circles and Guilds

    Groups, Coteries, Circles and Guilds

    Modernist Aesthetics and the Utopian Lure of Community
    by Laura Scuriatti (Volume editor) 2019
    ©2019 Edited Collection
  • Title: TYA, Culture, Society

    TYA, Culture, Society

    International Essays on Theatre for Young Audiences- A Publication of ASSITEJ and ITYARN
    by Manon van de Water (Volume editor) 2012
    ©2012 Conference proceedings
  • Race and Resistance Across Borders in the Long Twentieth Century

    ISSN: 2297-2552

    This series focuses on the history and culture of activists, artists and intellectuals who have worked within and against racially oppressive hierarchies in the twentieth century and beyond, and who have then sought to define and to achieve full equality once those formal hierarchies have been overturned. It explores the ways in which such individuals - writers, scholars, campaigners and organizers, ministers, and artists and performers of all kinds - locate their resistance within a global context and forge connections with each other across national, linguistic, regional and imperial borders. Disseminating the latest interdisciplinary scholarship on the history, literature and culture of anti-racist movements in Africa, the Caribbean, the United States, Europe, Asia and Latin America, the series foregrounds, through a cross-disciplinary approach, the transnational and intercultural nature of these resistance movements. The series embraces a range of themes, including but not limited to antislavery, intellectual and literary networks, emigration and immigration, anti-imperialism, church-based and religious movements, civil rights, citizenship and identity, Black Power, resistance strategies, women's movements, cultural transfer, white supremacy and anti-immigration, hip hop and global justice movements. The series is affiliated with the Race and Resistance Research Programme at The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities (TORCH), University of Oxford. Proposals are invited for sole- and joint-authored monographs as well as edited collections. We welcome projects in a wide range of fields, including but not restricted to history, political science, anthropology, literature, cultural studies and media studies. Editorial Advisory Board: Funmi Adewole (DeMontfort University), Joan Anim-Addo (Goldsmiths, University of London), Celeste-Marie Bernier (University of Edinburgh), Alan Cobley (University of the West Indies, Cave Hill), Carolyn Cooper (University of the West Indies, Mona), Zaire Dinzey-Flores (Rutgers, State University of New Jersey), Tanisha Ford (University of Delaware), Maryemma Graham (University of Kansas), Christopher J. Lee (The Africa Institute, UAE), Simon Lewis (College of Charleston), Justine McConnell (King's College London), Pap Ndiaye (Sciences Po), Tessa Roynon (University of Oxford), Barbara Savage (University of Pennsylvania), David Scott (Columbia University), Hortense Spillers (Vanderbilt University), Imaobong Umoren (London School of Economics), Harvey Young (Northwestern University)

    7 publications

  • Title: Hidden Stories – the Life Reform Movements and Art

    Hidden Stories – the Life Reform Movements and Art

    by Beatrix Vincze (Volume editor) Katalin Kempf (Volume editor) András Németh (Volume editor) 2021
    ©2020 Edited Collection
  • German Visual Culture

    German Visual Culture invites research on German art across different periods, geographical locations, and political contexts. Books in the series engage with aesthetic and ideological continuities as well as ruptures and divergences between individual artists, movements, systems of art education, art institutions, and cultures of display. Challenging scholarship that interrogates and updates existing orthodoxies in the field is desirable. A guiding question of the series is the impact of German art on critical and public spheres, both inside and outside the German-speaking world. Reception is thus conceived in the broadest possible terms, including both the ways in which art has been perceived and defined as well as the ways in which modern and contemporary German artists have undertaken visual dialogues with their predecessors or contemporaries. Issues of cultural transfer, critical race theory and related postcolonial analysis, feminism, queer theory, and other interdisciplinary approaches are encouraged, as are studies on production and consumption, especially the art market, pioneering publishing houses, and the ‘little magazines’ of the avant-garde. All proposals for monographs and edited collections in the history of German visual culture will be considered, although English will be the language of all contributions. Submissions are subject to rigorous peer review. The series will be promoted through the series editor’s Research Forum for German Visual Culture (https://www.eca.ed.ac.uk/research/research-forum-german-visual-culture), which he founded at the University of Edinburgh in 2011, and which has involved various symposia and related publications, all connected to an international network of Germanist scholars.

    20 publications

  • Title: Japanese Avant-Garde and Experimental Film

    Japanese Avant-Garde and Experimental Film

    by Agnieszka Kiejziewicz (Author) 2019
    ©2020 Monographs
  • Title: Internationalism and the Arts in Britain and Europe at the "Fin de Siècle"

    Internationalism and the Arts in Britain and Europe at the "Fin de Siècle"

    by Grace Brockington (Volume editor)
    ©2009 Conference proceedings
  • Title: McLuhan and Symbolist Communication

    McLuhan and Symbolist Communication

    The Shock of Dislocation
    by Andrea Lombardinilo (Author) 2017
    Monographs
  • Title: Paris in Architecture, Literature, and Art

    Paris in Architecture, Literature, and Art

    by May Spangler (Author) 2018
    ©2018 Textbook
  • Title: The Dada Archivist

    The Dada Archivist

    Hannah Höch, Kurt Schwitters and Berlin Dada
    by Stina Barchan (Author) 2023
    Monographs
  • Title: Hip Hop Harem

    Hip Hop Harem

    Women, Rap and Representation in the Middle East
    by Angela S. Williams (Author) 2020
    ©2020 Prompt
  • History and Philosophy of Science

    Heresy, Crossroads, and Intersections

    ISSN: 2376-6336

    This series invites book proposals that include innovative strategies for pursuing history and philosophy of science. Especially welcome are scholarly works using non-analytic philosophical perspectives to successfully bring to bear on our understanding of how scientific practices are related to the humanities and the social sciences. The series also welcomes exploration of the sciences in relation to gender, culture, society, and the intellectual and social contexts that illuminate the places, the structures of origination, and the patterns of development over generations. Approaches may include focused analyses of thinkers from unorthodox perspectives that can shed new light on the history and philosophy of science, such as Montaigne, Bruno, Galileo, Newton, Pascal, Emerson, Thoreau, Nietzsche, Jung, Freud. Proposals aimed at probing the philosophical intersections between the sciences and other societal practices that can be configured as heretic are also encouraged. These might include the emergence of the psychoanalytic movements in the twentieth century, how the fine arts have impinged on the historical processes that gave rise to the sciences over the last few centuries, how in turn the intellectual frameworks inaugurated by the sciences have been imported into the avant-garde movements that paralleled the advent of industrialized societies, and finally how contemporary scientific domains of knowledge reverberate in ’deviant’ social and artistic practices.

    9 publications

  • Title: Ireland, West to East

    Ireland, West to East

    Irish Cultural Connections with Central and Eastern Europe
    by Aidan O'Malley (Volume editor) Eve Patten (Volume editor) 2013
    ©2014 Edited Collection
  • Title: Views of Albion

    Views of Albion

    The Reception of British Art and Design in Central Europe, 1890–1918
    by Andrzej Szczerski (Author) 2015
    ©2015 Monographs
  • Title: Politics, Humor and the Counterculture

    Politics, Humor and the Counterculture

    Laughter in the Age of Decay
    by Vwadek P. Marciniak (Author) 2008
    ©2008 Monographs
  • Title: The Space of Crisis

    The Space of Crisis

    Images and Ideas of Europe in the Age of Crisis: 1914–1945
    by Vittorio Dini (Volume editor) Matthew D'Auria (Volume editor) 2013
    ©2013 Edited Collection
  • European Connections

    Studies in Comparative Literature, Intermediality and Aesthetics

    European Connections: Studies in Comparative Literature, Intermediality and Aesthetics is a peer-reviewed series that publishes innovative research monographs, edited volumes as well as translations of key theoretical works. The series focuses on the literary and artistic relations that have shaped and continue to shape European cultures across national, linguistic and media boundaries, leading to vibrant new forms of artistic creation and aesthetic expression. It also wishes to explore relations with non-European cultures with a view to fostering more equitable models of cultural exchange and transfer. The series promotes comparative, intermedial and interdisciplinary approaches, whether studies of specific writers, filmmakers and artists; critical re-evaluations of historical periods (from the medieval to the ultra-contemporary) and movements; or wider theoretical reflections within the fields of comparative literature, intermediality studies and aesthetics. In light of the urgent need to revitalize the idea of Europe along new lines of thought, the series encourages research that explores the rich connections within European artistic and cultural production as well as the participation of European cultures in what the great philosopher of relation Édouard Glissant has called the Tout-monde. The series publishes in English, French and German. Editorial Board: Vincent Ferré (University Paris-Est Créteil), Robin Kirkpatrick (University of Cambridge), Kim Knowles (Aberystwyth University), Frauke Matthes (University of Edinburgh), Jean-Pascal Pouzet (University of Limoges), Marisa Verna (Università Cattolica, Milan)

    54 publications

  • Title: Playing for Change

    Playing for Change

    Music Festivals as Community Learning and Development
    by Michael B. MacDonald (Author) 2016
    ©2016 Textbook
  • Title: Visual Spirituality

    Visual Spirituality

    Art, Mediums, and Cognitive Dissociation
    by Susan B. Barnes (Author) 2022
    ©2022 Textbook
  • Title: Ahasuerus at the Easel

    Ahasuerus at the Easel

    Jewish Art and Jewish Artists in Central and Eastern European Modernism at the Turn of the Last Century
    by Tom Sandqvist (Author) 2014
    ©2014 Monographs
  • Title: Pre-Raphaelite Sisters

    Pre-Raphaelite Sisters

    Art, Poetry and Female Agency in Victorian Britain
    by Glenda Youde (Volume editor) Robert Wilkes (Volume editor) 2022
    ©2022 Edited Collection
  • Title: The Streets Echoed with Chants

    The Streets Echoed with Chants

    The Urban Experience of Post-War West Berlin
    by Laura Bowie (Author) 2021
    ©2022 Monographs
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