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- English Studies (92)
- The Arts (49)
- Romance Studies (46)
- Science, Society & Culture (31)
- German Studies (25)
- Media and Communication (25)
- Theology & Philosophy (16)
- Linguistics (14)
- History & Political Science (12)
- Education (12)
- Law, Economics & Management (3)
- Slavic Studies (2)
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Visualizing Dublin
Visual Culture, Modernity and the Representation of Urban Space©2014 Edited Collection -
Visuality and Spatiality in Virginia Woolf’s Fiction
©2012 Monographs -
Visuality in the Works of Siri Hustvedt
©2014 Thesis -
Visual Anthropology in Sardinia
©2015 Monographs -
Verbal/Visual Narrative Texts in Higher Education
©2008 Edited Collection -
Visual Art as Theology
©1994 Monographs -
Invisibility Studies
Surveillance, Transparency and the Hidden in Contemporary Culture©2015 Edited Collection -
Opera, Exoticism and Visual Culture
©2015 Edited Collection -
The Visual and the Verbal in Film, Drama, Literature and Biography
©2012 Edited Collection -
Translation Today: Applied Translation Studies in Focus
©2019 Edited Collection -
Ghosts of the Revolution in Mexican Literature and Visual Culture
Revisitations in Modern and Contemporary Creative Media©2013 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