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Competing Schemas Within the American Liberal Democracy
An Interdisciplinary Analysis of Differing Perceptions of Church and State©2016 Monographs -
God at Ground Level
Reappraising Church Decline in the UK Through the Experience of Grass Roots Communities and Situations©2008 Edited Collection -
American Public Education Law Primer
©2007 Textbook -
The Political Economy of Liberation
Thomas Sowell and James Cone on the Black Experience©2012 Monographs -
Buddhist-Christian Encounter in Contemporary Thailand
©2014 Monographs -
Music and Space
A systematic and historical investigation into the impact of architectural acoustics on performance practice followed by a study of Handel’s Messiah©2011 Postdoctoral Thesis -
Metadiscourse in Middle English and Early Modern English Religious Texts
A corpus-based study©2009 Thesis -
The Reality of Biblical Theology
©2007 Monographs -
Queering Paradigms
ISSN: 2235-5367
Queering Paradigms is a series of peer-reviewed edited volumes and monographs presenting challenging and innovative developments in Queer Theory and Queer Studies from across a variety of academic disciplines and political spheres. Queer in this context is understood as a critical disposition towards the predominantly binarist and essentialising social, intellectual, political, and cultural paradigms through which we understand gender, sexuality, and identity. Queering denotes challenging and transforming not just heteronormativity, but homonormativity as well, and pushing past the binary axes of homo- and hetero-sexuality. In line with the broad inter- and trans-disciplinary ethos of queer projects generally, the series welcomes contributions from both established and aspiring researchers in diverse fields of studies including political and social science, philosophy, history, religious studies, literary criticism, media studies, education, psychology, health studies, criminology, and legal studies. The series is committed to advancing perspectives from outside of the Global North. Further, it will publish research that explicitly links queer insights to specific and local political struggles, which might serve to encourage the uptake of queer insights in similar contexts. By cutting across disciplinary, geographic, and cultural boundaries in this way, the series provides a unique contribution to queer theory. The Series Editor: Professor B. Scherer is Chair of Comparative Religion, Gender and Sexuality at Canterbury Christ Church University, UK, and an executive editor of the journal Religion and Gender. Read more about Queering Paradigms at the Canterbury Christ Church University's Queering Paradigms website.
11 publications