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  • Title: Cultures of Exile and the Experience of «Refugeeness»

    Cultures of Exile and the Experience of «Refugeeness»

    by Stephen Dobson (Author) 2012
    ©2004 Monographs
  • Title: Stages of Exile

    Stages of Exile

    Spanish Republican Exile Theatre and Performance
    by Helena Buffery (Volume editor) 2012
    ©2011 Edited Collection
  • Title: A Culture of Tough Jews

    A Culture of Tough Jews

    Rhetorical Regeneration and the Politics of Identity
    by David Moscowitz (Author) 2014
    ©2015 Monographs
  • Title: Landscapes of Exile

    Landscapes of Exile

    Once Perilous, Now Safe
    by Anna Haebich (Volume editor) Baden Offord (Volume editor)
    ©2006 Conference proceedings
  • Title: Languages of Exile

    Languages of Exile

    Migration and Multilingualism in Twentieth-Century Literature
    by Axel Englund (Volume editor) Anders Olsson (Volume editor) 2013
    ©2013 Edited Collection
  • Title: Exile and Otherness

    Exile and Otherness

    New Approaches to the Experience of the Nazi Refugees
    by Alexander Stephan (Volume editor)
    ©2005 Conference proceedings
  • Title: The Second Story of Creation (Gen 2:4-3:24)

    The Second Story of Creation (Gen 2:4-3:24)

    A Prologue to the Concept of Enneateuch?
    by Joseph Titus (Author)
    ©2011 Thesis
  • Title: The Faces of Janus

    The Faces of Janus

    English-language Fiction by German-speaking Exiles in Great Britain, 1933-1945
    by Nicole Brunnhuber (Author)
    ©2005 Monographs
  • Title: The Future of Tibet

    The Future of Tibet

    The Government-in-Exile Meets the Challenge of Democratization
    by Helen R. Boyd (Author)
    ©2005 Monographs
  • Title: Logics of Separation

    Logics of Separation

    Exile and Transcendence in Aesthetic Modernity
    by Michael Stone-Richards (Author) 2011
    ©2011 Monographs
  • Title: Ports of Call

    Ports of Call

    Central European and North American Culture/s in Motion
    by Susan Ingram (Volume editor) Markus Reisenleitner (Volume editor) Cornelia Szabó-Knotik (Volume editor)
    ©2003 Conference proceedings
  • Title: Signatures of the Past

    Signatures of the Past

    Cultural Memory in Contemporary Anglophone North American Drama
    by Marc Maufort (Volume editor) Caroline De Wagter (Volume editor)
    ©2008 Conference proceedings
  • Title: Shadows of the Past

    Shadows of the Past

    Austrian Literature of the Twentieth Century
    by Hans Schulte (Volume editor) Gerald Chapple (Volume editor)
    ©2009 Monographs
  • Title: Under the Sign of Contradiction

    Under the Sign of Contradiction

    Mandelstam and the Politics of Memory
    by Anna Razumnaya (Author) 2021
    ©2021 Monographs
  • Exile Studies

    Exile Studies is a series of monographs and edited collections that takes a broad view of exile, including the life and work of refugees from National Socialism, and beyond. The series explores the different global and cultural spaces of exile and refuge as well as the specific historical, political and social concerns of exile writers and artists. The series engages with recent theoretical approaches to exile to shed new light on the unique conditions of mass flight from National Socialist persecution, with a particular interest in the work of Jewish refugees of the period. A plurality of theoretical approaches is encouraged, featuring research that reaches beyond national frameworks or disciplinary boundaries and takes multi-directional, transcultural or comparative approaches. The series aims to make connections to studies on more recent groups of refugees and to contribute to current debates. Themes include persecution, exclusion and delocalization, legacies of displacement, loss and acculturation as well as the creation of new homes and networks. The series promotes dialogue among transnational, Jewish and memory studies, and among diaspora, Holocaust and postcolonial studies. It invites research that acknowledges questions of gender, race, class, religion and ethnicity as indispensable tools for understanding the cultural processes connected to the lives and works of refugees and exiles.

    26 publications

  • Wor(l)ds of Change: Latin American and Iberian Literature

    "This series deals with the relationship between literary creation and the social, political, and historical contexts in which it is produced. The types of volumes may include critical analyses of one or more works by one or several authors; critical editions of important works that may have been out of print for a long time, but which represent a major contribution to literature of the Iberian Peninsula or Latin America, English translations of important works, with critical introduction. Topics for Latin America include: studies of representative works of nineteenth- and twentieth-century thought, poetic portrayals of history, subgenres (fictionalization of the rural and urban social structures); historical novels; literature of exile; re-readings of colonial texts; new approaches to the figure of the Indian and other representatives of transculturation; women writers and other less studied authors. Topics for Spain and Portugal include: writing and nationalism in the Spanish State; bilingualism and the literary texts; censorship and exile; new and renewed genres such as autobiography and testimony; the formation of the avant-garde. Formal studies are expected to bear out the general contextual focus of the series. The use of recent developments in literary criticism is especially appropriate. The series also seeks to contribute to the understanding and accuracy of interpretation of the writing which has combined European elements with indigenous and African ones as well as to the understanding of the dynamics behind such major cultural issues as the formation of literary trends or subgenres, national identities, the effects of postcolonial status on literary imagination, the appearance and experience of women writers, and the relationships between post-modernism and Ibero-American writing. The series title is inclusive of literatures which are geographically, historically, or politically related and whose comparison is relevant to Spanish and Spanish American writing. This means those written in the other three languages of Spain, in Portugal, and Brazil. Comparative studies in which colonial or post colonial themes are prevalent may also be appropriate, if one of the literatures is in either Spanish or Portuguese. The breadth of the geographical area is intended to provide a forum for revealing and interpreting its multicultural aspects." "This series deals with the relationship between literary creation and the social, political, and historical contexts in which it is produced. The types of volumes may include critical analyses of one or more works by one or several authors; critical editions of important works that may have been out of print for a long time, but which represent a major contribution to literature of the Iberian Peninsula or Latin America, English translations of important works, with critical introduction. Topics for Latin America include: studies of representative works of nineteenth- and twentieth-century thought, poetic portrayals of history, subgenres (fictionalization of the rural and urban social structures); historical novels; literature of exile; re-readings of colonial texts; new approaches to the figure of the Indian and other representatives of transculturation; women writers and other less studied authors. Topics for Spain and Portugal include: writing and nationalism in the Spanish State; bilingualism and the literary texts; censorship and exile; new and renewed genres such as autobiography and testimony; the formation of the avant-garde. Formal studies are expected to bear out the general contextual focus of the series. The use of recent developments in literary criticism is especially appropriate. The series also seeks to contribute to the understanding and accuracy of interpretation of the writing which has combined European elements with indigenous and African ones as well as to the understanding of the dynamics behind such major cultural issues as the formation of literary trends or subgenres, national identities, the effects of postcolonial status on literary imagination, the appearance and experience of women writers, and the relationships between post-modernism and Ibero-American writing. The series title is inclusive of literatures which are geographically, historically, or politically related and whose comparison is relevant to Spanish and Spanish American writing. This means those written in the other three languages of Spain, in Portugal, and Brazil. Comparative studies in which colonial or post colonial themes are prevalent may also be appropriate, if one of the literatures is in either Spanish or Portuguese. The breadth of the geographical area is intended to provide a forum for revealing and interpreting its multicultural aspects." "This series deals with the relationship between literary creation and the social, political, and historical contexts in which it is produced. The types of volumes may include critical analyses of one or more works by one or several authors; critical editions of important works that may have been out of print for a long time, but which represent a major contribution to literature of the Iberian Peninsula or Latin America, English translations of important works, with critical introduction. Topics for Latin America include: studies of representative works of nineteenth- and twentieth-century thought, poetic portrayals of history, subgenres (fictionalization of the rural and urban social structures); historical novels; literature of exile; re-readings of colonial texts; new approaches to the figure of the Indian and other representatives of transculturation; women writers and other less studied authors. Topics for Spain and Portugal include: writing and nationalism in the Spanish State; bilingualism and the literary texts; censorship and exile; new and renewed genres such as autobiography and testimony; the formation of the avant-garde. Formal studies are expected to bear out the general contextual focus of the series. The use of recent developments in literary criticism is especially appropriate. The series also seeks to contribute to the understanding and accuracy of interpretation of the writing which has combined European elements with indigenous and African ones as well as to the understanding of the dynamics behind such major cultural issues as the formation of literary trends or subgenres, national identities, the effects of postcolonial status on literary imagination, the appearance and experience of women writers, and the relationships between post-modernism and Ibero-American writing. The series title is inclusive of literatures which are geographically, historically, or politically related and whose comparison is relevant to Spanish and Spanish American writing. This means those written in the other three languages of Spain, in Portugal, and Brazil. Comparative studies in which colonial or post colonial themes are prevalent may also be appropriate, if one of the literatures is in either Spanish or Portuguese. The breadth of the geographical area is intended to provide a forum for revealing and interpreting its multicultural aspects."

    50 publications

  • Title: The Dynamics of Forced Female Migration from Czechoslovakia to Britain, 1938–1950

    The Dynamics of Forced Female Migration from Czechoslovakia to Britain, 1938–1950

    by Jana Barbora Buresova (Author) 2019
    ©2019 Monographs
  • Title: Exile, language and identity

    Exile, language and identity

    by Magda Stroinska (Volume editor) Vittorina Cecchetto (Volume editor)
    ©2003 Edited Collection
  • Title: Foreign Devils

    Foreign Devils

    Exile and Host Nation in Hollywood’s Golden Age
    by Gábor Gergely (Author) 2013
    ©2013 Monographs
  • Title: Sir David Nairne

    Sir David Nairne

    The Life of a Scottish Jacobite at the Court of the Exiled Stuarts
    by Edward Corp (Author) 2018
    Others
  • Title: Clerical Exile in Late Antiquity

    Clerical Exile in Late Antiquity

    by Julia Hillner (Volume editor) Jörg Ulrich (Volume editor) Jakob Engberg (Volume editor) 2016
    ©2016 Conference proceedings
  • Title: Exiles in Print

    Exiles in Print

    Little Magazines in Europe, 1921–1938
    by Celia Aijmer Rydsjö (Author) AnnKatrin Jonsson (Author) 2015
    ©2016 Monographs
  • Title: Canada: Images of a Post/National Society

    Canada: Images of a Post/National Society

    by Gunilla Florby (Volume editor) Mark Shackleton (Volume editor) Katri Suhonen (Volume editor)
    ©2009 Edited Collection
  • Title: After the Fall

    After the Fall

    Rhetoric in the Aftermath of Dissent in Post-Communist Times
    by Noemi Marin (Author)
    ©2007 Monographs
  • Title: Across Borders: Essays in 20th Century Russian Literature and Russian-Jewish Cultural Contacts. In Honor of Vladimir Khazan

    Across Borders: Essays in 20th Century Russian Literature and Russian-Jewish Cultural Contacts. In Honor of Vladimir Khazan

    by Lazar Fleishman (Volume editor) Fedor B. Poljakov (Volume editor) 2018
    ©2018 Others
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