Loading...
14 results
Sort by 
Filter
Search
Search in
Search area
Subject
Category
Language
Publication Schedule
Open Access
Year
  • Title: New Perspectives on Irish TV Series

    New Perspectives on Irish TV Series

    Identity and Nostalgia on the Small Screen
    by Flore Coulouma (Volume editor) 2016
    ©2016 Edited Collection
  • Title: Irish Identities and the Great War in Drama and Fiction

    Irish Identities and the Great War in Drama and Fiction

    by Martin Decker (Author) 2016
    ©2016 Thesis
  • Title: Alice McDermott's Fiction

    Alice McDermott's Fiction

    Voice, Memory, Trauma, and Lies
    by Gail Shanley Corso (Volume editor) 2018
    ©2018 Monographs
  • Title: The Prose Fiction of Louise von François (1817-1893)

    The Prose Fiction of Louise von François (1817-1893)

    by Barbara Burns (Author)
    ©2007 Monographs
  • Title: Redefining the Fringes in Celtic Studies

    Redefining the Fringes in Celtic Studies

    Essays in Literature and Culture
    by Aleksander Bednarski (Volume editor) Robert Looby (Volume editor) 2019
    ©2019 Edited Collection
  • Title: Edgar Reitz’s «Heimat»

    Edgar Reitz’s «Heimat»

    Histories, Traditions, Fictions
    by Rachel Palfreyman (Author)
    ©2000 Monographs
  • Many Voices

    Ethnic Literatures of the Americas

    The literature of the Americas has a variety of cultural elements present under the general term "American." The canonical English mainstream of North America and the corresponding Spanish/Portuguese mainstream of South America have nevertheless reflected the arrival, assimilation, and marginality of numerous groups. Their experiences are both unique and representative of universal conditions of cultural contact and conflict. In both the United States and Canada, there are works which represent diverse aspects of the Black, Irish, Italian, Hispanic or Latino, Franco, German, Jewish, Portuguese, Greek, Slavic, and Asian communities, among others, as writers give both creative and testimonial form to the realities, both past and present of groups arriving subsequent to the original colonial period. In Latin America, some of these same groups are represented in the fiction written in Spanish and Portuguese. While this series focuses on specific ethnic groups and/or individual representatives, the fictional and poetic texts therein may address a range of issues, among them race relations, language and bilingualism, nationalism, colonialism, gender, class, cultural conflict, identity and maintenance, the context of multiculturalism. Critical approaches may include ethnocriticism, historical analyses, others, as well as structural critiques of these sorts of texts which by the very nature of their multiple focus become the aesthetic model for their content: a sort of border, mixed-blood, metis linguistic mode that in turn requires a double vision of its readers and critics. The literature of the Americas has a variety of cultural elements present under the general term "American." The canonical English mainstream of North America and the corresponding Spanish/Portuguese mainstream of South America have nevertheless reflected the arrival, assimilation, and marginality of numerous groups. Their experiences are both unique and representative of universal conditions of cultural contact and conflict. In both the United States and Canada, there are works which represent diverse aspects of the Black, Irish, Italian, Hispanic or Latino, Franco, German, Jewish, Portuguese, Greek, Slavic, and Asian communities, among others, as writers give both creative and testimonial form to the realities, both past and present of groups arriving subsequent to the original colonial period. In Latin America, some of these same groups are represented in the fiction written in Spanish and Portuguese. While this series focuses on specific ethnic groups and/or individual representatives, the fictional and poetic texts therein may address a range of issues, among them race relations, language and bilingualism, nationalism, colonialism, gender, class, cultural conflict, identity and maintenance, the context of multiculturalism. Critical approaches may include ethnocriticism, historical analyses, others, as well as structural critiques of these sorts of texts which by the very nature of their multiple focus become the aesthetic model for their content: a sort of border, mixed-blood, metis linguistic mode that in turn requires a double vision of its readers and critics. The literature of the Americas has a variety of cultural elements present under the general term "American." The canonical English mainstream of North America and the corresponding Spanish/Portuguese mainstream of South America have nevertheless reflected the arrival, assimilation, and marginality of numerous groups. Their experiences are both unique and representative of universal conditions of cultural contact and conflict. In both the United States and Canada, there are works which represent diverse aspects of the Black, Irish, Italian, Hispanic or Latino, Franco, German, Jewish, Portuguese, Greek, Slavic, and Asian communities, among others, as writers give both creative and testimonial form to the realities, both past and present of groups arriving subsequent to the original colonial period. In Latin America, some of these same groups are represented in the fiction written in Spanish and Portuguese. While this series focuses on specific ethnic groups and/or individual representatives, the fictional and poetic texts therein may address a range of issues, among them race relations, language and bilingualism, nationalism, colonialism, gender, class, cultural conflict, identity and maintenance, the context of multiculturalism. Critical approaches may include ethnocriticism, historical analyses, others, as well as structural critiques of these sorts of texts which by the very nature of their multiple focus become the aesthetic model for their content: a sort of border, mixed-blood, metis linguistic mode that in turn requires a double vision of its readers and critics.

    5 publications

  • Modern French Identities

    ISSN: 1422-9005

    This series aims to publish monographs, editions or collections of papers based on recent research into modern French literature. It welcomes contributions from academics, researchers and writers worldwide and in British and Irish universities in particular. Modern French Identities focuses on the French and Francophone writing of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, whose formal experiments and revisions of genre have combined to create an entirely new set of literary forms, from the thematic autobiographies of Michel Leiris and Bernard Noël to the magic realism of French Caribbean writers. The idea that identities are constructed rather than found, and that the self is an area to explore rather than a given pretext, runs through much of modern French literature, from Proust, Gide, Apollinaire and Césaire to Barthes, Duras, Kristeva, Glissant, Germain and Roubaud. This series explores the turmoil in ideas and values expressed in the works of theorists like Lacan, Irigaray, Foucault, Fanon, Deleuze and Bourdieu and traces the impact of current theoretical approaches – such as gender and sexuality studies, de/coloniality, intersectionality, and ecocriticism – on the literary and cultural interpretation of the self. The series publishes studies of individual authors and artists, comparative studies, and interdisciplinary projects and welcomes research on autobiography, cinema, fiction, poetry and performance art and/or the intersections between them. Editorial Board Contemporary Literature and Thought: Martin Crowley (University of Cambridge) Francophone Studies: Louise Hardwick (University of Birmingham) and Jean Khalfa (University of Cambridge) Gender and Sexuality Studies: Florian Grandena (University of Ottawa) and Cristina Johnston (University of Stirling) Language and Linguistics: Michaël Abecassis (University of Oxford) Literature and Art: Peter Collier and Jean Khalfa (University of Cambridge) Literature and Non-fiction: Muriel Pic (University of Bern) Poetry: Nina Parish (University of Stirling) and Emma Wagstaff (University of Birmingham) Zoopoetics and Ecocriticism: Anne Simon (CNRS/Ecole normale supérieure, Paris)

    155 publications

  • Title: John McGahern and the Art of Memory

    John McGahern and the Art of Memory

    by Dermot McCarthy (Author) 2011
    ©2010 Monographs
  • Title: The Ambivalent Author

    The Ambivalent Author

    Five German Writers and their Jewish Characters, 1848-1914
    by Hannah Burdekin (Author)
    ©2002 Monographs
  • Title: From «Moby-Dick» to «Finnegans Wake»

    From «Moby-Dick» to «Finnegans Wake»

    Essays in Close Reading- Edited by Janusz Semrau
    by Janusz Semrau (Author) 2012
    ©2012 Monographs
  • Title: Landmarks in the German Novel

    Landmarks in the German Novel

    Part 1
    by Peter Hutchinson (Volume editor)
    ©2007 Edited Collection
  • Title: Landmarks in German Short Prose

    Landmarks in German Short Prose

    by Peter Hutchinson (Volume editor)
    ©2003 Edited Collection
  • Title: Legacies and Identity

    Legacies and Identity

    East and West German Literary Responses to Unification
    by Martin Kane (Volume editor)
    ©2002 Conference proceedings
Previous
Search in
Search area
Subject
Category
Language
Publication Schedule
Open Access
Year