-
Islands and Cities in Medieval Myth, Literature, and History
Papers Delivered at the International Medieval Congress, University of Leeds, in 2005, 2006, and 2007©2011 Edited Collection -
Moors, Mansions, and Museums
Transgressing Gendered Spaces in Novels of the Brontë Sisters©2010 Thesis -
Hitler and Mussolini in Churches
The Church Painter’s Subversion of Fascism: The Ideological Marking of Space along the Slovene–Italian Border©2020 Monographs -
Turning Wind into Power
Effects of Stakeholder Networks on Renewable Energy Governance in India©2011 Thesis -
Space, Time and the Construction of Identity
Discursive Indexicality in Cultural, Institutional and Professional Fields©2013 Edited Collection -
Networked Remembrance
Excavating Buried Memories in the Railways beneath London and Berlin©2017 Monographs -
Spaces of Desire – Spaces of Transition
Space and Emotions in Modern Literature©2011 Edited Collection -
From Magic Columns to Cyberspace
Time and Space in German Literature, Art, and Theory©2008 Monographs -
Studies in European Integration, State and Society
ISSN: 2193-2352
European integration is a profound phenomenon influencing our current understanding of political and social processes in Europe and beyond. The set of European institutions that have now functioned in the continent for over half a century have created new broadened frames of reference for a variety of social actors. The most comprehensive is the European Union, which can be characterised as a multilevel polity. The other organisations, such as the Council of Europe and OSCE, also contribute significantly to the new mode of relations in Europe. This has in turn influenced how social and political actors act and define their roles. European integration has changed the functioning of states, their sovereignty and the meaning and status of borders, as well as the nature of citizenship. It has also allowed social actors to be engaged in the increasingly transnationalised public sphere and therefore changed the analysis of the concept of civil society. In addition, it profoundly impacts the life of individuals, permitting spatial and social mobility along with reconstruction of collective identity and memory. This series welcomes book proposals that look at the political and social aspects of human activities in the broadest terms but analysed from the perspective of how these processes are transformed as a result of European integration. The series is open to work emerging from research cooperation between Polish and foreign scholars. Authors are welcome to submit manuscripts of monographs, collected volumes, and post-conference volumes. Outstanding dissertations will also be considered for publication.
23 publications
-
Cities and Catastrophes- Villes et catastrophes
Coping with Emergency in European History- Réactions face a l’urgence dans l’histoire européenne©2002 Edited Collection -
Voyage and Emotions across Genres
©2020 Conference proceedings