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  • Title: Southern Hemisphere Ethnographies of Space, Place, and Time

    Southern Hemisphere Ethnographies of Space, Place, and Time

    by Robert E. Rinehart (Volume editor) Jacquie Kidd (Volume editor) Antonio Garcia Quiroga (Volume editor) 2018
    Edited Collection
  • Title: Space, Place and the Discursive Construction of Identity

    Space, Place and the Discursive Construction of Identity

    by Julia Bamford (Volume editor) Franca Poppi (Volume editor) Davide Mazzi (Volume editor) 2014
    ©2014 Edited Collection
  • Title: When Culture Goes to Market

    When Culture Goes to Market

    Space, Place, and Identity in an Urban Marketplace
    by Robert J. Shepherd (Author) 2007
    ©2008 Monographs
  • Title: Balzac and Violence

    Balzac and Violence

    Representing History, Space, Sexuality and Death in La Comédie humaine
    by Owen Heathcote (Author)
    ©2009 Monographs
  • Title: Time – Space – Places

    Time – Space – Places

    by Dietrich Henckel (Volume editor) Elke Pahl-Weber (Volume editor) Benjamin Herkommer (Volume editor)
    ©2007 Edited Collection
  • Title: Space and Time in Language

    Space and Time in Language

    by Mario Brdar (Volume editor) Marija Omazic (Volume editor) Visnja Pavicic Takac (Volume editor)
    ©2011 Edited Collection
  • Title: Revisiting Space

    Revisiting Space

    Space and Place in European Cinema
    by Wendy Everett (Volume editor) Axel Goodbody (Volume editor)
    ©2005 Conference proceedings
  • Title: This Timecoloured Place

    This Timecoloured Place

    The Time-Space Binarism in the Novels of James Joyce- Preface by Michał Głowiński
    by Agnieszka Graff (Author) 2012
    ©2012 Monographs
  • Title: «Ah done been tuh de horizon and back»

    «Ah done been tuh de horizon and back»

    Zora Neale Hurston’s Cultural Spaces in "Their Eyes Were Watching God" and "Jonah’s Gourd Vine"
    by Péter Gaál-Szabó (Author)
    ©2012 Thesis
  • Title: Re-Imagining and Re-Placing New York and Istanbul

    Re-Imagining and Re-Placing New York and Istanbul

    Exploring the Heterotopic and Third Spaces in Paul Auster's and Orhan Pamuk’s City Novels
    by Hatice Bay (Author) 2020
    ©2020 Thesis
  • Title: The Me-Generation in a Post-Collectivist Space

    The Me-Generation in a Post-Collectivist Space

    Dilemmas in a Time of Transition
    by Krystyna Szafraniec (Author) Jarosław Domalewski (Author) Krzysztof Wasielewski (Author) Paweł Szymborski (Author) Marcin Wernerowicz (Author) 2019
    ©2018 Monographs
  • Title: Voyages between France and Ireland

    Voyages between France and Ireland

    Culture, Tourism and Sport
    by Frank Healy (Volume editor) Brigitte Bastiat (Volume editor)
    Edited Collection
  • Title: City Places, Country Spaces

    City Places, Country Spaces

    Rhetorical Explorations of the Urban/Rural Divide
    by Wendy Atkins-Sayre (Volume editor) Ashli Quesinberry Stokes (Volume editor) 2020
    ©2020 Textbook
  • Title: Stonehenge: A Landscape Through Time

    Stonehenge: A Landscape Through Time

    by David Jacques (Author) Graeme Davis (Author) 2019
    ©2019 Edited Collection
  • Title: Mediation and the Communication Matrix

    Mediation and the Communication Matrix

    by C. Kaha Waite Phelan (Author)
    ©2004 Textbook
  • Title: Ein Platz für sich selbst. Schreibende Frauen und ihre Lebenswelten (1450-1700). A Place of Their Own. Women Writers and Their Social Environments (1450-1700)
  • The City as Place: Emotions, Experiences, and Meanings

    ISSN: 2632-0924

    The purpose of this series is to examine the city as a lived place. Specifically, we are interested in the ways in which the city is invested with meaning through everyday lived experiences. The series is particularly interested in submissions that focus on the perceptual and felt dimensions of urban places through exploring the experiential, emotional, sensory, and affective dimensions that contribute to how people behave in, feel about, and move around in cities. Books in this series will interrogate the relationship between people and place through a focus on the diverse ways in which subjective and intimate feelings are fundamental constituents of the urban experience. We encourage authors to examine the city as a lived place from a range of different perspectives, and to be inclusive of individual and collective voices in the city to better understand the historical development and contemporary evolution of diverse urban settings. Some of the questions we seek to explore through the series include, but are not restricted to: How is the city experienced, by whom, and how does this change over time? Who shapes the experience of the city and for what reasons? How do individual and shared joy, fear, pride, nostalgia, disgust, or other emotions, shape the meanings attributed to urban spaces? How does the lived experience of, and emotional connections to, urban places inform the way particular spaces within cities are preserved and memorialized, or alternatively demolished and redeveloped? In what ways is our understanding of the lived experience of the city sharpened through the lens of comparative, transnational, and global approaches? The series seeks to examine the real and the imaginary, the representational and the non-representational, the historical and the contemporary, the remembered and the recreated in all historical periods including research on the twenty-first-century city. The series is open to work covering all geographic areas, and we encourage authors, where possible and relevant, to situate their studies in comparative, transnational, or global perspectives. Books may be published in English or in French. Series Editors: Dr Rebecca Madgin, Urban Studies, University of Glasgow and Dr Nicolas Kenny, History, Simon Fraser University. Advisory Board: Prof. Jan Plamper, Goldsmiths, London; Dr Katie Barclay, Adelaide; Prof. Nicole Eustace, NYU; Dr Joseph Prestel, FU Berlin; Prof. Piroska Nagy, Université du Québec à Montréal; Prof. Roey Sweet, Leicester; Prof. Astrid Swenson, Bath Spa; Prof. Steve Cooke, Deakin; Prof. Sian Jones, Stirling; Dr James Lesh, Melbourne; Dr Anneleen Arnout, Radboud. The purpose of this series is to examine the city as a lived place. Specifically, we are interested in the ways in which the city is invested with meaning through everyday lived experiences. The series is particularly interested in submissions that focus on the perceptual and felt dimensions of urban places through exploring the experiential, emotional, sensory, and affective dimensions that contribute to how people behave in, feel about, and move around in cities. Books in this series will interrogate the relationship between people and place through a focus on the diverse ways in which subjective and intimate feelings are fundamental constituents of the urban experience. We encourage authors to examine the city as a lived place from a range of different perspectives, and to be inclusive of individual and collective voices in the city to better understand the historical development and contemporary evolution of diverse urban settings. Some of the questions we seek to explore through the series include, but are not restricted to: How is the city experienced, by whom, and how does this change over time? Who shapes the experience of the city and for what reasons? How do individual and shared joy, fear, pride, nostalgia, disgust, or other emotions, shape the meanings attributed to urban spaces? How does the lived experience of, and emotional connections to, urban places inform the way particular spaces within cities are preserved and memorialized, or alternatively demolished and redeveloped? In what ways is our understanding of the lived experience of the city sharpened through the lens of comparative, transnational, and global approaches? The series seeks to examine the real and the imaginary, the representational and the non-representational, the historical and the contemporary, the remembered and the recreated in all historical periods including research on the twenty-first-century city. The series is open to work covering all geographic areas, and we encourage authors, where possible and relevant, to situate their studies in comparative, transnational, or global perspectives. Books may be published in English or in French. Series Editors: Dr Rebecca Madgin, Urban Studies, University of Glasgow and Dr Nicolas Kenny, History, Simon Fraser University. Advisory Board: Prof. Jan Plamper, Goldsmiths, London; Dr Katie Barclay, Adelaide; Prof. Nicole Eustace, NYU; Dr Joseph Prestel, FU Berlin; Prof. Piroska Nagy, Université du Québec à Montréal; Prof. Roey Sweet, Leicester; Prof. Astrid Swenson, Bath Spa; Prof. Steve Cooke, Deakin; Prof. Sian Jones, Stirling; Dr James Lesh, Melbourne; Dr Anneleen Arnout, Radboud. The purpose of this series is to examine the city as a lived place. Specifically, we are interested in the ways in which the city is invested with meaning through everyday lived experiences. The series is particularly interested in submissions that focus on the perceptual and felt dimensions of urban places through exploring the experiential, emotional, sensory, and affective dimensions that contribute to how people behave in, feel about, and move around in cities. Books in this series will interrogate the relationship between people and place through a focus on the diverse ways in which subjective and intimate feelings are fundamental constituents of the urban experience. We encourage authors to examine the city as a lived place from a range of different perspectives, and to be inclusive of individual and collective voices in the city to better understand the historical development and contemporary evolution of diverse urban settings. Some of the questions we seek to explore through the series include, but are not restricted to: How is the city experienced, by whom, and how does this change over time? Who shapes the experience of the city and for what reasons? How do individual and shared joy, fear, pride, nostalgia, disgust, or other emotions, shape the meanings attributed to urban spaces? How does the lived experience of, and emotional connections to, urban places inform the way particular spaces within cities are preserved and memorialized, or alternatively demolished and redeveloped? In what ways is our understanding of the lived experience of the city sharpened through the lens of comparative, transnational, and global approaches? The series seeks to examine the real and the imaginary, the representational and the non-representational, the historical and the contemporary, the remembered and the recreated in all historical periods including research on the twenty-first-century city. The series is open to work covering all geographic areas, and we encourage authors, where possible and relevant, to situate their studies in comparative, transnational, or global perspectives. Books may be published in English or in French. Series Editors: Dr Rebecca Madgin, Urban Studies, University of Glasgow and Dr Nicolas Kenny, History, Simon Fraser University. Advisory Board: Prof. Jan Plamper, Goldsmiths, London; Dr Katie Barclay, Adelaide; Prof. Nicole Eustace, NYU; Dr Joseph Prestel, FU Berlin; Prof. Piroska Nagy, Université du Québec à Montréal; Prof. Roey Sweet, Leicester; Prof. Astrid Swenson, Bath Spa; Prof. Steve Cooke, Deakin; Prof. Sian Jones, Stirling; Dr James Lesh, Melbourne; Dr Anneleen Arnout, Radboud.

    2 publications

  • Critical Literacies and Language

    Pedagogies of Social Justice

    One of the most fundamental aspects of a just society is the right to create equitable and inclusive spaces of belonging for all people while also confronting injustice and oppression. However, we are now in a time where seeking justice and equity is met with neoliberalism, which pervades the academy at all levels of education. Yet, for many, this is not a time for retreat, but rather a moment of solidarity, a time to create new knowledge and understanding through struggle. As Freire wrote, "Knowledge emerges only through invention and re-invention, through the restless, impatient, continuing, hopeful inquiry human beings pursue in the world, with the world, and with each other." Thus, the purpose of this series is to provide literacy and language researchers, practitioners, as well as community activists, with a space to actualize and embody a restless, impatient never-finished objective of critical literacies and language education. It is the aim of this series to create a space to share research that promotes pedagogies of equity. We also recognize that different audiences have different needs. To that end, we seek to provide, when applicable, a "notebook" as a companion to research volumes to facilitate actionable steps for the PK-12 classroom or community spaces. This series is different as it approaches the dissemination of critical work from a place of intentionality to address the gap in disseminating research (typically read by scholars) and the need to have it "on the ground" for classroom teachers, community activists, and workers. By creating companion volumes (where applicable), there is a greater chance for sustained criticality in literacy education.

    2 publications

  • Title: Temporary Art and Public Place: Comparing Berlin with Los Angeles
  • Title: Occupying Space in Medieval and Early Modern Britain and Ireland

    Occupying Space in Medieval and Early Modern Britain and Ireland

    by Gregory Hulsman (Volume editor) Caoimhe Whelan (Volume editor) 2016
    Edited Collection
  • Title: Beyond Sustenance

    Beyond Sustenance

    An Exploration of Food and Drink Culture in Ireland
    by Brian Murphy (Author) 2022
    Monographs
  • Title: Re-Place

    Re-Place

    Irish Theatre Environments
    by Lisa FitzGerald (Author) 2017
    ©2017 Monographs
  • Title: Foreign Language Learning Outside School

    Foreign Language Learning Outside School

    Places to See, Learn and Enjoy
    by Jutta Rymarczyk (Volume editor) 2013
    ©2014 Edited Collection
  • Title: Translation in Second Language Learning and Teaching

    Translation in Second Language Learning and Teaching

    by Arnd Witte (Volume editor) Theo Harden (Volume editor) Alessandra Ramos de Oliveira Harden (Volume editor) 2012
    ©2009 Conference proceedings
  • Title: Exile, language and identity

    Exile, language and identity

    by Magda Stroinska (Volume editor) Vittorina Cecchetto (Volume editor)
    ©2003 Edited Collection
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