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  • Title: Urban Dynamics

    Urban Dynamics

    Conflicts, Representations, Appropriations and Policies
    by Anne-Marie Autissier (Volume editor) Javier Gómez Montero (Volume editor) Anxo Abuín (Volume editor) Victor Andrés Ferretti (Volume editor) Rubén Camilo Lois González (Volume editor) Rainer Wehrhahn (Volume editor) 2018
    ©2018 Edited Collection
  • Title: Les Villes et la fin du XX e  siècle en Amérique latine : Littératures, cultures, représentations- Las ciudades y el fin del siglo XX en América latina: Literaturas, culturas, representaciones

    Les Villes et la fin du XX e siècle en Amérique latine : Littératures, cultures, représentations- Las ciudades y el fin del siglo XX en América latina: Literaturas, culturas, representaciones

    Littératures, cultures, représentations/Literaturas, culturas, representaciones
    by Teresa Orecchia Havas (Volume editor)
    ©2007 Conference proceedings
  • Title: Kaliningrad and Cultural Memory

    Kaliningrad and Cultural Memory

    Cold War and Post-Soviet Representations of a Resettled City
    by Edward Saunders (Author) 2019
    ©2019 Monographs
  • Title: Urban and Rural Landscapes in Modern Ireland

    Urban and Rural Landscapes in Modern Ireland

    Language, Literature and Culture
    by Irene Gilsenan Nordin (Volume editor) Carmen Zamorano Llena (Volume editor) 2012
    ©2012 Edited Collection
  • Title: Urban Cultures of/in the United States

    Urban Cultures of/in the United States

    Interdisciplinary Perspectives
    by Andrea Carosso (Volume editor) 2011
    ©2010 Edited Collection
  • Title: New York City: «Gilt Cage» or «Promised Land»?

    New York City: «Gilt Cage» or «Promised Land»?

    Representations of Urban Space in Edith Wharton and Anzia Yezierska
    by Irene Billeter Sauter (Author) 2011
    ©2011 Thesis
  • Title: Whose Space is it Anyway?

    Whose Space is it Anyway?

    Place Branding and the Politics of Representation
    by Pascale Cohen-Avenel (Volume editor) Graham Roberts (Volume editor) 2024
    ©2023 Edited Collection
  • Title: Visualizing Dublin

    Visualizing Dublin

    Visual Culture, Modernity and the Representation of Urban Space
    by Justin Carville (Volume editor) 2013
    ©2014 Edited Collection
  • Title: Cities of the Lusophone World

    Cities of the Lusophone World

    Literature, Culture and Urban Transformations
    by Doris Wieser (Volume editor) Ana Filipa Prata (Volume editor) 2021
    Edited Collection
  • Title: Cartographies of Culture

    Cartographies of Culture

    Memory, Space, Representation
    by Wojciech Kalaga (Volume editor) Marzena Kubisz (Volume editor)
    ©2010 Edited Collection
  • Title: Imagining the City, Volume 1

    Imagining the City, Volume 1

    The Art of Urban Living
    by Christian Emden (Volume editor) Catherine Keen (Volume editor) David Robin Midgley (Volume editor)
    ©2006 Conference proceedings
  • Title: East/West, an Ambiguous State of Being

    East/West, an Ambiguous State of Being

    The Construction and Representation of Egyptian Cultural Identity in Egyptian Film
    by Hind Rassam Culhane (Author)
    ©1995 Others
  • Title: Giorgio Scerbanenco

    Giorgio Scerbanenco

    Urban Space, Violence and Gender Identity in Post-War Italian Crime Fiction
    by Marco Paoli (Author) 2016
    ©2016 Thesis
  • Title: What They Don’t Learn in School

    What They Don’t Learn in School

    Literacy in the Lives of Urban Youth
    by Jabari Mahiri (Volume editor)
    ©2005 Textbook
  • Title: London – Berlin

    London – Berlin

    Authenticity, Modernity, and the Metropolis in Urban Travel Writing from 1851 to 1939
    by Hagen Schulz-Forberg (Author)
    ©2006 Monographs
  • 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

  • Title: Of Empire and the City

    Of Empire and the City

    Remapping Early British Cinema
    by Maurizio Cinquegrani (Author) 2014
    ©2014 Monographs
  • Title: From European Modernity to Pan-American National Identity

    From European Modernity to Pan-American National Identity

    Literary Confluences between Edgar Allan Poe, Charles Baudelaire and Machado de Assis
    by Greicy Pinto Bellin (Author) 2018
    ©2018 Monographs
  • Title: Disarchiving Anguish

    Disarchiving Anguish

    Charles Reznikoff and the Modalities of Witnessing
    by Jacek Partyka (Author) 2021
    ©2021 Monographs
  • Title: Beyond the Piazza

    Beyond the Piazza

    Public and Private Spaces in Modern Italian Culture
    by Simona Storchi (Volume editor) 2013
    ©2013 Edited Collection
  • Title: Jane Smiley, Jonathan Franzen, Don DeLillo

    Jane Smiley, Jonathan Franzen, Don DeLillo

    Narratives of Everyday Justice
    by Jason S. Polley (Author) 2011
    ©2011 Monographs
  • Title: Envisioning American Utopias

    Envisioning American Utopias

    Fictions of Science and Politics in Literature and Visual Culture
    by Antje Dallmann (Volume editor) Reinhard Isensee (Volume editor) Philipp Kneis (Volume editor)
    ©2011 Edited Collection
  • Title: Postmodern Spain

    Postmodern Spain

    A Cultural Analysis of 1980s-1990s Spanish Culture
    by Antonio Sanchez (Author)
    ©2007 Monographs
  • Title: Vienna

    Vienna

    City of Modernity,- 1890-1914
    by Tag Gronberg (Author)
    ©2007 Monographs
  • Title: ‘Hanging in with Kids’ in Tough Times

    ‘Hanging in with Kids’ in Tough Times

    Engagement in Contexts of Educational Disadvantage in the Relational School
    by John Smyth (Author) Barry Down (Author) Peter McInerney (Author)
    ©2010 Textbook
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