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  • Title: A History of Irish Ballet from 1927 to 1963

    A History of Irish Ballet from 1927 to 1963

    by Victoria O'Brien (Author) 2011
    ©2011 Monographs
  • Title: Activist Art in Social Justice Pedagogy

    Activist Art in Social Justice Pedagogy

    Engaging Students in Glocal Issues Through the Arts, Revised Edition
    by Barbara Beyerbach (Volume editor) R. Deborah Davis (Volume editor) Tania Ramalho (Volume editor) 2017
    ©2017 Textbook
  • Title: Activist Art in Social Justice Pedagogy

    Activist Art in Social Justice Pedagogy

    Engaging Students in Glocal Issues through the Arts
    by Barbara Beyerbach (Volume editor) R. Deborah Davis (Volume editor)
    ©2011 Textbook
  • After Spirituality

    Studies in Mystical Traditions

    The role of mysticism is dramatically changing in Western society and culture as well as in the relationship between spiritual traditions throughout the world in the era of globalization. After Spirituality: Studies in Mystical Traditions seeks to develop a wide range of perspectives – anthropological, cultural, hermeneutical, historical, psychological, and sociological – on mystical and spiritual centers, figures, movements, textual and artistic products. The series will appeal to broad audiences, ranging from scholars to students to teachers.

    8 publications

  • Title: Ahasuerus at the Easel

    Ahasuerus at the Easel

    Jewish Art and Jewish Artists in Central and Eastern European Modernism at the Turn of the Last Century
    by Tom Sandqvist (Author) 2014
    ©2014 Monographs
  • Title: Beautiful Strangers

    Beautiful Strangers

    Ireland and the World of the 1950s
    by Gerald Dawe (Volume editor) Darryl Jones (Volume editor) Nora Pelizzari (Volume editor) 2013
    ©2013 Edited Collection
  • Title: Brazilian Political Theatre

    Brazilian Political Theatre

    Aesthetics and Engagement
    by José de Ipanema (Author) 2023
    ©2023 Thesis
  • Title: Bruno Munari

    Bruno Munari

    The Lightness of Art
    by Pierpaolo Antonello (Volume editor) Matilde Nardelli (Volume editor) Margherita Zanoletti (Volume editor)
    ©2017 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: Constance Naden

    Constance Naden

    Scientist, Philosopher, Poet
    by Clare Stainthorp (Author) 2019
    ©2019 Monographs
  • Title: Das Bild Griechenlands im Spiegel der Völker (17. bis 18. Jahrhundert)- The image of Greece in the mirror of nations (17 th -18 th  centuries)
  • Title: Dogmatics among the Ruins

    Dogmatics among the Ruins

    German Expressionism and the Enlightenment as Contexts for Karl Barth’s Theological Development
    by Ian Boyd (Author)
    ©2004 Monographs
  • European Connections

    Studies in Comparative Literature, Intermediality and Aesthetics

    European Connections: Studies in Comparative Literature, Intermediality and Aesthetics is a peer-reviewed series that publishes innovative research monographs, edited volumes as well as translations of key theoretical works. The series focuses on the literary and artistic relations that have shaped and continue to shape European cultures across national, linguistic and media boundaries, leading to vibrant new forms of artistic creation and aesthetic expression. It also wishes to explore relations with non-European cultures with a view to fostering more equitable models of cultural exchange and transfer. The series promotes comparative, intermedial and interdisciplinary approaches, whether studies of specific writers, filmmakers and artists; critical re-evaluations of historical periods (from the medieval to the ultra-contemporary) and movements; or wider theoretical reflections within the fields of comparative literature, intermediality studies and aesthetics. In light of the urgent need to revitalize the idea of Europe along new lines of thought, the series encourages research that explores the rich connections within European artistic and cultural production as well as the participation of European cultures in what the great philosopher of relation Édouard Glissant has called the Tout-monde. The series publishes in English, French and German. Editorial Board: Vincent Ferré (University Paris-Est Créteil), Robin Kirkpatrick (University of Cambridge), Kim Knowles (Aberystwyth University), Frauke Matthes (University of Edinburgh), Jean-Pascal Pouzet (University of Limoges), Marisa Verna (Università Cattolica, Milan)

    54 publications

  • Title: From Orientalism to Cultural Capital

    From Orientalism to Cultural Capital

    The Myth of Russia in British Literature of the 1920s
    by Olga Soboleva (Author) Angus Wrenn (Author) 2017
    Monographs
  • German Visual Culture

    German Visual Culture invites research on German art across different periods, geographical locations, and political contexts. Books in the series engage with aesthetic and ideological continuities as well as ruptures and divergences between individual artists, movements, systems of art education, art institutions, and cultures of display. Challenging scholarship that interrogates and updates existing orthodoxies in the field is desirable. A guiding question of the series is the impact of German art on critical and public spheres, both inside and outside the German-speaking world. Reception is thus conceived in the broadest possible terms, including both the ways in which art has been perceived and defined as well as the ways in which modern and contemporary German artists have undertaken visual dialogues with their predecessors or contemporaries. Issues of cultural transfer, critical race theory and related postcolonial analysis, feminism, queer theory, and other interdisciplinary approaches are encouraged, as are studies on production and consumption, especially the art market, pioneering publishing houses, and the ‘little magazines’ of the avant-garde. All proposals for monographs and edited collections in the history of German visual culture will be considered, although English will be the language of all contributions. Submissions are subject to rigorous peer review. The series will be promoted through the series editor’s Research Forum for German Visual Culture (https://www.eca.ed.ac.uk/research/research-forum-german-visual-culture), which he founded at the University of Edinburgh in 2011, and which has involved various symposia and related publications, all connected to an international network of Germanist scholars.

    20 publications

  • Title: Gesture in French Post-New Wave Cinema

    Gesture in French Post-New Wave Cinema

    by François Giraud (Author) 2023
    ©2023 Monographs
  • Title: Groups, Coteries, Circles and Guilds

    Groups, Coteries, Circles and Guilds

    Modernist Aesthetics and the Utopian Lure of Community
    by Laura Scuriatti (Volume editor) 2019
    ©2019 Edited Collection
  • Title: Hidden Stories – the Life Reform Movements and Art

    Hidden Stories – the Life Reform Movements and Art

    by Beatrix Vincze (Volume editor) Katalin Kempf (Volume editor) András Németh (Volume editor) 2021
    ©2020 Edited Collection
  • Hip-Hop Education

    Innovation, Inspiration, Elevation

    ISSN: 2643-5551

    Hip-Hop Education is a sociopolitical movement that utilizes both online and offline platforms to advance the utility of hip-hop as a theoretical framework and practical approach to teaching and learning. The movement is aimed at disrupting the oppressive structures of schools and schooling for marginalized youth through a reframing of hip-hop in the public sphere, and the advancement of the educative dimensions of the hip-hop culture. Hip-Hop Education’s academic roots include, but are not limited to the fields of education, sociology, anthropology and cultural studies and it draws its most distinct connections to the field of hip-hop studies; which is in many ways, is the stem from which this branch of study has grown and established itself. Authors and academics who brought hip-hop into fields like African American studies, philosophy, and the general public writ large, provided in depth studies of a wide range of topics that range from feminism to race and racism. Hip-Hop Education: Innovation, Inspiration, Elevation will be the first of its kind in educational praxis. The series will be composed of books by artists, scholars, teachers, and community participants. The series will publish global authors who are experts in the fields of Hip-Hop, Education, Black Studies, Black Popular Culture, Community Studies, Activism, Music, and Curriculum. Hip-Hop Education is explicit about its focus on the science and art of teaching and learning. This series argues that Hip-hop embodies the awareness, creativity and innovation that are at the core of any true education. Furthermore, its work brings visibility to the powerful yet silenced narratives of achievement and academic ability among the hip-hop generation; reflecting the brilliance, resilience, ingenuity and intellectual ability of those who are embedded in hip-hop culture but also not necessarily academics in the conventional sense.

    9 publications

  • Title: Hip Hop Harem

    Hip Hop Harem

    Women, Rap and Representation in the Middle East
    by Angela S. Williams (Author) 2020
    ©2020 Prompt
  • History and Philosophy of Science

    Heresy, Crossroads, and Intersections

    ISSN: 2376-6336

    This series invites book proposals that include innovative strategies for pursuing history and philosophy of science. Especially welcome are scholarly works using non-analytic philosophical perspectives to successfully bring to bear on our understanding of how scientific practices are related to the humanities and the social sciences. The series also welcomes exploration of the sciences in relation to gender, culture, society, and the intellectual and social contexts that illuminate the places, the structures of origination, and the patterns of development over generations. Approaches may include focused analyses of thinkers from unorthodox perspectives that can shed new light on the history and philosophy of science, such as Montaigne, Bruno, Galileo, Newton, Pascal, Emerson, Thoreau, Nietzsche, Jung, Freud. Proposals aimed at probing the philosophical intersections between the sciences and other societal practices that can be configured as heretic are also encouraged. These might include the emergence of the psychoanalytic movements in the twentieth century, how the fine arts have impinged on the historical processes that gave rise to the sciences over the last few centuries, how in turn the intellectual frameworks inaugurated by the sciences have been imported into the avant-garde movements that paralleled the advent of industrialized societies, and finally how contemporary scientific domains of knowledge reverberate in ’deviant’ social and artistic practices.

    9 publications

  • Imagining Black Europe

    ISSN: 2633-108X

    This series seeks to publish critical and nuanced scholarship in the field of Black European Studies. Moving beyond and building on the Black Atlantic approach, books in this series will underscore the existence, diversity and evolution of Black Europe. They will provide historical, intersectional and interdisciplinary perspectives on how Black diasporic peoples have reconfigured the boundaries of Black identity making, claim making and politics; created counterdiscourses and counterpublics on race, colonialism, postcolonialism and racism; and forged transnational connections and solidarities across Europe and the globe. The series will also illustrate the ways that Black European diasporic peoples have employed intellectual, socio-political, artistic/cultural, affective, digital and pedagogical work to aid their communities and causes, challenge their exclusion and cultivate ties with their allies, thus gaining recognition in their societies and beyond. Representing the field’s dynamic growth methodologically, geographically and culturally, the series will also collectively interrogate notions of Blackness, Black diasporic culture and Europeanness while also challenging the boundaries of Europe. Books in the series will critically examine how race and ethnicity intersect with the themes of gender, nationality, class, religion, politics, kinship, sexuality, affect and the transnational, offering comparative and international perspectives. One of the main goals of the series is to introduce and produce rigorous academic research that connects not only with individuals in academia but also with a broader public. Areas of interest: Social movements Racial discourses and politics Empire, slavery and colonialism Decolonialization and postcolonialism Gender, sexuality and intersectionality Black activism (in all its forms) Racial and political violence and surveillance Racial constructions Diasporic practices Race and racialization in the ancient, medieval, modern and contemporary eras Identity, representation and cultural productions (music, art, literature, etc.) Memory Migration and immigration Citizenship State building and diplomacy Nations and nationalisms All proposals and manuscripts will be rigorously peer reviewed. The language of publication is English. We welcome new proposals for monographs and edited collections. Advisory Board: Hakim Adi (Chichester), Robbie Aitken (Sheffield Hallam), Catherine Baker (Hull), Eddie Bruce-Jones (Birkbeck), Alessandra Di Maio (Palermo), Akwugo Emejulu (Warwick), Philomena Essed (Antioch), Crystal Fleming (Stony-Brook), David Theo Goldberg (UC Irvine), Silke Hackenesch (Cologne), Elahe Haschemi Yekani (Humboldt), Nicholas R. Jones (Yale), Silyane Larcher (CNRS), Olivette Otele (SOAS, London), Sue Peabody (Washington State), Kennetta Hammond Perry (Northwestern), Cassander L. Smith (Alabama), S. A. Smythe (Toronto)

    7 publications

  • 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: Internationalism and the Arts in Britain and Europe at the "Fin de Siècle"

    Internationalism and the Arts in Britain and Europe at the "Fin de Siècle"

    by Grace Brockington (Volume editor)
    ©2009 Conference proceedings
  • Title: Ireland, West to East

    Ireland, West to East

    Irish Cultural Connections with Central and Eastern Europe
    by Aidan O'Malley (Volume editor) Eve Patten (Volume editor) 2013
    ©2014 Edited Collection
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