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  • Travel Writing Across the Disciplines

    Theory and Pedagogy

    The recent critical attention devoted to travel writing enacts a logical transition from the ongoing focus on autobiography, subjectivity, and multiculturalism. Travel extends the inward direction of autobiography to consider the journey outward and intersects provocatively with studies of multiculturalism, gender, and subjectivity. Whatever the journey's motive--tourism, study, flight, emigration, or domination--journey changes both the country visited and the self that travels. Travel Writing Across the Disciplines welcomes studies from all periods of literature on the theory and/or pedagogy of travel writing from various disciplines, such as social history, cultural theory, multicultural studies, anthropology, sociology, religious studies, literary analysis, and feminist criticism. The volumes in this series explore journey literature from critical and pedagogical perspectives and focus on travel as metaphor in cultural practice. The recent critical attention devoted to travel writing enacts a logical transition from the ongoing focus on autobiography, subjectivity, and multiculturalism. Travel extends the inward direction of autobiography to consider the journey outward and intersects provocatively with studies of multiculturalism, gender, and subjectivity. Whatever the journey's motive--tourism, study, flight, emigration, or domination--journey changes both the country visited and the self that travels. Travel Writing Across the Disciplines welcomes studies from all periods of literature on the theory and/or pedagogy of travel writing from various disciplines, such as social history, cultural theory, multicultural studies, anthropology, sociology, religious studies, literary analysis, and feminist criticism. The volumes in this series explore journey literature from critical and pedagogical perspectives and focus on travel as metaphor in cultural practice. The recent critical attention devoted to travel writing enacts a logical transition from the ongoing focus on autobiography, subjectivity, and multiculturalism. Travel extends the inward direction of autobiography to consider the journey outward and intersects provocatively with studies of multiculturalism, gender, and subjectivity. Whatever the journey's motive--tourism, study, flight, emigration, or domination--journey changes both the country visited and the self that travels. Travel Writing Across the Disciplines welcomes studies from all periods of literature on the theory and/or pedagogy of travel writing from various disciplines, such as social history, cultural theory, multicultural studies, anthropology, sociology, religious studies, literary analysis, and feminist criticism. The volumes in this series explore journey literature from critical and pedagogical perspectives and focus on travel as metaphor in cultural practice.

    13 publications

  • Eruptions: New Feminism Across the Disciplines

    ISSN: 1091-8590

    This is a series of red-hot women's writing after the "isms." lt focuses on new cultural assemblages that are emerging from the deformation, breakout, ebullience, and discomfort of postmodern feminism. The series brings together a post-foundational generation of women's writing that, while still respectful of the idea of situated knowledge, does not rely on neat disciplinary distinctions and stable political coalitions. This writing transcends some of the more awkward textual performances of a first generation of "ferninism-meets-postmodernism" scholarship. lt has come to terms with its own body of knowledge as shifty, inflammatory, and ungovernable, The aim of the series is to make this cutting edge thinking more readily available to undergraduate and postgraduate students, researchers and new academics, and professional bodies and practitioners. Thus, we seek contributions from writers whose unruly scholastic projects are expressed in texts that are accessible and seductive to a wider academic readership. Proposals and/or manuscripts are invited from the domains of: "post" humanities, human movement studies, sexualities, media studies, literary criticism, information technologies, history of ideas, performing arts, gay and lesbian studies, cultural studies, post-colonial studies, pedagogics, social psychology, and the philosophy of science. We are particularly interested in publishing research and scholarship with international appeal from Australia, New Zealand, and the United Kingdom. This is a series of red-hot women's writing after the "isms." lt focuses on new cultural assemblages that are emerging from the deformation, breakout, ebullience, and discomfort of postmodern feminism. The series brings together a post-foundational generation of women's writing that, while still respectful of the idea of situated knowledge, does not rely on neat disciplinary distinctions and stable political coalitions. This writing transcends some of the more awkward textual performances of a first generation of "ferninism-meets-postmodernism" scholarship. lt has come to terms with its own body of knowledge as shifty, inflammatory, and ungovernable, The aim of the series is to make this cutting edge thinking more readily available to undergraduate and postgraduate students, researchers and new academics, and professional bodies and practitioners. Thus, we seek contributions from writers whose unruly scholastic projects are expressed in texts that are accessible and seductive to a wider academic readership. Proposals and/or manuscripts are invited from the domains of: "post" humanities, human movement studies, sexualities, media studies, literary criticism, information technologies, history of ideas, performing arts, gay and lesbian studies, cultural studies, post-colonial studies, pedagogics, social psychology, and the philosophy of science. We are particularly interested in publishing research and scholarship with international appeal from Australia, New Zealand, and the United Kingdom. This is a series of red-hot women's writing after the "isms." lt focuses on new cultural assemblages that are emerging from the deformation, breakout, ebullience, and discomfort of postmodern feminism. The series brings together a post-foundational generation of women's writing that, while still respectful of the idea of situated knowledge, does not rely on neat disciplinary distinctions and stable political coalitions. This writing transcends some of the more awkward textual performances of a first generation of "ferninism-meets-postmodernism" scholarship. lt has come to terms with its own body of knowledge as shifty, inflammatory, and ungovernable. The aim of the series is to make this cutting edge thinking more readily available to undergraduate and postgraduate students, researchers and new academics, and professional bodies and practitioners. Thus, we seek contributions from writers whose unruly scholastic projects are expressed in texts that are accessible and seductive to a wider academic readership. Proposals and/or manuscripts are invited from the domains of: "post" humanities, human movement studies, sexualities, media studies, literary criticism, information technologies, history of ideas, performing arts, gay and lesbian studies, cultural studies, post-colonial studies, pedagogics, social psychology, and the philosophy of science. We are particularly interested in publishing research and scholarship with international appeal from Australia, New Zealand, and the United Kingdom.

    16 publications

  • Title: Disciplining Subjectivities and Sensing Time at a US University
  • Title: Lying Bodies

    Lying Bodies

    Survival and Subversion in the Field of Vision
    by Akiko Shimizu (Author)
    ©2008 Monographs
  • Title: Sienkiewicz’s Bodies

    Sienkiewicz’s Bodies

    Studies of Gender and Violence
    by Ryszard Koziolek (Author) 2014
    ©2015 Monographs
  • Title: Queer Bodies

    Queer Bodies

    Sexualities, Genders, and Fatness in Physical Education
    by Heather Sykes (Author) 2010
    ©2011 Textbook
  • Title: Boys’ Bodies

    Boys’ Bodies

    Speaking the Unspoken
    by Michael Kehler (Volume editor) Michael Atkinson (Volume editor) 2010
    ©2010 Textbook
  • Title: Battleground Bodies

    Battleground Bodies

    Gender and Sexuality in Mozambican Literature
    by Eleanor Jones (Author) 2017
    Monographs
  • Title: (Non)Human Bodies

    (Non)Human Bodies

    In Various Contexts
    by Özden Sözalan (Volume editor) Inci Bilgin Tekin (Volume editor) 2022
    Edited Collection
  • Title: Bicultural Bodies

    Bicultural Bodies

    A Study of South Asian American Women’s Literature
    by Izabella Kimak (Author) 2013
    ©2014 Monographs
  • Title: Bodies of Poems

    Bodies of Poems

    Graphic Poetics in a Historical Perspective
    by Lennart Nyberg (Author)
    ©2009 Monographs
  • Title: Primordial Landscapes, Incorruptible Bodies

    Primordial Landscapes, Incorruptible Bodies

    Desert Asceticism and the Christian Appropriation of Greek Ideas on Geography, Bodies, and Immortality
    by Dag Øistein Endsjø (Author)
    ©2008 Monographs
  • Title: Performative Bodies, Hybrid Tongues

    Performative Bodies, Hybrid Tongues

    Race, Gender, Sex and Modernity in Latin America and the Maghreb
    by Julian Vigo (Author) 2011
    ©2010 Monographs
  • Title: Slave to the Body

    Slave to the Body

    Black Bodies, White No-Bodies and the Regulative Dualism of Body-Politics in the Old South
    by Lars Schroeder (Author)
    ©2003 Thesis
  • Title: Bodies That Work

    Bodies That Work

    African American Women’s Corporeal Activism in Progressive America
    by Tami Miyatsu (Author) 2020
    ©2020 Monographs
  • Title: Bodies of Discourse

    Bodies of Discourse

    Sport Stars, Mass Media and the Global Public
    by Cornel Sandvoss (Volume editor) Michael Real (Volume editor) Alina Bernstein (Volume editor)
    Textbook
  • Title: Re-Theorizing Discipline in Education

    Re-Theorizing Discipline in Education

    Problems, Politics, and Possibilities
    by Zsuzsanna Millei (Volume editor) Tom G. Griffiths (Volume editor) Robert John Parkes (Volume editor) 2010
    ©2010 Textbook
  • Title: Bodies Out of Control

    Bodies Out of Control

    Rethinking Science Texts
    by Matthew Weinstein (Author)
    ©2010 Textbook
  • Title: Disrupting Discipline of Black Women in Higher Education from a Black Feminist Perspective of Foucauldian Discipline

    Disrupting Discipline of Black Women in Higher Education from a Black Feminist Perspective of Foucauldian Discipline

    by Janelle Grant-Ashbaugh, (Author) Stephanie Masta, (Author) Jennifer DeBoer, (Author)
  • Title: Academic Discourse Across Disciplines

    Academic Discourse Across Disciplines

    by Ken Hyland (Volume editor) Marina Bondi (Volume editor) 2012
    ©2006 Edited Collection
  • Title: Mapping Academic Values in the Disciplines

    Mapping Academic Values in the Disciplines

    A Corpus-Based Approach
    by Davide Simone Giannoni (Author) 2010
    ©2010 Monographs
  • Title: Disciplining Coolies

    Disciplining Coolies

    An Archival Footprint of Trinidad, 1846
    by Amar Wahab (Author) 2019
    ©2019 Textbook
  • Title: Normes, disciplines et manuels scolaires

    Normes, disciplines et manuels scolaires

    by Sylvain Wagnon (Volume editor) 2022
    ©2022 Edited Collection
  • Title: The Queen's Two Bodies

    The Queen's Two Bodies

    Maria Stuart und Elisabeth I. von Schiller bis Jelinek
    by Elena Agazzi (Volume editor) Gesa Dane (Volume editor) Gaby Pailer (Volume editor) 2021
    ©2021 Conference proceedings
  • Title: Queering Paradigms VII

    Queering Paradigms VII

    Contested Bodies and Spaces
    by Bee Scherer (Volume editor) 2019
    ©2018 Edited Collection
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