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  • Ludic Scholarship

    Games, Learning, and Innovative Pedagogy

    This series focuses on the intersection of gamification, ludology, pedagogy, and innovative methodological thinking, offering a space for cutting-edge scholarship that bridges game-based approaches with educational theory and practice. Ludic Scholarship highlights gamified learning and emergent methodologies that challenge traditional research frameworks, encouraging transformative approaches to teaching, learning, meaning-making, and the construction of knowledge. The series invites contributions that explore how game mechanics, narrative structures, and immersive environments are reshaping learning practices across disciplines. From theoretical explorations of ludic strategies to applied case studies of gamified pedagogy, Ludic Scholarship emphasizes creativity and academic rigor, inviting works that challenge established conventions. Targeting educators, researchers, and curriculum scholars, this series supports interdisciplinary collaborations and post-qualitative approaches that investigate the dynamic role of games and play in 21st-century education. This series focuses on the intersection of gamification, ludology, pedagogy, and innovative methodological thinking, offering a space for cutting-edge scholarship that bridges game-based approaches with educational theory and practice. Ludic Scholarship highlights gamified learning and emergent methodologies that challenge traditional research frameworks, encouraging transformative approaches to teaching, learning, meaning-making, and the construction of knowledge. The series invites contributions that explore how game mechanics, narrative structures, and immersive environments are reshaping learning practices across disciplines. From theoretical explorations of ludic strategies to applied case studies of gamified pedagogy, Ludic Scholarship emphasizes creativity and academic rigor, inviting works that challenge established conventions. Targeting educators, researchers, and curriculum scholars, this series supports interdisciplinary collaborations and post-qualitative approaches that investigate the dynamic role of games and play in 21st-century education. This series focuses on the intersection of gamification, ludology, pedagogy, and innovative methodological thinking, offering a space for cutting-edge scholarship that bridges game-based approaches with educational theory and practice. Ludic Scholarship highlights gamified learning and emergent methodologies that challenge traditional research frameworks, encouraging transformative approaches to teaching, learning, meaning-making, and the construction of knowledge. The series invites contributions that explore how game mechanics, narrative structures, and immersive environments are reshaping learning practices across disciplines. From theoretical explorations of ludic strategies to applied case studies of gamified pedagogy, Ludic Scholarship emphasizes creativity and academic rigor, inviting works that challenge established conventions. Targeting educators, researchers, and curriculum scholars, this series supports interdisciplinary collaborations and post-qualitative approaches that investigate the dynamic role of games and play in 21st-century education.

    2 publications

  • New Perspectives in Philosophical Scholarship

    Texts and Issues

    15 publications

  • Tartu Historical Studies

    ISSN: 2191-0480

    Tartu Historical Studies is the academic series by the Chair of Contemporary History at the University of Tartu, Estonia. The series’ aim is to publish peer-reviewed monographs and edited volumes in English or German on Central and Eastern European history. We encourage especially works related to topics of Baltic history.

    8 publications

  • Historical Sociolinguistics

    Studies on Language and Society in the Past

    The interdisciplinary field of Historical Sociolinguistics seeks to reveal the impact of language development on society and the role of individuals and society in the changing forms and usage of language. This book series is aimed at sociolinguists and social historians who are keen to publish studies on the social history of languages, the interaction of linguistic practices and society, and the sociological significance of linguistic variation with a historical dimension. The purpose of the series is to provide empirically supported studies that will challenge and advance current language historiographies, which often continue to present the history of particular languages as necessarily leading to the creation of a standard or prestige variety. Of particular interest are topics such as the following: language myths and language ideology, historical multilingualism and the formation of nation-states, the sociolinguistics of minority and regional languages, the rise of urban vernaculars, immigrants and their languages, the role of prescriptive grammarians, and the social history of pidgins and creoles. Book proposals from historians and linguists working on any language in any period are welcome, in particular those that include a comparative dimension as well as those with a strong empirical foundation. The language of publication is primarily English, though other languages may be considered. The editors guarantee that all publications in this series have been submitted to external and anonymous peer review. The four series editors and twenty-six members of the advisory board are all members of the Historical Sociolinguistics Network (HiSoN). Advisory Board: Anita Auer (Lausanne), Wendy Ayres-Bennett (Cambridge), Andrea Cuomo (Ghent), Steffan Davies (Bristol), Ana Deumert (Cape Town), José del Valle (CUNY), Martin Durrell (Manchester), Jan Fellerer (Oxford), Elin Fredsted (Flensburg), Róisín Healy (Galway), Juan Hernandez-Campoy (Murcia), Kristine Horner (Sheffield), Ernst Håkon Jahr (Agder), Mark Richard Lauersdorf (Kentucky), Anthony Lodge (St Andrews), Nicola McLelland (Nottingham), Miriam Meyerhoff (Oxford), Agnete Nesse (Bergen), Terttu Nevalainen (Helsinki), Taru Nordlund (Helsinki), Gijsbert Rutten (Leiden), Joachim Scharloth (Waseda Tokyo), Peter Trudgill (Fribourg), Marijke van der Wal (Leiden), Rik Vosters (Vrije Universiteit Brussel), Laura Wright (Cambridge)

    10 publications

  • Studies in Historical Linguistics

    Studies in Historical Linguistics brings together work which utilises the comparative method of language study. Topics include the examination of language change over time, the genetic classification of language, lexicography, dialectology and etymology. Pronunciation, lexis, morphology and syntax are examined within the framework of historical linguistics. Both synchronic and diachronic approaches are used so that language is examined both at one time and across time. Historical Linguistics is still a young area of academic study, but it has its foundations in one of the oldest - philology. This series recognises both the seminal importance of philology, and the recent development through the conceptual framework provided by linguistic science. Studies in Historical Linguistics is based at the Department of Media, Culture and Languages at the University of Roehampton.

    8 publications

  • Title: Outsiders or Equals?

    Outsiders or Equals?

    Women Professors at the University of New Zealand, 1911-1961
    by Tanya Fitzgerald (Author)
    ©2009 Monographs
  • Title: “Using Historical Examples to Give Evidence about the Changes” and Chengzhai’s Scholarship on the Changes1
  • Title: The Impetus of Amateur Scholarship

    The Impetus of Amateur Scholarship

    Discussing and Editing Medieval Romances in Late-Eighteenth and Nineteenth-Century Britain
    by Monica Santini (Author)
    ©2010 Monographs
  • Title: Legal Scholarship in International and Comparative Law

    Legal Scholarship in International and Comparative Law

    by Thomas Groß (Volume editor)
    ©2003 Edited Collection
  • Title: Media Scholarship in a Transitional Age

    Media Scholarship in a Transitional Age

    Research in Honor of Pamela J. Shoemaker
    by Carol M. Liebler (Volume editor) Tim P. Vos (Volume editor) 2018
    ©2018 Edited Collection
  • Title: Historical (Im)politeness

    Historical (Im)politeness

    by Jonathan Culpeper (Volume editor) Dániel Z. Kádár (Volume editor) 2011
    ©2010 Edited Collection
  • Title: Nordic Ideology between Religion and Scholarship

    Nordic Ideology between Religion and Scholarship

    by Horst Junginger (Volume editor) Andreas Akerlund (Volume editor) 2013
    ©2013 Conference proceedings
  • Title: The Book of Margery Kempe

    The Book of Margery Kempe

    Scholarship, Community, and Criticism
    by Marea Mitchell (Author)
    ©2005 Textbook
  • Title: Staging Thought

    Staging Thought

    Essays on Irish Theatre, Scholarship and Practice
    by Rhona Trench (Volume editor) 2012
    ©2012 Edited Collection
  • Title: The Algerian Historical Novel

    The Algerian Historical Novel

    Linking the Past to the Present and Future
    by Abdelkader Aoudjit (Author) 2021
    ©2020 Monographs
  • Title: Historical Analysis of the Catalan Identity

    Historical Analysis of the Catalan Identity

    by Flocel Sabaté (Volume editor) 2015
    ©2015 Edited Collection
  • Title: The Evaluation of Ideological Trends in Recent Soviet Literary Scholarship

    The Evaluation of Ideological Trends in Recent Soviet Literary Scholarship

    by Henrietta Mondry (Author) 1990
    ©1990 Monographs
  • Title: Contexts – Historical, Social, Linguistic

    Contexts – Historical, Social, Linguistic

    Studies in Celebration of Toril Swan
    by Kevin McCafferty (Volume editor) Tove Bull (Volume editor) Kristin Killie (Volume editor)
    ©2005 Others
  • Title: Intra-Writer Variation in Historical Sociolinguistics

    Intra-Writer Variation in Historical Sociolinguistics

    by Markus Schiegg (Volume editor) Judith Huber (Volume editor) 2023
    ©2023 Edited Collection
  • Title: Curriculum Studies Gone Wild

    Curriculum Studies Gone Wild

    Bioregional Education and the Scholarship of Sustainability
    by Nathan Hensley (Author)
    ©2011 Textbook
  • Title: Europe and the Historical Legacies in the Balkans

    Europe and the Historical Legacies in the Balkans

    by Raymond Detrez (Volume editor) Barbara Segaert (Volume editor)
    ©2008 Edited Collection
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