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People of Print
New Histories in the Book and Print TradesPeople of Print: New Histories in the Book and Print Trades is a platform for new scholarship focusing on the people behind the global print trade. The series reveals the untold stories of printers, publishers, booksellers and cultural intermediaries who have shaped the literary and cultural history of print networks worldwide. It expands the field through fresh perspectives on overlooked individuals, places and periods. People of Print offers a forum for both emergent and established international researchers to disseminate their scholarship. Proposals are welcome for monographs, biographies and edited collections that challenge established narratives and highlight the diversity of the book and print trades. The primary language of publication is English. All projects will undergo rigorous peer review.
1 publications
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Indigenous Cultures of Latin America
Past and PresentISSN: 2689-8217
Indigenous Cultures of Latin America: Past and Present is a new bilingual series that welcomes book proposals, in English or Spanish, focused on the fields of anthropology, archaeology, linguistics, ethnohistory, and art history, among others. We encourage original proposals for projects that use a conjunctive approach to understanding beliefs and lifeways of prehispanic, colonial period, and contemporary indigenous peoples inhabiting Latin America, broadly defined (i.e. extending into parts of the U.S. Southeast and Southwest), relying on a combination of methodologies and data sets to interpret the subject matter. We further encourage projects that utilize decolonizing methodologies and seek to promote research and fieldwork undertaken in collaboration with local indigenous communities and/or indigenous consultants. The series will publish academic monographs, edited collections, and readers. All book proposals and manuscripts will be subject to a rigorous single-blind peer review process, conducted by experts in the respective field(s) of study. Proposals and author/volume editor CVs should be sent to the Series Editor, Dr. Gabrielle Vail, at vailg@email.unc.edu.
4 publications
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Kurdish People, History and Politics
ISSN: 2701-3030
Kurdish People, History and Politics is envisioned as a series to create new knowledge about the Kurds. The social basis of Kurdish Studies began to widen in the latter part of the twentieth century, growing in the context of major political and cultural changes on the global and regional levels including the coming to power of the Kurdistan Regional Government in the wake of the 1991 U.S. war against Iraq, the process of peace negotiation between the Turkish State and the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) since the 1990s, and in more recent years, the struggle of the Syrian Kurds in Rojava (Northern Syria) for self-determination. In the last three decades, an expanded network of Kurdish Studies scholars have borrowed theoretical and methodological approaches from feminist studies, cultural studies, anti-colonial and anti-racist epistemology. This series pushes the boundaries of existing scholarship through a robust engagement with critiques of nationalism, patriarchy, class, colonialism, and orientalism, with the aim of contributing to the renewal of Kurdish Studies in two distinctive ways: First, it aims to prevail over the limitations imposed on knowledge production and dissemination on the Kurds and their homeland of Kurdistan, in Turkey, Iran, Syria, and Iraq. Second, it strives to broaden the social base of Kurdish Studies, which until the mid-twentieth century was primarily conducted by Western academics specializing in the anthropological study of the Kurdish people, languages and culture. The series encourages authors to engage with theoretical frameworks that allow a radical break with the colonial, orientalist, and nationalist traditions of knowledge production, exploring social media, democratization, border studies, and geographies of resistance in the context of Kurdish diaspora through this critical lens. We welcome proposals for monographs, oral history projects, anthologies, edited collections, and projects interdisciplinary and collaborative in nature.
4 publications
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The Griqua Conundrum
Political and Socio-Cultural Identity in the Northern Cape, South Africa©2007 Monographs -
Nationalisms and Identities among Indigenous Peoples
Case Studies from North America©2015 Edited Collection -
Seeing and Knowing the Indigenous Peoples of the Americas
Exchange and Alliance Between France and the New World During the French Wars of Religion©2023 Monographs -
Die rechtliche Stellung der Indianerstämme innerhalb der Vereinigten Staaten von Amerika
Ein Modell für den Schutz der "indigenous peoples"©1995 Thesis -
Indigenous Epistemology
Descent into the Womb of Decolonized Research Methodologies©2020 Monographs -
My People as Your People
A Textual and Archaeological Analysis of the Reign of Jehoshaphat©2016 Monographs -
Indigenous Cosmopolitans
Transnational and Transcultural Indigeneity in the Twenty-First Century©2010 Textbook -
Indigenous Grammar Across Cultures
©2001 Edited Collection -
Legacies of Indigenous Resistance
Pemulwuy, Jandamarra and Yagan in Australian Indigenous Film, Theatre and Literature©2019 Monographs -
An Indigenous Curriculum of Place
The United Houma Nation’s Contentious Relationship with Louisiana’s Educational Institutions©2007 Textbook -
Indigenous Nigerian Communication and Media Theories
©2026 Edited Collection