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  • Literary and Cultural Theory

    The objective of the Literary and Cultural Theory series is to publish works, collections of articles, and conference proceedings which aim at transgressing boundaries of single disciplines and at creating common space within which themes and methodologies of those single disciplines merge and contribute to the production of a novel approach to culture, literature, and philosophy. Within thus conceived area of the humanities we place particular emphasis on: first, interdisciplinarity (both in terms of topics and methodology) and, secondly, on theoretical (or theorizing) approach, i.e., an approach which not only aims at describing cultural and literary phenomena, but also at revealing their mechanisms and multiple interrelationships, visible sometimes only when boundaries of disciplines are transgressed, and when areas of overlap are identified. Those priorities do not exclude publication of volumes within what has traditionally been considered the realm of literary studies, as long as the critical and theorizing attitude is maintained. Editors Homepage : Prof. Dr. Wojciech Kalaga

    62 publications

  • Cultural History and Literary Imagination

    This series promotes critical inquiry into the relationship between the literary imagination and its cultural, intellectual or political contexts. The series encourages the investigation of the role of the literary imagination in cultural history and the interpretation of cultural history through literature, visual culture and the performing arts. Contributions of a comparative or interdisciplinary nature are particularly welcome. Individual volumes might, for example, be concerned with any of the following: The mediation of cultural and historical memory, The material conditions of particular cultural manifestations, The construction of cultural and political meaning, Intellectual culture and the impact of scientific thought, The methodology of cultural inquiry, Intermediality, Intercultural relations and practices. Acceptance is subject to advice from our editorial board, and all proposals and manuscripts undergo a rigorous peer review assessment prior to publication. The usual language of publication is English, but proposals in French, German, Italian and Spanish may also be considered. Editorial Board: Rodrigo Cacho, University of Cambridge; Sarah Colvin, University of Cambridge; Kenneth Loiselle, Trinity University; Heather Webb, Yale University.

    40 publications

  • Literary and Cultural Studies, Theory and the (New) Media

    ISSN: 0935-4093

    Literary and Cultural Studies, Theory and the (New) Media provides a forum for discussions on a variety of topics in literary, cultural, and media studies. Open to comparatist approaches, the series main venue is in anglophone literature and media, with a special emphasis on narratological, postcolonial, film and media studies. Dedicated to promoting innovative and theoretically informed analyses, the series publishes monographs as well as edited volumes versed in media and literary theory. It also encourages explorations within, as well as dialogues between, narratological, postcolonial, feminist and queer approaches. Other theoretical approaches (stylistics, New Historicism, ecocriticism, etc.) are welcome as are works on literary and cultural theory. All volumes in the series are peer-reviewed. Monographs: Only complete manuscripts are accepted for review. Edited volumes: A proposal with two essays is solicited; a final decision will be taken after all the essays have been submitted in their final form. Please address all queries to sekretariat.fludernik@anglistik.uni-freiburg.de or sieglinde.lemke@anglistik.uni-freiburg.de.

    10 publications

  • Contemporary Studies in Descriptive Linguistics: Literary and Cultural Stylistics

    This series provides an outlet for academic monographs which offer a recent and original contribution to linguistics and which are within the descriptive tradition. While the monographs demonstrate their debt to contemporary linguistic thought, the series does not impose limitations in terms of methodology or genre, and does not support a particular linguistic school. Rather the series welcomes new and innovative research that contributes to furthering the understanding of the description of language. The topics of the monographs are scholarly and represent the cutting edge for their particular fields, but are also accessible to researchers outside the specific disciplines. Contemporary Studies in Descriptive Linguistics is based at the Department of English, University of Buckingham. The Literary and Cultural Stylistics subseries aims to explore the intersection of descriptive linguistics with the disciplines of literature and culture. The techniques of stylistic analysis offer a way of approaching texts both literary and non-literary as well as all forms of cultural communication. The subseries offers a home for this research, where literary criticism meets linguistics and where cultural studies meets communication. It welcomes a wide range of data sets and methodologies, with the intention that every book in the subseries makes a new contribution to the disciplines that support them.

    0 publications

  • The Modernist Revolution in World Literature

    ISSN: 1528-9672

    In the stormy time period approximately between the Paris Commune in 1871 and the revolutionary events in May 1968, or between the conclusion of the American Civil War and the withdrawal of American troops from Vietnam, the rise and fall of international modernism was crucial to all historical, political, and intellectual de-velopments around the world. By the time the United States had emerged from its military involvement in Indo-China, the modernist movement had given way to postmodernism. This series investigates the development of international modern-ism in the half century leading up to World War I and its disintegration in the fol-lowing fifty years. High modernism claimed that it represented a break with corrupt values of previous cultural traditions, but we now think that this very drive to “make it new” is itself derivative. What are the roots and characteristics of modernism? How did the philosophical and pedagogical system supporting modernism develop? Is mod-ernism, perhaps, not a liberating movement but a device to shield high culture from rising democratic vulgarization? What is the role of modernism in postcolonial struggles? Where does feminism fall in the modernist agenda? How do changing systems of patronage and the economy of art influence modernism as an enor-mously expanded reading public becomes augmented by cinema, radio, and televi-sion? Such questions on a worldwide stage, in the century approximately from 1870 to 1970, in all manifestations of literature, art, politics, and culture, represent the scope of this series In the stormy time period approximately between the Paris Commune in 1871 and the revolutionary events in May 1968, or between the conclusion of the American Civil War and the withdrawal of American troops from Vietnam, the rise and fall of international modernism was crucial to all historical, political, and intellectual de-velopments around the world. By the time the United States had emerged from its military involvement in Indo-China, the modernist movement had given way to postmodernism. This series investigates the development of international modern-ism in the half century leading up to World War I and its disintegration in the fol-lowing fifty years. High modernism claimed that it represented a break with corrupt values of previous cultural traditions, but we now think that this very drive to “make it new” is itself derivative. What are the roots and characteristics of modernism? How did the philosophical and pedagogical system supporting modernism develop? Is mod-ernism, perhaps, not a liberating movement but a device to shield high culture from rising democratic vulgarization? What is the role of modernism in postcolonial struggles? Where does feminism fall in the modernist agenda? How do changing systems of patronage and the economy of art influence modernism as an enor-mously expanded reading public becomes augmented by cinema, radio, and televi-sion? Such questions on a worldwide stage, in the century approximately from 1870 to 1970, in all manifestations of literature, art, politics, and culture, represent the scope of this series In the stormy time period approximately between the Paris Commune in 1871 and the revolutionary events in May 1968, or between the conclusion of the American Civil War and the withdrawal of American troops from Vietnam, the rise and fall of international modernism was crucial to all historical, political, and intellectual de-velopments around the world. By the time the United States had emerged from its military involvement in Indo-China, the modernist movement had given way to postmodernism. This series investigates the development of international modern-ism in the half century leading up to World War I and its disintegration in the fol-lowing fifty years. High modernism claimed that it represented a break with corrupt values of previous cultural traditions, but we now think that this very drive to “make it new” is itself derivative. What are the roots and characteristics of modernism? How did the philosophical and pedagogical system supporting modernism develop? Is mod-ernism, perhaps, not a liberating movement but a device to shield high culture from rising democratic vulgarization? What is the role of modernism in postcolonial struggles? Where does feminism fall in the modernist agenda? How do changing systems of patronage and the economy of art influence modernism as an enor-mously expanded reading public becomes augmented by cinema, radio, and televi-sion? Such questions on a worldwide stage, in the century approximately from 1870 to 1970, in all manifestations of literature, art, politics, and culture, represent the scope of this series

    3 publications

  • Title: Modernist Women Dandies

    Modernist Women Dandies

    Poetry, Photography, Authorship
    by Teona Micevska (Author) 2021
    ©2021 Thesis
  • Title: An Apprehensive Aesthetic: The Legacy of Modernist Culture

    An Apprehensive Aesthetic: The Legacy of Modernist Culture

    The Legacy of Modernist Culture
    by Andrew McNamara (Author)
    ©2009 Monographs
  • Title: Freaks in Late Modernist American Culture

    Freaks in Late Modernist American Culture

    Nathanael West, Djuna Barnes, Tod Browning, and Carson McCullers
    by Nancy Bombaci (Author)
    ©2006 Monographs
  • Title: Literary and Cultural Circulation

    Literary and Cultural Circulation

    by José Luís Jobim (Volume editor) 2017
    Edited Collection
  • Title: Literary and Cultural Relations

    Literary and Cultural Relations

    Ireland, Hungary and Central and Eastern Europe
    by Maria Kurdi (Volume editor) 2020
    ©2009 Monographs
  • Title: Freaks in Late Modernist American Culture

    Freaks in Late Modernist American Culture

    Nathanael West, Djuna Barnes, Tod Browning, and Carson McCullers
    by Nancy Bombaci (Author) 2024
    ©2024 Monographs
  • Title: Postmodernism in Estonian Literary Culture

    Postmodernism in Estonian Literary Culture

    by Piret Viires (Author) 2012
    ©2012 Monographs
  • Title: Will the Modernist

    Will the Modernist

    Shakespeare and the European Historical Avant-Gardes
    by Giovanni Cianci (Volume editor) Caroline M. Patey (Volume editor) 2014
    ©2014 Edited Collection
  • Title: Literary and cultural forays into the contemporary

    Literary and cultural forays into the contemporary

    by Katarzyna Więckowska (Volume editor) Grzegorz Koneczniak (Volume editor) 2016
    ©2017 Edited Collection
  • Title: Norman Mailer and the Modernist Turn

    Norman Mailer and the Modernist Turn

    by Jerry Schuchalter (Author) 2015
    ©2016 Monographs
  • Title: Cultural Contexts and Literary Forms

    Cultural Contexts and Literary Forms

    Essays on Genre
    by Goethe Society of India (Volume editor) Chitra Harshvardhan (Volume editor) Rekha Rajan (Volume editor) Madhu Sahni (Volume editor) 2015
    ©2016 Edited Collection
  • Title: The Modernist Human

    The Modernist Human

    The Configuration of Humanness in Stéphane Mallarmé’s "Herodiade</I>, T. S. Eliot’s "Cats</I>, and Modernist Lyrical Poetry
    by Noriko Takeda (Author)
    ©2008 Monographs
  • Title: Literary and Cultural Images of a Nation without a State

    Literary and Cultural Images of a Nation without a State

    The Case of Nineteenth-Century Poland
    by Agnieszka B. Nance (Author)
    ©2008 Monographs
  • Title: Modernist Translation

    Modernist Translation

    An Eastern European Perspective: Models, Semantics, Functions
    by Tamara Brzostowska-Tereszkiewicz (Author) 2016
    ©2016 Monographs
  • Title: Revisiting Style in Literary and Cultural Studies

    Revisiting Style in Literary and Cultural Studies

    Interdisciplinary Articulations
    by Jasmin Herrmann (Volume editor) Moritz Ingwersen (Volume editor) Björn Sonnenberg-Schrank (Volume editor) Olga Ludmila Tarapata (Volume editor) 2020
    ©2019 Edited Collection
  • Title: The Language of Polish Modernism

    The Language of Polish Modernism

    by Ryszard Nycz (Author) 2017
    ©2017 Monographs
  • Title: Aspects of Reference in Literary Theory

    Aspects of Reference in Literary Theory

    Poetics, Rhetoric and Literary History
    by Alina Silvana Felea (Author) 2017
    ©2017 Monographs
  • Title: Modernist Visions

    Modernist Visions

    Marcel Proust’s «A la recherche du temps perdu» and Jean-Luc Godard’s «Histoire(s) du cinéma»
    by Miriam Heywood (Author) 2012
    ©2012 Monographs
  • Title: Musicality of a Literary Work

    Musicality of a Literary Work

    by Andrzej Hejmej (Author) 2019
    ©2018 Monographs
  • Title: On Variations of Classical Chinese Literary Theory for a Framework of Global Literary History
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