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  • New Disciplinary Perspectives on Education

    ISSN: 2297-718X

    Educational theory has always been framed within a wider context including philosophy, psychology, sociology and history. In the last ten years, educational discourse has been characterized by the emergence of a more managerialist paradigm and increased emphasis on the delivery of particular educational ‘outcomes’. This has taken place in the context of the huge expansion of tertiary education from the national level, a process in which education has come to be understood as a lucrative global commodity. But alongside these developments, there has also been a resurgence of interest in the educational insights provided by the disciplines of education: for example, renewed emphasis on enquiry-based approaches to learning (Dewey), social constructivist pedagogy (Vygotsky), educational critique (Bourdieu, Freire), new inter-religious pedagogies (Grimmit, Jackson) and fresh perspectives on the ‘spiral’ curriculum (Bruner). Much of this work takes the form of a critique of the instrumentalism of outcome-driven approaches. As the debt-laden student emerges as a political subject, educational discourse has come to represent a particularly contested terrain. The book series New Disciplinary Perspectives on Education seeks to explore how these debates within the resurgence of the disciplines of education relate to wider political and economic conditions, creating new critical understandings and possibilities within educational theory and practice. It welcomes both theoretical and empirical studies, alongside mixed-methods approaches, and publishes disciplinary studies within philosophy, psychology, sociology and history as well as encouraging cross-disciplinary and inter-disciplinary work.

    15 publications

  • Crosscurrents: New Studies on the Middle East

    ISSN: 2381-2443

    "This series will publish book-length manuscripts pertaining to the peoples of the Middle East. The Middle East is understood in the broadest sense associated with the term, and is reflective of widely shared socio-religious patterns, histories, and heritages. For the purpose of this series, the Middle East will include what is more commonly referred to as the Near East (Lebanon, Syria, Jordan, Israel/Palestine); North Africa (Egypt, Libya, Tunisia, Algeria, Morocco, Mauritania, Mali, Chad, the Sudans, and Somalia); Turkey and Iran; Saudi Arabia, Yemen, and the countries of the Arab Gulf; and, finally, Afghanistan, Pakistan, and the Central Asian Republics. The series will be interdisciplinary and inclusive of diverse topics and methodologies. Representative fields will include art, art history, architecture, language and literature, history, politics, economics, and religion. Reinterpretations, as well as investigations of the hitherto uninvestigated, will be especially welcomed. "

    5 publications

  • Vampire Studies: New Perspectives on the Undead

    ISSN: 2977-0718

    Vampires are everywhere. Appearing on streaming services, in book series and on multimedia platforms, vampires and the undead are an integral part of popular culture in the twenty-first century. But vampires have a long and varied history across cultures from at least the early eighteenth century onwards. Nina Auerbach once commented on their cultural ubiquity: ‘Every age embraces the vampire it needs, and gets the vampire it deserves’. The inherently transformative properties of vampires have made them uniquely able to reflect the age in which they appear. As a result, they provide original and multiple perspectives, not just on culture, but on established and emerging areas of study. Vampires and the undead serve as a useful lens for exploring Indigeneity, environmental studies and the ecogothic; identity, ethnicity and gender politics; material culture, spectatorship and fan cultures; hybridity, post-humanism and futurities; disability, mental health and ageing studies; and theology, philosophy and politics. These new territories and methodologies of vampire studies also retroactively shift the ways we view and understand earlier iterations of the undead and the different cultures they materialized from. In this first book series dedicated to vampire studies, authors will explore the ongoing evolution of vampires and the undead in the broadest sense – including the supernatural, super-human and non-human, and across cultures, histories and media – and will use new theoretical frameworks to offer original and innovative readings of established and more recent texts. This original series aims to provide a focused hub for the diverse and often dispersed body of study that sees the vampire and the undead not as a subgenre of other categories such as the Gothic or horror, but as a genre in its own right that intersects with others. An important dimension of the series is diversity and the inclusion of multiple cultural and minority perspectives, including LGBTQ+, disability, Indigeneity, and any approaches that encourage new ways of viewing the cultural impact of vampires and the undead and widen our understanding of an ever-expanding genre. Proposals for monographs and edited collections are warmly invited. All projects undergo rigorous peer review. Please contact the series editor, Simon Bacon (baconetti@googlemail.com), or editorial@peterlang.com for more information. Editorial Board: Stacey Abbott (Birkbeck, University of London), Katarzyna Ancuta (Chulalongkorn University, Thailand), Uzoamaka Melissa Anyiwo (University of Scranton, USA), John Edgar Browning (Savannah College of Art and Design, USA), S. Brooke Cameron (Queen's University, Canada), Sir Christopher Frayling, Tabish Khair (University of Aarhus, Denmark), Lorna Piatti-Farnell (Auckland University of Technology, New Zealand), Xavier Aldana Reyes (Manchester Metropolitan University, UK), Cristina Santos (Brock University, Canada), Jeffrey Andrew Weinstock (Central Michigan University, USA), Laura Westengard (City University of New York).

    0 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

  • Medieval Interventions

    New Light on Traditional Thinking

    ISSN: 2376-2683

    Medieval Interventions publishes innovative studies on medieval culture broadly conceived. By «innovative», we envisage works espousing, for example, new research protocols especially those involving digitized resources, revisionist approaches to codicology and paleography, reflections on medieval ideologies, fresh pedagogical practices, digital humanities, advances in gender studies, as well as fresh thinking on animal, environmental, geospatial, and nature studies. In short, the series will seek to set rather than follow agendas in the study of medieval culture. Since medieval intellectual and artistic practices were naturally interdisciplinary, the series welcomes studies from across the humanities and social sciences. Recognizing also the vigor that marks the field worldwide, the series endeavors to publish work in translation from non-Anglophone medievalists.

    13 publications

  • Title: Painted Poetry

    Painted Poetry

    Colour in Baudelaire’s Art Criticism
    by Ann Kennedy Smith (Author) 2011
    ©2011 Monographs
  • Title: New Media Theories

    New Media Theories

    by Deniz Yengin (Author) Tamer Bayrak (Author) 2023
    ©2023 Monographs
  • Title: Questions of Colour in Cinema

    Questions of Colour in Cinema

    From Paintbrush to Pixel
    by Wendy Everett (Volume editor) 2012
    ©2008 Conference proceedings
  • Title: Colour and Light, Illness and Death

    Colour and Light, Illness and Death

    A New Interpretation of Kafka’s "Der Proceß</I>
    by Barbara McKenzie (Author) 2011
    ©2011 Thesis
  • Title: Reading Colour

    Reading Colour

    George, Rilke, Kandinsky, Lasker-Schüler
    by Rey Conquer (Author) 2019
    ©2019 Monographs
  • Title: Local Colour

    Local Colour

    A Travelling Concept
    by Vladimir Kapor (Author)
    ©2009 Monographs
  • Title: A New Theory of Information & the Internet

    A New Theory of Information & the Internet

    Public Sphere meets Protocol
    by Mark Balnaves (Author) Michele A. Willson (Author)
    ©2011 Textbook
  • Title: The New History of Political Theory

    The New History of Political Theory

    Ancient Greece to the Modern World
    by Garrett Ward Sheldon (Author) 2023
    ©2023 Textbook
  • Title: New Perspectives on Irish TV Series

    New Perspectives on Irish TV Series

    Identity and Nostalgia on the Small Screen
    by Flore Coulouma (Volume editor) 2016
    ©2016 Edited Collection
  • Title: New Perspectives on Languages in Contact

    New Perspectives on Languages in Contact

    by Félix Rodríguez González (Volume editor) 2024
    ©2024 Others
  • Title: New Studies on Lex Regia

    New Studies on Lex Regia

    Right, Philology and Fides Historica in Holland Between the 17 th and 18 th Centuries
    by Fabrizio Lomonaco (Author) 2011
    ©2011 Monographs
  • Title: Bertrand Russell

    Bertrand Russell

    The Colours of Pacifism
    by Claudio Giulio Anta (Author) 2023
    ©2023 Monographs
  • Title: New Perspectives on The Black Atlantic

    New Perspectives on The Black Atlantic

    Definitions, Readings, Practices, Dialogues
    by Bénédicte Ledent (Volume editor) Pilar Cuder-Domínguez (Volume editor) 2012
    ©2012 Edited Collection
  • Title: Foucault and Contemporary Theory in Higher Education: New Approaches, Theories, and Conditions of Possibility
  • Title: New Perspectives on China’s Late Imperial Period

    New Perspectives on China’s Late Imperial Period

    Why China Slept
    by Patrick Leung (Author) 2020
    ©2020 Monographs
  • Title: New Perspectives on the Sierra Leone Krio

    New Perspectives on the Sierra Leone Krio

    by Mac Dixon-Fyle (Volume editor) Gibril Cole (Volume editor)
    ©2006 Monographs
  • Title: New Critical Perspectives on Franco-Irish Relations

    New Critical Perspectives on Franco-Irish Relations

    by Anne Goarzin (Volume editor) 2015
    ©2016 Edited Collection
  • Title: The Colours of the Past in Victorian England

    The Colours of the Past in Victorian England

    by Charlotte Ribeyrol (Volume editor) 2016
    ©2016 Edited Collection
  • Title: Pluricentric Languages: New Perspectives in Theory and Description

    Pluricentric Languages: New Perspectives in Theory and Description

    by Rudolf Muhr (Volume editor) Dawn Marley (Volume editor) 2015
    ©2015 Conference proceedings
  • Title: Theories of Dynamic Cosmopolitanism in Modern European History

    Theories of Dynamic Cosmopolitanism in Modern European History

    by Georg Cavallar (Author) 2017
    Monographs
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