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  • Many Voices

    Ethnic Literatures of the Americas

    The literature of the Americas has a variety of cultural elements present under the general term "American." The canonical English mainstream of North America and the corresponding Spanish/Portuguese mainstream of South America have nevertheless reflected the arrival, assimilation, and marginality of numerous groups. Their experiences are both unique and representative of universal conditions of cultural contact and conflict. In both the United States and Canada, there are works which represent diverse aspects of the Black, Irish, Italian, Hispanic or Latino, Franco, German, Jewish, Portuguese, Greek, Slavic, and Asian communities, among others, as writers give both creative and testimonial form to the realities, both past and present of groups arriving subsequent to the original colonial period. In Latin America, some of these same groups are represented in the fiction written in Spanish and Portuguese. While this series focuses on specific ethnic groups and/or individual representatives, the fictional and poetic texts therein may address a range of issues, among them race relations, language and bilingualism, nationalism, colonialism, gender, class, cultural conflict, identity and maintenance, the context of multiculturalism. Critical approaches may include ethnocriticism, historical analyses, others, as well as structural critiques of these sorts of texts which by the very nature of their multiple focus become the aesthetic model for their content: a sort of border, mixed-blood, metis linguistic mode that in turn requires a double vision of its readers and critics. The literature of the Americas has a variety of cultural elements present under the general term "American." The canonical English mainstream of North America and the corresponding Spanish/Portuguese mainstream of South America have nevertheless reflected the arrival, assimilation, and marginality of numerous groups. Their experiences are both unique and representative of universal conditions of cultural contact and conflict. In both the United States and Canada, there are works which represent diverse aspects of the Black, Irish, Italian, Hispanic or Latino, Franco, German, Jewish, Portuguese, Greek, Slavic, and Asian communities, among others, as writers give both creative and testimonial form to the realities, both past and present of groups arriving subsequent to the original colonial period. In Latin America, some of these same groups are represented in the fiction written in Spanish and Portuguese. While this series focuses on specific ethnic groups and/or individual representatives, the fictional and poetic texts therein may address a range of issues, among them race relations, language and bilingualism, nationalism, colonialism, gender, class, cultural conflict, identity and maintenance, the context of multiculturalism. Critical approaches may include ethnocriticism, historical analyses, others, as well as structural critiques of these sorts of texts which by the very nature of their multiple focus become the aesthetic model for their content: a sort of border, mixed-blood, metis linguistic mode that in turn requires a double vision of its readers and critics. The literature of the Americas has a variety of cultural elements present under the general term "American." The canonical English mainstream of North America and the corresponding Spanish/Portuguese mainstream of South America have nevertheless reflected the arrival, assimilation, and marginality of numerous groups. Their experiences are both unique and representative of universal conditions of cultural contact and conflict. In both the United States and Canada, there are works which represent diverse aspects of the Black, Irish, Italian, Hispanic or Latino, Franco, German, Jewish, Portuguese, Greek, Slavic, and Asian communities, among others, as writers give both creative and testimonial form to the realities, both past and present of groups arriving subsequent to the original colonial period. In Latin America, some of these same groups are represented in the fiction written in Spanish and Portuguese. While this series focuses on specific ethnic groups and/or individual representatives, the fictional and poetic texts therein may address a range of issues, among them race relations, language and bilingualism, nationalism, colonialism, gender, class, cultural conflict, identity and maintenance, the context of multiculturalism. Critical approaches may include ethnocriticism, historical analyses, others, as well as structural critiques of these sorts of texts which by the very nature of their multiple focus become the aesthetic model for their content: a sort of border, mixed-blood, metis linguistic mode that in turn requires a double vision of its readers and critics.

    5 publications

  • Liberatory Stories and Rebel Voices for Abolition

    Liberatory Stories and Rebel Voices for Abolition, is a grass-roots community-focused radical transformative critical decolonizing anti-authoritarian book series on the political delineations of transforming education for liberation in communities occupying Indigenous territories and stolen land on Turtle Island (North America) and beyond. This book series will provide space and place for marginalized communities, students, workers, public intellectuals, activist-scholars, teachers, professors, justice impacted people, youth, and oppressed voices to critically resist and amplify their counter-stories which demand that in the rollout of the neoliberal agendas, that public education must be affordable, inclusive, equitable, inclusive, just, transformative, and open to all. This book series foregrounds writer’s agency with authentic story-telling, autoethnography, collective biography and life writing narratives and is a place for disseminating participatory action and social justice activist research. It seeks critical teaching and critical writing that resists Eurocentric pedagogies and methodologies such as denotative reports, standardized metrics, rubrics, corporate, neoliberal, capitalist, standardized, colonial, factory education that colonizes the mind. Instead, the series privileges radical liberatory praxis and makes space for outstanding embodied action research tied to teaching, transformative participatory projects created with not ‘on’ marginalized communities that centers the margin. This book series defends, supports, and participates in revolutionary, transformative, social justice radical critical abolition movements to end authoritarianism, domination, oppression, state-violence, and repression. This book series has a hope for democracy from which knowledge from and for the margins emerge as powerful counter-currents and disruptive discourses that liberate. This book series holds space and place for these voices who brave the world with knowledge in one hand and resistance in the other to liberate all.

    7 publications

  • Title: Silenced Voices

    Silenced Voices

    Hunagrian Plays from Transylvania
    by Csilla Bertha (Volume editor) Donald E. Morse (Volume editor)
    ©2008
  • Title: Challenging Voices

    Challenging Voices

    Music Making with Children Excluded from School
    by Philip Mullen (Author) 2021
    ©2022 Monographs
  • Title: Voices of the Churches, Voices of the Nationalities

    Voices of the Churches, Voices of the Nationalities

    Competing Loyalties in the Upper House of the Hungarian Parliament (1867 - 1918)
    by Andreea Dăncilă-Ineoan (Author) Marius Eppel (Author) Ovidiu-Emil Iudean (Author) 2019
    ©2019 Monographs
  • Title: Voices

    Voices

    Exploring the Shifting Contours of Communication
    by Patricia Moy (Volume editor) Donald Matheson (Volume editor) 2019
    ©2019 Textbook
  • Title: Voices of Dissent

    Voices of Dissent

    Interdisciplinary Approaches to New Italian Popular and Political Music
    by Giovanni Pietro Vitali (Author) 2020
    ©2020 Monographs
  • Title: Voices of Marginality

    Voices of Marginality

    Exile and Return in Second Isaiah 40-55 and the Mexican Immigrant Experience
    by Gregory Lee Cuéllar (Author)
    ©2008 Monographs
  • Title: Vocalizing Silenced Voices

    Vocalizing Silenced Voices

    White Supremacy, social caste, cultural hegemony, and narratives to overcome trauma and social injustice
    by Virginia Lea (Author) Sapna Thapa (Author) Emily Hines (Author) 2024
    ©2024 Textbook
  • Title: Autonomous Voices

    Autonomous Voices

    An Exploration of Polyphony in the Novels of Samuel Richardson
    by Alex Townsend (Author)
    ©2003 Monographs
  • Title: Reading Voices

    Reading Voices

    Five Studies in Theocritus’ Narrating Techniques
    by J. Andrew Foster (Author) 2016
    ©2016 Monographs
  • Title: Children's Voices in Politics

    Children's Voices in Politics

    by Michael S. Cummings (Author) 2020
    ©2020 Monographs
  • Title: Public Voices

    Public Voices

    Political Discourse in the Writings of Caroline de la Motte Fouqué
    by Karin Baumgartner (Author)
    ©2009 Monographs
  • Title: Voices in the Heart

    Voices in the Heart

    Postcolonialism and Identity in Hong Kong Literature
    by Brian J. Hooper (Author)
    ©2003 Thesis
  • Title: Women and Malay Voices

    Women and Malay Voices

    Undercurrent Murmurings in Indonesia’s Colonial Past
    by Tineke Hellwig (Author) 2012
    ©2012 Monographs
  • Title: New Voices, Inherited Lines

    New Voices, Inherited Lines

    Literary and Cultural Representations of the Irish Family
    by Yvonne O'Keeffe (Volume editor) Claudia Reese (Volume editor) 2013
    ©2013 Edited Collection
  • Title: Voices from the Margins

    Voices from the Margins

    Gender and the Everyday in Women’s Pre- and Post- Agreement Troubles Short Fiction
    by Mercedes del Campo (Author) 2021
    ©2022 Monographs
  • Title: Media and Marginalized Voices

    Media and Marginalized Voices

    Women and LGBTQIA+ Community
    by V. Vijay Kumar (Volume editor) Jyoti Sahoo (Volume editor) 2025
    ©2025 Edited Collection
  • Title: Eighteenth-Century Female Voices

    Eighteenth-Century Female Voices

    Education and the Novel
    by Sabine Augustin-Bech (Author)
    ©2005 Thesis
  • Title: Voices and Visions

    Voices and Visions

    Interviews with the Contemporary English-Language Poets of Wales
    by Kathryn Gray (Author) 2019
    ©2019 Edited Collection
  • Title: Voices of Experience

    Voices of Experience

    Reflections from a Harvard Teaching Seminar
    by Mary-Ann Winkelmes (Volume editor) James Wilkinson (Volume editor)
    ©2001 Textbook
  • Title: Contemporary Voices from Anima Mundi

    Contemporary Voices from Anima Mundi

    A Reappraisal
    by Frédérique Apffel-Marglin (Volume editor) Stefano Varese (Volume editor) 2020
    ©2020 Monographs
  • Title: The Voices of Mechthild of Magdeburg

    The Voices of Mechthild of Magdeburg

    by Elizabeth Ann Andersen (Author)
    ©2001 Monographs
  • Title: Voices of Early Childhood Educators

    Voices of Early Childhood Educators

    by Susan Bernheimer (Author) 2016
    ©2016 Textbook
  • Title: Voices of Rebellion

    Voices of Rebellion

    Political Writing by Malwida von Meysenbug, Fanny Lewald, Johanna Kinkel and Louise Aston
    by Ruth Whittle (Author) Debbie Pinfold (Author)
    ©2005 Monographs
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