African and French Cultural Narratives in Martinique: The Architecture of Social Dominance from 1635–1848 (Part 1)
In: The International Journal of Interdisciplinary Cultural Studies, Volume 7, Issue 1, p. 35-44
ISSN: 2327-2554
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In: The International Journal of Interdisciplinary Cultural Studies, Volume 7, Issue 1, p. 35-44
ISSN: 2327-2554
In: Tsarist and Soviet Mennonite studies
In: TranscUlturAl: a journal of translation and cultural studies, Volume 12, Issue 2, p. 101-106
ISSN: 1920-0323
Angelone, Erik, Maureen Ehrensberger-Dow and Gary Massey (eds). The Bloomsbury Companion to Language Industry Studies. Bloomsbury Academic, 2020. 406 pp.. The Bloomsbury Companion to Language Industry Studies. Bloomsbury Academic, 2020. 406 pp.
In: Kultur und soziale Praxis
Wie fühlt es sich an, als Sicherheitsproblem wahrgenommen zu werden? Wie wirkt sich das auf das Leben von »Muslim:innen« aus? Wie gehen sie in ihrem Alltag, ihren Beziehungen und bei ihrer Arbeit damit um? In Einzelinterviews und Gruppendiskussionen sprechen muslimische Akteur:innen darüber, wie sie angesichts des Sicherheitsdiskurses ihre Deutungs- und Handlungsmacht (wieder) gewinnen. Dabei wird rekonstruiert, wie Muslim:innen (oder als solche Markierte) das Verhältnis von Zustimmung und Kritik angesichts ihrer Adressierung austarieren und wie es ihnen gelingt, ihre Diskursivierung nicht (gänzlich) anderen zu überlassen und ihre Interessen umzusetzen.
In: Short introductions series
Intro -- Table of Contents -- Series page -- Title page -- Copyright page -- Tables and Figures -- Preface -- Acknowledgments -- Abbreviations -- 1: What's in a Name? Hispanic, Latino: Labels, Identities -- Constructing Hispanics -- Embodying Latinidad: Latino, Latina, Latina/o, Latin@, and Latinx -- A Latino by any other name … -- Who Latinos are, who Latinos are not -- Notes -- 2: Historical Groundings: The Origins of Latina/o Thought -- Conclusion -- Notes -- 3: Origins of Latina/o Studies: Puerto Rican and Chicano Studies -- Latina/o protest movements -- Culture of poverty -- Puerto Rican Studies -- Chicano Studies -- Conclusion -- Notes -- 4: The Arrival of Latina/o Studies: Bringing in Central American, Cuban, and Dominican Studies -- Bridges to Latina/o Studies -- Central American Studies -- Cuban American Studies -- Dominican Studies -- South American Studies -- The Arrival of Latina/o Studies -- Notes -- 5: Latina Feminism, Intersectionalities, and Queer Latinidades -- Reclamations/Recuperaciónes -- New directions/Direcciones nuevas -- Analyses/Análisis -- Queer Latino Studies and QTPOC critique -- Conclusion -- Notes -- 6: Latina/o Cultural Studies: From Invisible to Hypervisible -- Hyper(in)visibility -- Demonizing Latino immigrants: the hypervisibility of criminalization -- Latina/os in popular culture -- 7: New Approaches: The Logic of Comparisons, Connections, Bridges, and Borders -- From participatory action research to community-based engaged research -- Testimonio -- Comparative Latinidades and multiracialities -- Law and society: the development of LatCrit -- Border Studies -- Notes -- 8: New Perspectives: Theorizing (Post)Coloniality and Racializations -- Brown threats, Brown bodies -- Colonization: de-, post-, internal, power, settler -- Racializing Latinidades -- How the United States Racializes Latinos -- Conclusion -- Notes
In: Frau Minne und die Liebenden
Cover -- Contents -- Introduction: What's "Okay" in Bed? Identifying and Comparing Sexual Scripts in Media Content -- Chapter 1: Constructivist Theoretical Underpinnings: Sexual Scripts and Media Frames -- Chapter 2: Look-Sees, Lysol, and Baseball: Heterosexual Scripts in American Popular Culture -- Chapter 3: Sex as an Existential Journey: Heterosexual Scripts in European Popular Culture -- Chapter 4: What's Same-Sex Sex Like?: Popular Imagination of Gay and Lesbian Sexuality -- Chapter 5: Not Loud Enough, Too Loud: Gender and Heterosexuality Construction in Sex Advice -- Chapter 6: Kinksters, Swingers, and Other Weirdos: Media Depictions of Alternative Sexualities -- Chapter 7: Just What the Doctor Ordered: The Scientification of Sex and Sexual Dysfunction -- Chapter 8: Too Young, Too Old: The Procreative-Age Confinement of Socially Tolerable Sexuality -- Conclusion: The Implicit Perpetuation of Sexual Scripts -- References -- Index
In: The International Journal of Interdisciplinary Cultural Studies, Volume 11, Issue 2, p. 15-28
ISSN: 2327-2554
In: The International Journal of Interdisciplinary Cultural Studies, Volume 11, Issue 4, p. 1-8
ISSN: 2327-2554
In: Cultural identity studies vol. 11
World Affairs Online
In: Cultural Studies 23
Während Mode zumeist entweder als sozialpsychologisches Phänomen gesehen oder als wirtschaftlicher Faktor analysiert wird, ist es das Anliegen dieses Buches, Mode als allumfassendes kulturelles Phänomen sowie als einen zentralen Teil unseres kulturellen Alltags darzustellen. Mit Hilfe der Cultural Studies wird nicht nur die Interdisziplinarität von Mode, sondern auch die Verbindung zwischen Mode und Kultur analysiert, und damit veranschaulicht, wie Mode Kultur formt und selbst von ihr geformt wird. Mit dem Kulturkreislauf (Circuit of Culture) geben die Cultural Studies eine perfekte Plattform, um sämtliche Aspekte dieser Vernetzung von Mode und Kultur ansprechen, analysieren und mit Fallbeispielen belegen zu können: Identität, Repräsentation, Produktion, Regulierung und Konsum.
UID/HIS/04209/2013 UID/CPO/04627/2013 ; The central role in Portuguese political culture of the identification of Portugal as a colonizing power legitimized a massive mobilization and violent response to the perceived existential threat of decolonization in the shape of prolonged wars in its main African colonies (1961–1974). If, however, this cultural myth of a Greater Portugal overseas was so powerful, how was decolonization eventually possible? The accumulated human and economic cost of facing three simultaneous, protracted anti-colonial insurgencies eroded this overseas creed and made Catholic and Marxist strands of anti-colonialism increasingly attractive to younger, more internationally connected, Portuguese elites. What also happened, however, this article will argue, was a refashioning of the powerful cultural myth of a special connection between Portugal and tropical Africa. A colonial myth was turned into a post-colonial myth legitimizing decolonization as a mutual and fraternal liberation from the same oppressive regime without a loss of strong 'natural' cultural bonds. More widely, the article aims to show that we cannot ignore the importance of cultural factors in international history. Our approach in this article is pluralist and this means that while arguing strongly for taking culture seriously and focusing on it, it does consider other, including more material, dimensions of power. ; authorsversion ; published
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In: Journal of Islamic thought and civilization, Volume 6, Issue 1, p. 61-75
ISSN: 2520-0313