New Publication Series "Transnational Cultures"

New Publication Series "Transnational Cultures"

Project owner / organizer
Transnational Modernisms Research Cluster (TMRC), University of Bristol ()
Hosting organization
City
Bristol
Country
United Kingdom
From - Until
01.03.2015 -
By
Price, Dorothy

The University of Bristol's Transnational Modernisms Research Cluster (TMRC), in association with the Centre for the Study of Colonial and Postcolonial Societies, is pleased to announce a new publication series from the academic publisher Peter Lang, entitled "Transnational Cultures", edited by Dorothy Price, Madhu Krishnan and Rhian Atkin.

Transnational Cultures promotes enquiry into the cultural products of transnationalism with a particular focus on the visual arts, literature, music, performance, cinema and new media. With the growth of diasporic communities, migratory crossings and virtual exchange, cultural production beyond, across and traversing borders has become an increasing focus of scholarship within historical, contemporary and comparative contexts. Concepts of nationhood are increasingly understood as a limiting and limited way of understanding culture, as artists, writers, filmmakers and intellectuals produce multilingual or translingual texts, collaborate and communicate across national borders, and redefine and reject the national in favour of the global and/or the postnational.

This series encourages new work that investigates how a transnational lens might transform existing understandings of art and culture produced in any period or location. What broader flows of knowledge, capital and power mark the cultural crossings that appear and reappear in pre-modern, modern and contemporary social formations? How do the cultural products of transnationalism trouble existing narratives of the nation-state? How do transnational cultures interact with and become absorbed by local, indigenous and national narratives? Topics may include the production and consumption of culture across borders; mutual exchange of ideas, objects and practices as a result of exile, migration and displacement; the role of social media, vlogging, reality television and digital gaming in transnational dialogue. The series strives to offer a renewed understanding of the networks of cultural exchange, transmission and translation that have helped to produce and disseminate aesthetic ideas across different continents and centuries.

Proposals for monographs and edited collections are welcome. All proposals and manuscripts will be peer reviewed. The main language of publication is English.

Editors Information
Published on
14.03.2015
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English
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