Your Search Results(showing 8)

    • Trusted Partner
    • Trusted Partner
      Humanities & Social Sciences
      June 2023

      Borders of desire

      by Elissa Helms, Tuija Pulkkinen

    • Trusted Partner
      Humanities & Social Sciences
      January 2026

      The urban life of workers in post-Soviet Russia

      by Alexandrina Vanke

    • Trusted Partner
      Humanities & Social Sciences
      January 2025

      Europeanisation as violence

      Souths and Easts as method

      by Kolar Aparna, Daria Krivonos, Elisa Pascucci

      The book offers a novel lens to situate Europeanisation as violence - through institutions and technologies of development, cultural heritage, and borders, among others - by bringing South and East within a relational frame. Through four inter-related sections, it foregrounds Europeanisation as infrastructural violence and colonial asymmetries, slow violence and the construction of stratified subalternities, epistemic dispossession, and border epistemologies.

    • Trusted Partner
      Humanities & Social Sciences
      May 2024

      Off white

      Central and Eastern Europe and the global history of race

      by Catherine Baker, Bogdan C. Iacob, Anikó Imre, James Mark

      This volume foregrounds racial difference as a key to an alternative history of the Central and Eastern European region, which revolves around the role of whiteness as the unacknowledged foundation of semi-peripheral nation-states and national identities, and of the region's current status as a global stronghold of unapologetic white, Christian nationalisms. Contributions address the pivotal role of whiteness in international diplomacy, geographical exploration, media cultures, music, intellectual discourses, academic theories, everyday language and banal nationalism's many avenues of expressions. The book offers new paradigms for understanding the relationships among racial capitalism, populism, economic peripherality and race.

    • December 2021

      Queering Chinese Kinship

      Queer Public Culture in Globalizing China

      by Lin Song

      What does it mean to be queer in a Confucian society in which kinship roles, ties, and ideologies are of such great importance? This book makes sense of queer cultures in China—a country with one of the largest queer populations in the world—and offers an alternative to Euro-American blueprints of queer individual identity. This book contends that kinship relations must be understood as central to any expression of queer selfhood and culture in contemporary cultural production in China. Using a critical approach—“queering Chinese kinship”—Lin Song scrutinizes the relationship between queerness and family relations, and questions Eurocentric queer culture’s frequent assumption of the separation of queerness from blood family. Offering five case studies of queer representations across a range of media genres, this book also challenges the tendency in current scholarship on Chinese and East Asian queerness to understand queer cultures as predominantly counter-mainstream, marginal, and underground. Shedding light on the representations of queerness and kinship in independent and subcultural as well as commercial and popular cultural products, the book presents a more comprehensive picture of queerness and kinship in flux and highlights queer politics as an integral part of contemporary Chinese public culture.

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