Re-inventing/Re-presenting Identities in a Global World is a collection of twelve selected essays which address the concepts of cultural identity formation and enactment, immigration, diaspora and repatriation, and gender politics within a globalized context. With the peripheral having now become the center of contemporary culture, this volume examines cultural and literary diversities that have emerged from the reciprocal traffic of ideas and influences between cultures, politics, aesthetics and disciplines, with an emphasis on cultural identity as a site of crisis and fragmentation.Written in an accessible way, this volume addresses several audiences, from postgraduate researchers and scholars in the fields of Anglo-American and cross-cultural studies, women''s studies, minority and ethnic literature studies, to scholars, students and specialists of American, cross-Atlantic and even global studies. Because of the numerous theoretical concerns which underpin this work and its interdisciplinary approach, the publication is also aimed at researchers and scholars in the fields of trans-atlantic studies and cultural geography, as well as the general reader who is interested in globality and cultural identity.
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Product Details
Format: Hardback
Dimensions: 148 x 212mm
Publication Date: 02 Apr 2012
Publisher: Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Publication City/Country: United Kingdom
Language: English
ISBN13: 9781443835695
About Eleftheria Arapoglu
Smatie Yemenedzi-Malathouni is Assistant Professor in the Department of American Literature and Culture in the School of English at the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki Greece. Her main publications are in Puritan American Literature and she is the co-editor of : : . . - - Thucydides: Historiae: The Peloponnesian War. k VIII. Introduction-Translation-Commentary (2011).Tatiani G. Rapatzikou is Assistant Professor in the Department of American Literature and Culture in the School of English at the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki Greece. She is the editor of Anglo-American Perceptions of Hellenism (2007) and H American Poetry in Greece (2006) as well as the author of Gothic Motifs in the Fiction of William Gibson (2004).Eleftheria Arapoglou works as Lecturer at the Department of English of the University of California at Davis USA. Her book A Bridge Over the Balkans: Demetra Vaka Brown and the Tradition of Women''s Orients (2011) is published by Gorgias Press and she has co-edited two volumes-Transcultural Localisms (2006) and City in (Culture in City) (2005).