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Number, Word, and Spirit
Rethinking T. F. Torrance’s Theological Science From a Pneumatological Perspective©2018 Monographs -
The Fall of the Word and the Rise of the Mental Model
A Reinterpretation of the Recent Research on Spatial Cognition and Language©2006 Monographs -
Words and Expressions of Emotion in Medieval English
©2013 Monographs -
A World in Words, A Life in Texts
Revisiting Latin American Cultural Heritage – Festschrift in Honour of Peter R. Beardsell©2011 Others -
Methodological Considerations in Morphological Processing Research
©2022 Monographs -
Criminal Humanities & Forensic Semiotics
This series publishes monographs, anthologies, annotated literary editions, and comparative studies that critically engage the humanities as a locus for the study of criminal offending, criminal investigation, deviance, penology, and deterrence, as well as the epistemology of justice. We are especially interested in submissions with a strong interdisciplinary orientation and which lie at the crossroads of theory and practice. In other words, this series is foremost concerned with using artistic, literary, and multimedia texts, situations, and other products of the strictly non-investigative world as vehicles for exploring long-standing social and procedural issues of interest to both academia and the general public. By engaging a wide readership encompassing both scholars and practitioners, it is the intent of this series to breathe new life into the humanities and cultural studies, not to further alienate or obfuscate the scholarship done in these disciplines. For this reason, collaborations between authors representing academic institutions and those working in both private and public knowledge sectors, including government and specialized areas of law enforcement, are encouraged to collaborate with respect to this project. The series will publish studies and anthologies that explore the connection between fictional writing, movies, music, traditional electronic media, the Internet, and other domains of popular culture and how they have influenced the perception of crime and criminality. The synergy that exists between real crime (reality) and imagined criminality as manifesting itself through representations in writing and media is the primary focus of the series. We also welcome submissions that draw on any number of semiotic, linguistic, and comparative literature traditions, particularly those espousing new approaches to these fields and which allow key concepts to be unpacked within the framework of the criminal justice system, the forensic sciences, or other professions or institutions that serve the public interest.
5 publications
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Vocalizing Silenced Voices
White Supremacy, social caste, cultural hegemony, and narratives to overcome trauma and social injustice©2024 Textbook -
Images of Otherness
©2022 Edited Collection -
Trauma and Identity in Contemporary Irish Culture
©2020 Edited Collection -
Journeys in the Sun: Travel Literature and Desire in the Balearic Islands (1903–1939)
Second edition©2017 Monographs -
Invisible Languages in the Nineteenth Century
©2015 Edited Collection -
Vowel Elision in Florentine Italian
©2012 Thesis -
Kumeyaay Courses «astride la línea»
An Account of Cross-Border Contacts and Collaborations of an Indigenous Community at the California Border©2011 Thesis -
New Possibilities for Early Childhood Education
Stories from Our Nontraditional Students©2006 Textbook