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Socialist Educational Cooperation and the Global South
©2020 Edited Collection -
Socialist Countries Face the European Community
Soviet-Bloc Controversies over East-West Trade©2014 Thesis -
From Beauty Fear to Beauty Fever
A Critical Study of Contemporary Chinese Female Writers©2011 Monographs -
City and Power – Postmodern Urban Spaces in Contemporary Poland
©2018 Edited Collection -
Paths of Urban Transformation
©2005 Edited Collection -
Science Fiction Circuits of the South and East
©2018 Edited Collection -
Planning as a welfare project
International models, theories and policies from the mid-century to the presentEdited Collection -
Planning as a welfare project
International models, theories and policies from the mid-century to the presentEdited Collection -
The Problem of Nutrition
Experimental Science, Public Health and Economy in Europe 1914-1945©2010 Monographs -
Polish Studies in Culture, Nations and Politics
The Polish Studies in Culture, Nations and Politics series publishes monographs and collected volumes aimed at scholars working in Sociology, Political Sciences and History. The studies depict the formation of cultural identities, and their subsequent expression in historical, geographical and political contexts focusing on selected cases from Poland and the globalized world. The editor of the series Professor Joanna Kurczewska and her co-editor Dr. Yasuko Shibata both specialize in relations between culture, politics, locality and nationalism in the post-socialist systems.
7 publications
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Exile Studies
Exile Studies is a series of monographs and edited collections that takes a broad view of exile, including the life and work of refugees from National Socialism, and beyond. The series explores the different global and cultural spaces of exile and refuge as well as the specific historical, political and social concerns of exile writers and artists. The series engages with recent theoretical approaches to exile to shed new light on the unique conditions of mass flight from National Socialist persecution, with a particular interest in the work of Jewish refugees of the period. A plurality of theoretical approaches is encouraged, featuring research that reaches beyond national frameworks or disciplinary boundaries and takes multi-directional, transcultural or comparative approaches. The series aims to make connections to studies on more recent groups of refugees and to contribute to current debates. Themes include persecution, exclusion and delocalization, legacies of displacement, loss and acculturation as well as the creation of new homes and networks. The series promotes dialogue among transnational, Jewish and memory studies, and among diaspora, Holocaust and postcolonial studies. It invites research that acknowledges questions of gender, race, class, religion and ethnicity as indispensable tools for understanding the cultural processes connected to the lives and works of refugees and exiles.
26 publications