@book{OPUS4-30542, title = {Global Cultural Studies? Engaged Scholarship between National and Transnational Frames}, editor = {Jetter, Tobias}, edition = {1. Auflage}, publisher = {W{\"u}rzburg University Press}, address = {W{\"u}rzburg}, isbn = {978-3-95826-206-5}, doi = {10.25972/WUP-978-3-95826-207-2}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-305425}, publisher = {W{\"u}rzburg University Press}, pages = {viii, 192}, year = {2023}, abstract = {Can cultural studies attend to the problems of our globalized world? Or is this project of "engaged scholarship" too deeply rooted in the parochial terrain of the national? This collection of essays - the first volume in the new JMU Cultural Studies publication series - attends to this vital yet difficult question. Based on joint seminars bringing together emerging scholars from Germany and India, the contributions confront "classic texts" from US-American, British, and Indian cultural studies with the specific concerns and contemporary perspectives of the authors. The collection thus tests the potentials of the tradition to speak to the transnational as well as the national environments of the very present. Emphasis is placed on Marxist and feminist legacies, which are then projected into the domains of contemporary disability, food, and film studies.}, subject = {Globalisierung}, language = {en} } @book{AgbokhanSandigHaasetal.2023, author = {Agbokhan, Serena and Sandig, Anna and Haas, Thea and Valentin, Francesca and Gasteiger, Annika and von Keller, Anna and Friedmann, Fiona and Wicht, Rebecca and Wintermeyer, Nina and Hofmann, Anna-Lena and Liebich, Alexander and B{\"o}rdlein, Sophie and L{\"u}deritz, Cathrin and Philipp, Sonja and Watermann, Anne and Hercher, Anna}, title = {Insights;}, editor = {Nelson-Teutsch, Hannah}, isbn = {978-3-945459-44-7}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-31700}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-317007}, publisher = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, pages = {99}, year = {2023}, abstract = {The cluster of texts assembled here were imagined, crafted, and brought together as a collaborative writing project that emerged from the seminar titled "Words Matter Worlds: Activist Scholarship and Literary Praxis," which convened over the course of the 2021/22 winter semester as an offering of the American Studies department of the Julius-Maximilians-Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg. Like the seminar that nurtured the considerations that evolve here, these contributions engage with how scholarly writing practices in general, and literary and cultural studies in particular, can remake the world.}, subject = {Aktivist}, language = {en} }