Cultural Studies 2009 (US)

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Routledge

New Titles and Key Backlist

Cultural Studies

2009

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www.routledge.com Welcome to the Routledge

CONTENTS

Cultural Studies Catalog

Books for Courses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1 Cultural Studies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4 Cultural Theory . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .10

New Titles & Key Backlist 2009

Gender and Sexuality . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .13 Race and Ethnicity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .16 Celebrity and Culture . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .20 Fashion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .21 Order Form . . . . . . . . . .Last Page of Catalog

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CONTACTS MARKETING CONTACTS For USA, Canada and Latin America: Joon Won Moon Marketing Manager Email: joonwon.moon@taylorandfrancis.com

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EDITORIAL CONTACTS COMPLETE CATALOG This catalog only includes a selection of our Cultural Studies titles. Our online catalog www.routledge.com gives you the power to search for any book currently in print by title, author’s last name, or ISBN. All the entries have a description of the book’s content.

For USA, Canada and Latin America: Matthew Byrnie Senior Editor Email: matthew.byrnie@taylorandfrancis.com

For all territories excluding the Americas: Natalie Foster Senior Editor

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BOOKS FOR COURSES

Books for Courses

TEXTBOOK

New

Cultural Studies: A Critical Introduction

TEXTBOOK

TEXTBOOK

Simon During

3RD EDITION

Cultural Studies: A Critical Introduction is a wideranging and stimulating introduction to the history and theory of Cultural Studies from Leavisism, through the era of the Centre for Contemporary Cultural Studies, to the global nature of contemporary Cultural Studies. Cultural Studies: A Critical Introduction begins with an introduction to the field and its theoretical history and then presents a series of short essays on key areas of Cultural Studies, designed to provoke discussion and raise questions. Each thematic section examines and explains a key topic within Cultural Studies.

The Cultural Studies Reader Edited by Simon During, John Hopkins University, Baltimore, USA The Cultural Studies Reader is the ideal introduction for students. A revised introduction explaining the history and key concerns of cultural studies brings together important articles by leading thinkers to provide an essential guide to the development, key issues and future directions of cultural studies. This fully updated third edition includes: •36 essays including 21 new articles •An editor’s preface succinctly introducing each article with suggestions for further reading •Comprehensive coverage of every major cultural studies method and theory •An updated account of recent developments in the field •Articles on new areas such as culture and nature and the cultures of globalization •New key thinkers such as CLR James, Gilles Deleuze, Antonio Negri and Edward Said, included for the first time The Cultural Studies Reader is designed to be read around the world and deals with issues relevant to each continent Table of Contents: Acknowledgments Introduction Simon During Part 1: Theory And Method Part 2: Culture In Space Part 3: Globalisation/Postmodernism Part 4: Nationalism/Postcolonialism/Multiculturalism Part 5: Science, Nature & Cyberculture Part 6: Sexuality & Gender Part 7: Consumption And The Market Part 8: Media And Public Spheres Bibliography Index 2007: 246x174: 576pp Hb: 0-415-37412-X ISBN13: 978-0-415-37412-5: $140.00 Pb: 0-415-37413-8 ISBN13: 978-0-415-37413-2: $39.95 • For a complimentary copy visit www.routledge.com/9780415374132

TEXTBOOK

The Everyday Life Reader Edited by Ben Highmore Using primary materials, Highmore brings together a wide range of thinkers to provide a comprehensive resource on theories of everyday life. Highmore’s introduction surveys the development of thought about everyday life. 2001: 246x174: 392pp Pb: 0-415-23025-X ISBN13: 978-0-415-23025-4: $43.95 • For a complimentary copy visit www.routledge.com/9780415230254

*See page 13 for companion introductory text, Everyday Life and Culture Theory

2ND EDITION

Table of Contents: Part 1: The Discipline 1. Going global 2. Enterprise culture 3. Genres and genealogies 4. Problems Part 2: Time 1. The Past: cultural history/cultural memory 2. The Present 3. The Future: policies and prophesies Part 3: Space 1. Thinking globalisation 2. The regional, national and local Part 4: Media and the Public Sphere 1. Television 2. Popular music 3. The internet and technoculture Part 5: Identity 1. Debating identity 2. Multiculturalism 3. Race Part 6: Sexuality and Gender 1. Feminism’s aftermath: gender today 2. Queer culture Part 7: Value 1. Culture high and low 2. The nature of culture 2005: 234x156: 256pp Pb: 0-415-24657-1 ISBN13: 978-0-415-24657-6: $33.95 • For a complimentary copy visit www.routledge.com/9780415246576

TEXTBOOK

The Celebrity Culture Reader Edited by P. David Marshall, Northeastern University Boston, USA From the new celebrity culture that has emerged from reality television and the Internet, to the paparazzi-filled endgame of Princess Diana and the bizarre trials and tribulations of Michael Jackson, The Celebrity Culture Reader documents the significant role that celebrities occupy in contemporary culture. Combining classic essays and contemporary writings, The Celebrity Culture Reader investigates the cultural implications of this complex contemporary phenomenon. Table of Contents: 1. Celebrity and Modernity: The Historical Pattern of Celebrity 2. The Textual and the Extra-Textual Dimensions of the Public Persona 3. Ascribed Celebrity: The Transformed Public Sphere 4. Transgression: Scandal, Notoriety and Infamy 5. The Body and Celebrity 6. Celebrity Culture: Narcissism, Fandom and the Will-to-Celebrity 7. Celebrity Nation: Celebrity in National Contexts 8. The Celebrity Industry: The Management of Fame. Conclusion: Surface and Depth: Celebrity in the “Post-Celebrity” Era 2006: 246x174: 872pp Hb: 0-415-33791-7 ISBN13: 978-0-415-33791-5: $150.00 Pb: 0-415-33792-5 ISBN13: 978-0-415-33792-2: $49.95 • For a complimentary copy visit www.routledge.com/9780415337922

Communication as Culture, Revised Edition Essays on Media and Society James W. Carey In this classic text, James W. Carey maintains that communication is not merely the transmission of information; reminding the reader of the link between the words “communication” and “community,” he broadens his definition to include the drawing-together of a people that is culture. In this context, Carey questions the American tradition of focusing only on mass communication’s function as a means of social and political control, and makes a case for examining the content of a communication—the meaning of symbols, not only the motives that originate them or the purposes they serve. He seeks to recast the goal of communications studies, replacing the search for deterministic laws of behavior with a simpler, yet far more challenging mission: “to enlarge the human conversation by comprehending what others are saying.” This new edition includes a new critical foreword by G. Stuart Adam that explains Carey’s fundamental role in transforming the study of mass communication to include a cultural perspective and connects his classic essays with contemporary media issues and trends. This edition also adds a new, complete bibliography of all of Carey’s writings. Table of Contents: Series Editor’s Introduction Acknowledgements; Introduction PART I: COMMUNICATION AS CULTURE; A cultural approach to communication; Mass communication and cultural studies; Reconceiving ‘mass’ and ‘media’; Overcoming resistance to cultural studies; PART II: TECHNOLOGY AND CULTURE; The mythos of the electronic revolution with John J Quirk; Space, time and communications: a tribute to Harold Innis; The history of the future with John J Quirk Technology and Ideology: the case of the telegraph; Works cited; Index; About the author September 2008: 229x152: 240pp Hb: 0-415-98975-2 ISBN13: 978-0-415-98975-6: $120.00 Pb: 0-415-98976-0 ISBN13: 978-0-415-98976-3: $29.95 • For a complimentary copy visit www.routledge.com/9780415989763

TEXTBOOK

The Popular Music Studies Reader Edited by Andy Bennett, Barry Shank and Jason Toynbee The Popular Music Studies Reader maps the changing nature of popular music over the last decade and considers how popular music studies has expanded and developed to deal with these changes. 2005: 246x174: 432pp Pb: 0-415-30710-4 ISBN13: 978-0-415-30710-9: $43.95 • For a complimentary copy visit www.routledge.com/9780415307109

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BOOKS FOR COURSES

TEXTBOOK

TEXTBOOK

Understanding Video Games

2ND EDITION

The Essential Introduction

The Subcultures Reader

Simon Egenfeldt-Nielsen, Jonas Heide Smith, and Susana Pajares Tosca, all at IT University of Copenhagen, Denmark

Second Edition

From Pong to PlayStation 3 and beyond, Understanding Video Games is the first general introduction to the exciting new field of video game studies. This textbook traces the history of video games, introduces the major theories used to analyze games such as ludology and narratology, reviews the economics of the game industry, examines the aesthetics of game design, surveys the broad range of game genres, explores player culture, and addresses the major debates surrounding the medium, from educational benefits to the effects of violence. Throughout the book, the authors ask readers to consider larger questions about the medium:

New TEXTBOOK

The Design Culture Reader

Edited by Ken Gelder Revised and updated completely to include new research and theories, this second edition of a hugely successful book brings together a range of articles, from big names in the field, classic texts and new thinking on subcultures and their definitions. 2005: 246x174: 656pp Pb: 0-415-34416-6 ISBN13: 978-0-415-34416-6: $43.95 • For a complimentary copy visit www.routledge.com/9780415344166

•What defines a video game? •Who plays games?

TEXTBOOK

•Why do we play games? •How do games affect the player? Extensively illustrated, Understanding Video Games is an indispensable and comprehensive resource for those interested in the ways video games are reshaping entertainment and society. A companion website (www.routledge.com/textbooks/ 9780415977210) features student resources including discussion questions for each chapter, a glossary of key terms, a video game timeline, and links to other video game studies resources for further study. Table of Contents: Acknowledgments. Introduction. 1. Studying Video Games 2. The Game Industry 3. What is a Game? 4. History 5. Video Game Aesthetics 6. Video Game Culture 7. Player Culture 8. Narrative 9. Serious Games-When Entertainment Is Not Enough 10. Video Games and Risks. List of Games. Bibliography. February 2008: 254x178: 304pp eBook: 0-203-93074-6 ISBN13: 978-0-203-93074-8 Hb: 0-415-97720-7 ISBN13: 978-0-415-97720-3: $95.00 Pb: 0-415-97721-5 ISBN13: 978-0-415-97721-0: $29.95 • For a complimentary copy visit www.routledge.com/9780415977210

The Inter-Asia Cultural Studies Reader Edited by Kuan-Hsing Chen and Beng Huat Chua A collection of groundbreaking essays from the highly respected journal, the reader provides useful alternative case studies and challenging perspectives bringing Asian cultural studies to the international English-speaking world. 2007: 246x174: 624pp eBook: 0-203-96098-X ISBN13: 978-0-203-96098-1 Hb: 0-415-43134-4 ISBN13: 978-0-415-43134-7: $140.00 Pb: 0-415-43135-2 ISBN13: 978-0-415-43135-4: $43.95 • For a complimentary copy visit www.routledge.com/9780415431354

Forthcoming TEXTBOOK

TEXTBOOK

The Chicana/o Cultural Studies Reader Edited by Angie Chabram-Dernersesian This book brings together a broad range of writing on culture including TV, film, art, music, dance, theatre and literature, and expertly examines the changing social and cultural condition of Chicana/os in the United States. 2005: 246x174: 552pp Hb: 0-415-23515-4 ISBN13: 978-0-415-23515-0: $150.00 Pb: 0-415-23516-2 ISBN13: 978-0-415-23516-7: $43.95 • For a complimentary copy visit www.routledge.com/9780415235167

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The New Media and Technocultures Reader Edited by Seth Giddings, McGill University and Martin Lister The New Media & Technocultures Reader will offer students further reading on key issues and debates raised in New Media: A Critical Introduction, and explication of these debates through the selected texts. It will critically and theoretically contextualize the various disciplinary stances (visual culture; media and cultural history; media theory; media production; philosophy and the history of the sciences; political economy and sociology, etc.), offering students a rich and interdisciplinary resource. Critical editorial commentary will guide the reader through the debates, and between the extracts. September 2009: 246x174: 496pp Hb: 0-415-46913-9 ISBN13: 978-0-415-46913-5: $150.00 Pb: 0-415-46914-7 ISBN13: 978-0-415-46914-2: $43.95 • For a complimentary copy visit www.routledge.com/9780415469142

Call toll free: 1-800-634-7064

Edited by Ben Highmore, University of Sussex, UK Design is part of ordinary, everyday life, to be found in every room in every building in the world. While we may tend to think of design in terms of highly desirable objects, this book encourages us to think about design as ubiquitous (from plumbing to television) and as an agent of social change (from telephones to weapon systems). The Design Culture Reader brings together an international array of writers whose work is of central importance for thinking about design culture in the past, present and future. Essays from philosophers, media and cultural theorists, historians of design, anthropologists, cultural historians, artists and literary critics all demonstrate the enormous potential of design studies for understanding the modern world. Organized in thematic sections, The Design Culture Reader explores the social role of design by looking at the impact it has in a number of areas especially globalisation, ecology, and the changing experiences of modern life. Particular essays focus on topics such as design and the senses, design and war and design and technology, while the editor’s introduction to the collection provides a compelling argument for situating design studies at the very forefront of contemporary thought. Selected Table of Contents: Section 1: Materials and Methods 1. Karl Marx (1867) ‘The Fetishism of the Commodity and its Secret’. 2. Jonathan Crary (1989) ‘Spectacle, Attention, Counter-Memory’ 3. Vilem Flusser (1993) ‘About the word Design’ 4. Michael Moon, Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick, Benjamin Gianni and Scott Weir (1994) ‘Queers in (Single-Family) Space’ 5. Pauline Madge (1997) ‘Ecological Design: A New Critique’ 6. Hal Foster (2002) ‘The ABCs of Contemporary Design’ Section 2: Actors and Agents 7. Marcel Mauss (1934) ‘Techniques of the Body’ 8. Michel Foucault (1982) ‘Space, Knowledge, and Power’. 9. Friedrich A. Kittler (1986) ‘Introduction’ to Gramophone, Film, Typewriter 10. Lana F. Rakow (1988) ‘Women and the Telephone: the gendering of a communication technology’ 11. Ellen Lupton (1996) ‘Power Tool for the Dining Room: The Electric Carving Knife’ 12. Tobin Siebers (2003) ‘What can disability studies learn from the culture wars?’ Section 3: Object Life 13. Stuart Cosgrove (1984) ‘The ZootSuit and Style Warfare’ 14. Mihay Csikszentmihalyi (1991) ‘Design and Order in Everyday Life’ 15. Celik, Zeynep (1996) ‘Gendered Spaces in Colonial Algiers’ 16. Celine Rosselin (1999) ‘The Ins and Outs of the Hall: A Parisian Example’ 17. Svetlana Boym (2001) ‘Immigrant Souvenirs’ Section 4: Sense and Sensibilities 18. Wolfgang Schivelbusch (1983) ‘Shop Windows’ 19. Nicholson Baker (1986) from The Mezzanine 20. C. Nadia Seremetakis (1996) ‘The Memory of the Senses, Part 1: Marks of the Transitory’ 21. Koichi Iwabuchi (1998) ‘Marketing “Japan”: Japanese cultural presence under a global gaze’ 22. Jonathan Sterne (2003) ‘Hello’ Section 5: Designing (in) the World 23. John McHale (1969) ‘An Ecological Overview’ 24. Krzysztof Wodiczko (1999) ‘Designing for the City of Strangers’ 25. Celeste Olalquiaga (1999) ‘The Crystal Palace’ 26. Tony Fry (1999) ‘From War to Warring’ 27. Ashoke Chatterjee (2005) ‘Design in India: The Experience of Transition’ Section 6: Design Time 28. Siegfried Giedion (1948) ‘Anonymous History’ 29. Evan Watkins (1993) ‘Social Position and the Art of Automobile Maintenance’ 30. Michel Serres (with Bruno Latour) (1995) ‘The Past is no longer out-of-date’ 31. N. Katherine Hayles (1999) ‘The materiality of informatics: Audiotape and Its Cultural 32. Peter Hitchcock (2003) ‘Chronotope of the Shoe’ August 2008: 246x174: 400pp Hb: 0-415-40355-3 ISBN13: 978-0-415-40355-9: $140.00 Pb: 0-415-40356-1 ISBN13: 978-0-415-40356-6: $45.95 • For a complimentary copy visit www.routledge.com/9780415403566

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BOOKS FOR COURSES

New

TEXTBOOK

New

TEXTBOOK

The Routledge Critical and Cultural Theory Reader

TEXTBOOK

2ND EDITION

New Media A Critical Introduction Martin Lister, Jon Dovey, Seth Giddings, Iain Grant, and Kieran Kelly, all at University of the West of England, UK New Media: A Critical Introduction is a comprehensive introduction to the culture, history, technologies and theories of new media. Written especially for students, the book considers the ways in which ‘new media’ really are new, assesses the claims that a media and technological revolution has taken place and formulates new ways for media studies to respond to new technologies. The authors introduce a wide variety of topics including: how to define the characteristics of new media; social and political uses of new media and new communications; new media technologies, politics and globalization; everyday life and new media; theories of interactivity, simulation, the new media economy; cybernetics, cyberculture, the history of automata and artificial life. Substantially updated from the first edition to cover recent theoretical developments, approaches and significant technological developments, this is the best and by far the most comprehensive textbook available on this exciting and expanding subject. Table of Contents: Preface to Second Edition Introduction Part 1 : New Media And New Technologies Part 2: New Media And Visual Culture Part 3 : Networks Users And Economics Part 4. Everyday Life In Cyberspace Part 5: Cyberculture: Technology, Nature And Culture December 2008: 246x189: 464pp eBook: 0-203-88482-5 ISBN13: 978-0-203-88482-9 Hb: 0-415-43160-3 ISBN13: 978-0-415-43160-6: $150.00 Pb: 0-415-43161-1 ISBN13: 978-0-415-43161-3: $43.95 • For a complimentary copy visit www.routledge.com/9780415431613

2ND EDITION TEXTBOOK

The Visual Culture Reader Edited by Nicholas Mirzoeff In response to rapid changes in the field of visual culture, this updated second edition brings together key writings on photography, painting, sculpture, fashion, advertising, television, cinema and digital culture. 2002: 246x174: 776pp Pb: 0-415-25222-9 ISBN13: 978-0-415-25222-5: $45.95 • For a complimentary copy visit www.routledge.com/9780415252225

Edited by Neil Badmington and Julia Thomas, both at University of Cardiff, UK Everything is open to question. Nothing is sacred. Critical and cultural theory invites a rethinking of some of our most basic assumptions about who we are, how we behave, and how we interpret the world around us. The Routledge Critical and Cultural Theory Reader brings together 29 key pieces from the last century and a half that have shaped the field. Topics include: subjectivity, language, gender, ethnicity, sexuality, the body, the human, class, culture, everyday life, literature, psychoanalysis, technology, power, and visuality. The choice of texts, together with the editors’ introduction and glossary, will allow newcomers to begin from first principles, while the use of unabridged readings will also make the volume suitable for those undertaking more specialized work. Material is arranged chronologically, but the editors have suggested thematic pathways through the selections. Selected Table of Contents: Pathways Acknowledgments Editors’ Introduction 1. Karl Marx, ‘Preface (to a Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy)’, 1859. 2. Sigmund Freud, ‘A Note on the Unconscious in Psychoanalysis’, 1912. 3. Ferdinand de Saussure, ‘Linguistic Value’, 1916. 4. Joan Riviere, ‘Womanliness as a Masquerade’, 1929. 5. Walter Benjamin, ‘The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction’, 1936. 6. Jacques Lacan, ‘The Mirror Stage as Formative of the Function of the I as Revealed in Psychoanalytic Experience’, 1949. 7. Frantz Fanon, ‘The Fact of Blackness’, 1952. 8. Raymond Williams, ‘Culture is Ordinary’, 1958. 9. Henri Lefebvre, ‘The Social Text’, 1961. 10. Hayden White, ‘The Burden of History’, 1966. 11. Roland Barthes, ‘The Death of the Author’, 1968. 12. Jacques Derrida, ‘Differance’, 1968. 13. Michel de Certeau, ‘Walking in the City’, 1974. 14. Gilles Deleuze and FÈlix Guattari, ‘What is a Minor Literature?’, 1975. 15. Michel Foucault, ‘Panopticism’, 1975. 16. Laura Mulvey, ‘Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema’, 1975. 17. Edward Said, Introduction to Orientalism, 1978. 18. Stuart Hall, ‘Encoding/Decoding’, 1980. 19. Julia Kristeva, ‘Approaching Abjection’, 1980. 20. Jean Baudrillard, ‘Simulacra and Science Fiction’, 1981. 21. Jean-François Lyotard, ‘Answer to the Question: What is the Postmodern?’, 1982. 22. Gayle Rubin, ‘Thinking Sex: Notes Towards a Radical Theory of the Politics of Sexuality’, 1984. 23. Donna J. Haraway, ‘A Manifesto for Cyborgs: Science, Technology, and Socialist Feminism in the 1980s’, 1985. 24. Gloria Anzald˙a, ‘How to Tame a Wild Tongue’, 1987. 25. Judith Butler, ‘Imitation and Gender Insubordination’, 1991. 26. Chandra Talpade Mohanty, ‘Under Western Eyes: Feminist Scholarship and Colonial Discourses’, 1991. 27. Giorgio Agamben, Introduction to Homo Sacer: Sovereign Power and Bare Life, 1995. 28. Lauren Berlant and Michael Warner, ‘What Does Queer Theory Teach Us About X?’, 1995 29. Marjorie Garber, ‘Who Owns “Human Nature”?’, 2003. Glossary Index June 2008: 246x174: 464pp Pb: 0-415-43309-6 ISBN13: 978-0-415-43309-9: $49.95 • For a complimentary copy visit www.routledge.com/9780415433099

The Object Reader Edited by Raiford Guins, State University of New York, USA and Fiona Candlin, Birkbeck College, University of London Series: In Sight: Visual Culture This unique and groundbreaking collection frames the classic debates on objects and aims to generate new ones by reshaping the ways in which the object can be taught and studied, from a wide variety of disciplines and fields. The collection, composed of twentieth and twentyfirst century writing also seeks to make its own contribution through original work, in the form of twenty-five short ‘object lessons’ commissioned specifically for this book. These new and innovative studies from key writers across a range of disciplines, will enable students to look upon their surroundings with trained eyes to search out their own ‘object studies’. Table of Contents: Nicolas Mirzoeff. Foreword Fiona Candlin and Raiford Guins. ‘Introducing Objects’ I. Object Marcel Mauss. ‘Gifts and the Obligation to Return Gifts’ Georg Luk·cs. ‘The Phenomenon of Reification’, in History and Class Consciousness, Rodney Livingston Roland Barthes. ‘Toys’ Jean Baudrillard. ‘Subjective Discourse or The Non-Functional System of Objects’ D.W. Winnicott. ‘Transitional Objects and Transitional Phenomena’ Tim Ingold. ‘On Weaving a basket’ Page Dubois. ‘Dildos’ II. Thing Martin Heidegger. ‘The Thing’ Elizabeth Grosz. ‘The Thing’ Bill Brown. ‘Thing Theory’ Bruno Latour. ‘From Realpolitik to Dingpolitik or How to Make Things Public’ Julian Bleecker. ‘Why Things Matter: A Manifesto for Networked Objects - Cohabiting with Pigeons, Arphids, Aibos in the Internet of Things.’ III. Objects and Agency Peter Brown. ‘Praesentia’ Michael Taussig. ‘In some way or another one can protect oneself from the spirits by portraying them’ Alfred Gell. ‘The Technology of Enchantment and the Enchantment of Technology’ Bruno Latour. ‘Where Are the Missing Masses? The Sociology of a Few Mundane Artifacts’ IV. Object Experience Walter Benjamin. ‘Unpacking My Library: A Talk about Book Collecting’ Wiebe E. Bijker. ‘King of the Road: The Social Construction of the Safety Bicycle’ Vivian Sobchack. ‘A Leg to Stand On: Prosthetics, Metaphor, and Materiality’ Sherry Turkle. ‘Objects Inspire’ V. The Objecthood of Images Michael Fried. ‘Art and Objecthood’ Siegfried Kracauer. ‘Calico-World: The UFA City in Neubabelsberg’ Elizabeth Edwards. ‘Photographs as Objects of Memory’ Maurice M. Manring. ‘Aunt Jemima Explained: The Old South, the Absent Mistress and the Slave in a Box’ VI. Leftovers Barbara Penner. ‘A World of Unmentionable Suffering: Women’s Public Conveniences in Victorian London’ Celeste Olalquiaga. ‘Holy Kitschen: Collecting Religious Junk from the Street’ Julian Stallabrass. ‘Trash’ Christina Lindsay. ‘From the Shadows: Users as Designers, Producers, Marketers, Distributors, and Technical Support’ VII. Object Lessons Anne Friedberg. ‘AIBO’ Anna Beatrice Scott. ‘Bouncing in the Streets: a performance remix’ Ruud Kalingfreks. ‘Broken Mug’ Michelle Henning. ‘The Cosmic Symbol’ Tara McPherson. ‘The Eames Chair’ Susan Pearce. ‘A Flake of Paint’ Henry Lowood. ‘Game Counter’ Jill Cook. ‘The Grays Inn Lane’ Handaxe Curtis Marez. ‘The Homies, or The Last Angel of History in Silicon Valley’ Guy Julier. ‘Inside and outside the iPod’ Penny Sparke. ‘The LC4 Chaise Longue’ by Le Corbusier, Pierre Jeanneret and Charlotte Perriand, 1928 Griselda Pollock. ‘Maternal Object: Matrixial Subject’ Raiford Guins. ‘Mermaid’s Tears’ Victor Margolin. ‘The Museum of Corntemporary Art’ Adrian Rifkin. ‘No thing to regret...’ Alexander R. Galloway. ‘Pixel’ Laura U. Marks. ‘My Rock’ Carolyn Thomas de la PeÒa. ‘Saccharin Sparrow’ (circa 1955) Georgina Kleege. ‘My Secret Weapon’ Laurie Beth Clarke. ‘Shin’s Tricycle’ Esther Leslie. ‘Snow Shaker’ Peter Lunenfeld. ‘Ten Foot, Four’ Heidi Cooley. Thumbnail’ Erica Rand. ‘What Lube Goes Into’ Fiona Candlin. Yesterday, Upon The Stair’ VIII. An Object Bibliography December 2008: 246x174: 464pp Hb: 0-415-45229-5 ISBN13: 978-0-415-45229-8: $150.00 Pb: 0-415-45230-9 ISBN13: 978-0-415-45230-4: $39.95 • For a complimentary copy visit www.routledge.com/9780415452304

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BOOKS FOR COURSES • CULTURAL STUDIES

TEXTBOOK

New

The Feminism and Visual Culture Reader

2ND EDITION

Amelia Jones

An Introduction to Visual Culture

Series: In Sight: Visual Culture Bringing together key writings on art, film, architecture, popular culture, new media and other visual fields, this key reader combines classic texts by leading feminist thinkers with six previously unpublished polemical new pieces. 2002: 246x174: 592pp Pb: 0-415-26706-4 ISBN13: 978-0-415-26706-9: $43.95 • For a complimentary copy visit www.routledge.com/9780415267069

New TEXTBOOK

Emotions: A Cultural Studies Reader Edited by Jennifer Harding and Deidre Pribram Emotions: A Cultural Studies Reader will bring together the best examples of initial work on emotions in cultural studies and related disciplines. The book differentiates between theoretical traditions and ways of understanding emotion in relation to culture, subjectivity and power. In other words, it maps a new academic territory and provides an introduction to epistemological and methodological concerns in cultural studies and contrasts these with other areas of the humanities and social sciences. In this sense, it provides a succinct overview of cultural studies as well as studies of emotion. Emotions: A Cultural Studies Reader will provide students with an essential overview of contemporary academic debate within the humanities and social sciences on the place of emotions in culture, as part of everyday individual, cultural, and political life. May 2009: 246x174: 400pp Hb: 0-415-46929-5 ISBN13: 978-0-415-46929-6: $150.00 Pb: 0-415-46930-9 ISBN13: 978-0-415-46930-2: $43.95 • For a complimentary copy visit www.routledge.com/9780415469302

2ND EDITION

Cultural Studies

TEXTBOOK

Second Edition

MARJORIE GARBER The Medusa Reader

Nicholas Mirzoeff The new edition of Nicholas Mirzoeff’s bestselling and innovative textbook, An Introduction to Visual Culture provides a comprehensive introduction to the exciting interdisciplinary field of visual culture. Tracing the history and theory of visual culture from painting to the internet and beyond, An Introduction to Visual Culture asks how and why visual media have become so central to contemporary everyday life.

Edited by Marjorie Garber and Nancy J. Vickers 2003: 229x152: 288pp Pb: 0-415-90099-9 ISBN13: 978-0-415-90099-7: $35.00

Quotation Marks Marjorie Garber 2002: 229x152: 328pp Pb: 0-415-93746-9 ISBN13: 978-0-415-93746-7: $27.95

February 2009: 234x156: 352pp Hb: 0-415-32758-X ISBN13: 978-0-415-32758-9: $110.00 Pb: 0-415-32759-8 ISBN13: 978-0-415-32759-6: $30.95 • For a complimentary copy visit www.routledge.com/9780415327596

TEXTBOOK

Symptoms of Culture

The Nineteenth Century Visual Culture Reader

Marjorie Garber 2000: 229x152: 288pp Pb: 0-415-91860-X ISBN13: 978-0-415-91860-2: $27.95

Edited by Jeannene Przyblyski and Vanessa Schwartz Series: In Sight: Visual Culture Exploring such topics as photographs, exhibitions and advertising, this reader brings together, for the first time, key writings about the nineteenth century, a major period in the contemporary discussion of visual culture. Table of Contents: 1. Visual Culture and Disciplinary Practices 2. Genealogies 3. Technology and Vision 4. Practices of Display and the Circulation of Images 5. Cities and the Built Environment 6. Inside and Out: Seeing the Personal and the Political 2004: 246x174: 432pp Pb: 0-415-30866-6 ISBN13: 978-0-415-30866-3: $43.95 • For a complimentary copy visit www.routledge.com/9780415308663

TEXTBOOK

Vested Interests Cross-dressing and Cultural Anxiety Marjorie Garber 1997: 254x178: 456pp Pb: 0-415-91951-7 ISBN13: 978-0-415-91951-7: $34.95

An Introduction to Theories of Popular Culture

TEXTBOOK

Dominic Strinati

Selected Works of Gayati Chakravorty Spivak

Bisexuality and the Eroticism of Everyday Life

2004: 216x138: 304pp Pb: 0-415-23500-6 ISBN13: 978-0-415-23500-6: $33.95 • For a complimentary copy visit www.routledge.com/9780415235006

Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak

Marjorie Garber

An Introduction to Studying Popular Culture

The Spivak Reader

Edited by Donna Landry and Gerald MacLean 1995: 229x152: 344pp Pb: 0-415-91001-3 ISBN13: 978-0-415-91001-9: $31.95 • For a complimentary copy visit www.routledge.com/9780415910019

The Turn to Ethics

Series: CultureWork: A Book Series from the Center for Literacy and Cultural Studies at Harvard

2000: 216x138: 304pp Pb: 0-415-15767-6 ISBN13: 978-0-415-15767-4: $33.95 • AVAILABLE AS AN INSPECTION COPY

See Order Form on last page of the catalog

Pb: 0-415-92661-0 ISBN13: 978-0-415-92661-4: $29.95

Edited by Marjorie Garber, Beatrice Hanssen and Rebecca L. Walkowitz

Dominic Strinati

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2000: 229x152: 624pp

2000: 229x152: 256pp Pb: 0-415-92226-7 ISBN13: 978-0-415-92226-5: $29.95

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CULTURAL STUDIES

One Nation Under God? Religion and American Culture Edited by Marjorie Garber and Rebecca Walkowitz Series: CultureWork: A Book Series from the Center for Literacy and Cultural Studies at Harvard 1999: 229x152: 256pp Pb: 0-415-92224-0 ISBN13: 978-0-415-92224-1: $29.95

Field Work Sites in Literary and Cultural Studies Edited by Marjorie Garber, Paul B. Franklin and Rebecca L. Walkowitz Series: CultureWork: A Book Series from the Center for Literacy and Cultural Studies at Harvard 1996: 229x152: 288pp Pb: 0-415-91455-8 ISBN13: 978-0-415-91455-0: $31.95

Media Spectacles Edited by Marjorie Garber, Jann Matlock and Rebecca Walkowitz Series: CultureWork: A Book Series from the Center for Literacy and Cultural Studies at Harvard 1993: 229x152: 288pp Pb: 0-415-90751-9 ISBN13: 978-0-415-90751-4: $34.95

2ND EDITION

Resistance Through Rituals Youth subcultures in Post-War Britain Edited by Tony Jefferson and Stuart Hall

New

New

Contexts of Social Capital

Mobile Technologies

Social Networks in Markets, Communities and Families

From Telecommunications to Media

Edited by Ray-May Hsung, National Chengchi University, Taiwan, Nan Lin, Duke University, USA and Ronald L. Breiger, University of Arizona, USA Series: Routledge Advances in Sociology One of the “hottest” concepts in international academic social-science research, social capital refers to the ways in which people make use of social networks in “getting ahead”. This book presents the latest contributions and advances in theory and method in this important field. September 2008: 229x152: 380pp eBook: 0-203-89009-4 ISBN13: 978-0-203-89009-7 Hb: 0-415-41117-3 ISBN13: 978-0-415-41117-2: $120.00

New

Outside in the Teaching Machine Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak Series: Routledge Classics This collection presents some of Spivak’s most challenging and engaging essays on works of literature such as Salman Rushdie’s controversial Satanic Verses, and twentieth century thinkers such as Jacques Derrida and Karl Marx. Spivak relentlessly questions and deconstructs power structures where ever they operate. In doing so, she provides a voice for those who can not speak, proving that the true work of resistance takes place in the margins, Outside in the Teaching Machine. August 2008: 197x127: 392pp Pb: 0-415-96482-2 ISBN13: 978-0-415-96482-1: $24.95

Series: Cultural Studies Birmingham 2006: 234x156: 288pp Pb: 0-415-32436-X ISBN13: 978-0-415-32436-6: $37.95

In Other Worlds Essays In Cultural Politics

New

Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak

Media Globalization and the Discovery Channel Networks

Preface by the author

Ole Mjos, University of Pennsylvania, USA

‘A celebrity in academia...[Spivak] creates a stir wherever she goes.’ —The New York Times

This unique study is the first book-length look at the global media phenomenon Discovery, one of the world’s largest factual entertainment and documentary producers and distributors. Offering a thorough and accessible account of the global expansion of Discovery and its relationship with media globalization, Mjos provides an exploration of how the processes of media globalization unfolds and develops, and attempts to trace some of the possible consequences.

Series: Routledge Classics

2006: 198x129: 440pp Pb: 0-415-38956-9 ISBN13: 978-0-415-38956-3: $22.95

Edited by Gerard Goggin, University of Sydney, Australia and Larissa Hjorth, RMIT University, Australia Series: Routledge Research in Cultural and Media Studies In the light of emerging forms of software, interfaces, cultures of uses, and media practices associated with mobile media, this collection investigates the various ways in which mobile media is developing in different cultural, linguistic, social, and national settings. We consider the promises and politics of mobile media and its role in the dynamic social and gender relations configured in the boundaries between public and private spheres. In turn, the contributors revise the cultural and technology politics of mobiles. The collection is genuinely interdisciplinary, as well as international in its range with contributors and studies from China, Japan, Korea, Italy, Norway, France, Belgium, Britain, and Australia. December 2008: 229x152: 317pp eBook: 0-203-88431-0 ISBN13: 978-0-203-88431-7 Hb: 0-415-98986-8 ISBN13: 978-0-415-98986-2: $110.00

New

Cities, Citizens, and Technologies Urban Life and Postmodernity Paula Geyh, Yeshiva University, USA Series: Routledge Research in Cultural and Media Studies This book is about the contemporary city and those who live in it. It is thus also about the urban world of the era (extending roughly from the 1960s to the present) that we see as postmodern, and specifically about how the postmodern city is changing under the impact of globalization and new information and communication technologies. In particular, Geyh explores how the urban spaces of postmodernity (parks, plazas, streets, sidewalks) and postmodern urban subjectivities and communities respond to and create each other—how they become mutually constructing. While there is much in this book about what makes a city “postmodern,” its primary focus is on how the postmodern city is experienced by its inhabitants, and in this respect the book is also a study of everyday life in the postmodern era. As such, it deals not only with the ways in which the postmodern city has developed out of economic, technological, political, and cultural structures that are different from those of the modern city, but also with how the postmodern city changes our ways of knowing and experiencing the world and ourselves as postmodern urban subjects, as citizens of postmodernity. January 2009: 229x152: 296pp Hb: 0-415-99172-2 ISBN13: 978-0-415-99172-8: $95.00

April 2009: 229x152: 256pp Hb: 0-415-99246-X ISBN13: 978-0-415-99246-6: $95.00

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5


6

CULTURAL STUDIES

New

New

New

Cognitive Poetics and Cultural Memory

The Contemporary Comic Book Superhero

Communicating in the Third Space

Russian Literary Mnemonics

Edited by Angela Ndalianis, University of Melbourne, Australia

Mikhail Gronas, Dartmouth College, USA Series: Routledge Research in Cultural and Media Studies In this volume, Gronas addresses the full range of psychological, social, and historical issues that bear on the mnemonic existence of modern literary works, particularly Russian literature. While the first half of the book focuses on the mnemonic processes involved in literary creativity, and the question of how our memories of past reading experiences shape the ways in which we react to literary works, the second half of the book examines the concrete mnemonic qualities of poetry, as well as the social uses to which poetry memorization has historically been put to use. Scholars of cognitive poetics, Russian literature, and cultural studies are sure to find this volume appealing. May 2009: 229x152: 208pp Hb: 0-415-99737-2 ISBN13: 978-0-415-99737-9: $95.00

Series: Routledge Research in Cultural and Media Studies Over the last several decades, comic book superheroes have multiplied and, in the process, become more complicated. In this cutting edge anthology an international roster of contributors offer original research and writing on the contemporary comic book superhero, with occasional journeys into the film and television variation. As superheroes and their stories have grown with the audiences that consume them, their formulas, conventions, and narrative worlds have altered to follow suit, injecting new, unpredictable and more challenging characterizations that engage ravenous readers who increasingly demand more. October 2008: 229x152: 314pp Hb: 0-415-99176-5 ISBN13: 978-0-415-99176-6: $95.00

Film and Television After DVD Forthcoming

Letters, Postcards, and Email Technologies of Presence Esther Milne, Swinburne University, Australia Series: Routledge Research in Cultural and Media Studies In this original study, Milne moves between close readings of letters, postcards and emails, on the one hand, and investigations of the material, technological infrastructures of these forms, on the other hand to answer the question: How does presence function as an aesthetic and rhetorical strategy within networked communication practices? As her work reveals, the relation between old and new communication systems is more complex than allowed in much contemporary media theory. October 2009: 229x152: 192pp Hb: 0-415-99328-8 ISBN13: 978-0-415-99328-9: $95.00

Edited by James Bennett, London Metropolitan University, UK and Tom Brown, University of Reading, UK Series: Routledge Research in Cultural and Media Studies Heralded as “the most significant invention [for film] since the coming of sound” (The Observer 2003), by 2005 DVD players were in approximately 84 million homes in the US, making it the “fastest selling item in history of US consumer electronics market” (McDonald 2007: 135). This book examines the phenomenal growth of DVDs in relation to the cultures, economies, texts, audiences and histories of film, television and new media. June 2008: 229x152: 212pp Hb: 0-415-96241-2 ISBN13: 978-0-415-96241-4: $95.00

Edited by Karin Ikas and Gerhard Wagner, both at Frankfurt, Germany Series: Routledge Research in Cultural and Media Studies Communicating in the Third Space aims to clarify Homi Bhabha’s theory of the third space of enunciation by reconstructing its philosophical, sociological, geographical, and political meaning with attention to the special advantages and ambiguities that arise as it is applied in practical—as well as theoretical—contexts. The idea of “third space” conceives the encounter of two distinct and unequal social groups as taking place in a special third space of enunciation where culture is disseminated and displaced from the interacting groups, making way for the invention of a hybrid identity, whereby these two groups conceive themselves to partake in a common identity relating to shared space and common dialogue. The essays collected in Communicating (in) the Third Space— including a preface by Bhabha himself—brilliantly introduce readers to this exciting topic in Cultural and Post-Colonial theory and offers insightful elaboration and critique of the meaning and relevance of life in the “third space”. With a preface by Homi K. Bhabha. September 2008: 229x152: 218pp Hb: 0-415-96315-X ISBN13: 978-0-415-96315-2: $95.00

New

Dynamics and Performativity of Imagination The Image between the Visible and the Invisible Edited by Bernd Huppauf, New York University, USA and Christoph Wulf, Free University, Berlin Series: Routledge Research in Cultural and Media Studies December 2008: 229x152: 400pp Hb: 0-415-99093-9 ISBN13: 978-0-415-99093-6: $120.00

New

Deconstruction After 9/11

American Icons

Martin McQuillan, University of Leeds, UK

The Genesis of a National Visual Language Benedikt Feldges

Series: Routledge Research in Cultural and Media Studies This exciting new collection of essays by practicing artists, curators, activists, art writers, administrators, city planners, and educators offers divergent perspectives on the numerous facets of the public art process. The volume also includes a useful graphic timeline of public art history.

Series: Routledge Research in Cultural and Media Studies In this book Martin McQuillan brings Derrida’s writing into the immediate vicinity of geo-politics today, from the Kosovan conflict to the war in Iraq. The chapters in this book follow both Derrida’s writing since Specters of Marx and the present political scene through the former Yogoslavia and Afghanistan to Palestine and Baghdad. His ‘textual activism’ is as impatient with the universal gestures of philosophy as it is with the complacency and reductionism of policy-makers and activists alike. This work records a response to the war on thinking that has marked western discourse since 9/11.

August 2008: 229x152: 286pp Hb: 0-415-96292-7 ISBN13: 978-0-415-96292-6: $95.00

October 2008: 229x152: 214pp Hb: 0-415-96494-6 ISBN13: 978-0-415-96494-4: $95.00

21.1

New

The Practice of Public Art Edited by Cameron Cartiere, Birkbeck College, University of London, UK and Shelly Willis, University of Minnesota

Series: Routledge Research in Cultural and Media Studies 2007: 229x152: 296pp Hb: 0-415-95635-8 ISBN13: 978-0-415-95635-2: $95.00

Cultural Studies 22.1/3 Edited by Lawrence Grossberg and Della Pollock 2007 Pb: 0-415-43142-5 ISBN13: 978-0-415-43142-2: $43.95

Cultural Studies Edited by Lawrence Grossberg 2007 Pb: 0-415-43141-7 ISBN13: 978-0-415-43141-5: $43.95

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CULTURAL STUDIES

New

CCCS Selected Working Papers

2ND EDITION

Gaming Cultures and Place in AsiaPacific

Volume 1

Food and Culture

Edited by Ann Gray, University of Lincoln, UK, Jan Campbell, Mark Erickson, Stuart Hanson and Helen Wood

A Reader

Edited by Larissa Hjorth, RMIT University, Australia and Dean Chan, Edith Cowan University Series: Routledge Studies in New Media and Cyberculture This collection explores the changing media and socio-technological space of Asia Pacific through the buoyant phenomena of gaming cultures. Housing key locations for global gaming production and consumption such as China, Japan and South Korea, as well as increasingly significant sites like Singapore and Australia, the the Asia-Pacific region provides a wealth of divergent examples of the role of gaming as a socio-cultural phenomenon. Drawing from micro ethnographic studies to macro political economy analysis of techno-nationalisms and transcultural flows of cultural capital, this collection will provide an interdisciplinary model for thinking through the politics of gaming production, representation and consumption in the region. Individual chapters touch on a diversity of topics including: case study analysis of specific games and game play; emerging and re-occurring productions of techno-nationalism; new media and experimental gaming; convergent technologies and the impact on established modes of game play; gendered consumption and production of games; technonational and government regulations and types of game play; pervasive (location-aware) gaming and the role of co-presence. March 2009: 229x152: 256pp Hb: 0-415-99627-9 ISBN13: 978-0-415-99627-3: $95.00

Edited by Carole Counihan and Penny Van Esterik

This volume is split into four thematic sections that are introduced by key academics working in the field of cultural studies, and includes a preface by eminent scholar, Stuart Hall. The thematic sections are:

2007: 254x178: 624pp Hb: 0-415-97776-2 ISBN13: 978-0-415-97776-0: $125.00 Pb: 0-415-97777-0 ISBN13: 978-0-415-97777-7: $54.95

•CCCS Founding Moments •Theoretical Engagements •Theorising Experience, Exploring Methods •Grounded Studies 2007: 246x174: 928pp Hb: 0-415-32440-8 ISBN13: 978-0-415-32440-3: $220.00

CCCS Selected Working Papers

Diets and Dieting

Volume 2

A Cultural Encyclopedia

Edited by Ann Gray, University of Lincoln, UK, Jan Campbell, Mark Erickson, Stuart Hanson and Helen Wood

Sander L. Gilman, Emory University, USA In this innovative reference work that spans many periods and cultures, the acclaimed cultural and medical historian Sander Gilman lays out the history of diets and dieting in a fascinating series of articles.

This volume is split into seven thematic sections that are introduced by key academics working in the field of cultural studies, and includes a preface by eminent scholar, Stuart Hall. The thematic sections are: •Literature and Society

2007: 279x216: 320pp Hb: 0-415-97420-8 ISBN13: 978-0-415-97420-2: $150.00

•Popular Culture and Youth Subculture •Media •Women’s Studies and Feminism •Race

Beyond Subculture

•History

Pop, Youth and Identity in a Postcolonial World

•Education and Work

Rupa Huq, Kingston University, UK

2007: 246x174: 1120pp Hb: 0-415-32441-6 ISBN13: 978-0-415-32441-0: $220.00

Presenting a new approach to the study of youth culture and popular music, Beyond Subculture reexamines the link between music and subcultures and asks the question; in an ageing world, can pop music still be an automatic metaphor for youth culture?

Subcultures Cultural Histories and Social Practice Ken Gelder, University of Melbourne, Australia Gelder covers a remarkable range of forms and practices across many different subcultural groups.

Stuart Hall Critical Dialogues in Cultural Studies Edited by Kuan-Hsing Chen and David Morley

2007: 234x156: 208pp eBook: 0-203-44685-2 ISBN13: 978-0-203-44685-0 Hb: 0-415-37951-2 ISBN13: 978-0-415-37951-9: $110.00 Pb: 0-415-37952-0 ISBN13: 978-0-415-37952-6: $29.95

Using case studies and first-hand interviews with consumer and producers including Noel Gallagher and Talvin Singh, Rupa Huq investigates a series of musically-centred global youth cultures including hip-hop, electronic dance music and bhangra.

Series: Comedia

With ‘Generation X’ becoming an increasingly redundant term, this book will help students redefine their ideas of youth culture and will be an invaluable addition to their studies.

1996: 234x156: 544pp Pb: 0-415-08804-6 ISBN13: 978-0-415-08804-6: $37.95

Flagging Patriotism

Subculture

2006: 234x156: 232pp Pb: 0-415-27815-5 ISBN13: 978-0-415-27815-7: $39.95

Crises of Narcissism and Anti-Americanism

The Meaning of Style

Ella Shohat, New York University and Robert Stam, New York University

Dick Hebdige

Cell Phone Culture Mobile Technology in Everyday Life Gerard Goggin

A representative selection of Hall’s enormously influential writings on cultural studies and Hall’s engagement with urgent and abiding questions of ‘race’, ethnicity and identity.

2006: 229x152: 408pp Hb: 0-415-97921-8 ISBN13: 978-0-415-97921-4: $95.00 Pb: 0-415-97922-6 ISBN13: 978-0-415-97922-1: $26.95

2006: 234x156: 240pp Pb: 0-415-36744-1 ISBN13: 978-0-415-36744-8: $29.95

Series: New Accents “Hebdige’s Subculture: The Meaning of Style is so important: complex and remarkably lucid, it’s the first book dealing with punk to offer intellectual content. Hebdige [...] is concerned with the UK’s postwar, music-centred, white working-class subcultures, from teddy boys to mods and rockers to skinheads and punks.” —Rolling Stone 1979: 198x129: 208pp Pb: 0-415-03949-5 ISBN13: 978-0-415-03949-9: $26.95 £14.99

E-mail: orders@taylorandfrancis.com

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7


8

CULTURAL STUDIES

New

3RD EDITION

Popular Music of Vietnam

Ecstasy and Raves

Understanding Popular Music Culture

The Politics of Remembering, the Economics of Forgetting

Roy Shuker, Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand

Dale A. Olsen, Florida State University, USA

Written specifically for students, this introductory textbook explores the history and meaning of rock and popular music. Roy Shuker’s study provides an accessible and comprehensive introduction to the production, distribution, consumption and meaning of popular music and examines the difficulties and debates which surround the analysis of popular culture and popular music.

Based on the author’s research in Ho Chi Minh City, Hanoi, and other urban areas in Vietnam, this study of contemporary Vietnamese popular music explores the ways globalization and free market economics have influenced the music and subcultures of Vietnamese youth.

Geoffrey Hunt, Institute for Scientific Analysis, US and Kristin Evans, Institute for Scientific Analysis, US From marijuana and jazz, to amphetamines and punk, drugs and popular music have been inextricably tied together. Today the music is electronic and ecstasy and party drugs are the drugs of choice. In Ecstasy and Raves the authors explore the attraction of the scene and the drugs to young people today. Using information from over 300 indepth interviews with ravers, DJ’s and promoters, the authors examine the social and ethnic background of the ravers and clubbers. They show how it is made up of many different social groupings based not just on social class, gender or ethnicity, but also length of time in the scene, choice of drugs, styles of dancing and types of music. In contrast to the often stereotypical views of about young drug users as naive and poorly informed, the authors explore the sources of information used by ravers, the precautions they take both prior and after using, and the controls they impose on each others’ use. We learn about frustrations with legislation controlling raves and clubs, anger at the increasing commercialization of the scene, and general scepticism about official pronouncements on the dangers of ecstasy and other drugs. Table of Contents: 1. Introduction: Becoming Involved 2. The Growth of the Dance and Drug Scene 3. Dance in San Francisco 4. Clubbers and Ravers 5. First Experiences 6. ‘The Night Out’ 7. Raves, Ecstasy and Everyday Life 8. Transitions Within the Scene: From ‘Candy Raver’ to ‘Jaded Raver’ to Phasing Out 9. Conclusion April 2009: 234x156: 256pp eBook: 0-203-92941-1 ISBN13: 978-0-203-92941-4 Hb: 0-415-37471-5 ISBN13: 978-0-415-37471-2: $130.00 Pb: 0-415-37473-1 ISBN13: 978-0-415-37473-6: $45.95

This heavily revised and updated third edition includes: •new case studies on the iPod, downloading, and copyright •the impact of technologies, including on-line delivery and the debates over MP3 and Napster •new chapters on music genres, cover songs and the album canon as well as music retail, radio and the charts •case studies and lyrics of artists such as Robert Johnson, The Who, Fat Boy Slim and The Spice Girls •a comprehensive discography, suggestions for further reading, listening and viewing and a directory of useful websites. With chapter related guides to further reading, listening and viewing, a glossary, and a timeline, this textbook is the ideal introduction for students. 2007: 234x156: 328pp Hb: 0-415-41905-0 ISBN13: 978-0-415-41905-5: $125.00 Pb: 0-415-41906-9 ISBN13: 978-0-415-41906-2: $31.95

A National Joke Popular Comedy and English Cultural Identity

American Youth Cultures

Andy Medhurst, University of Sussex, UK

Edited by Neil Campbell

”In A National Joke, Medhurst...uses comedy to pin down that most elusive of things, the English national identity.” —The Guardian “This is an excellent study of a popular comedy that links it into a variety of English cultural identities. Unusually for a book classified as cultural studies, it is clearly written, and by an author who enjoys humour...a splendid account” —The Times Higher Education 2007: 234x156: 240pp Hb: 0-415-16877-5 ISBN13: 978-0-415-16877-9: $120.00 Pb: 0-415-16878-3 ISBN13: 978-0-415-16878-6: $35.95

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2004: 229x152: 272pp Pb: 0-415-97197-7 ISBN13: 978-0-415-97197-3: $28.95 £28.95

True Crime Observations on Violence and Modernity Mark Seltzer, UCLA 2006: 229x152: 288pp Hb: 0-415-97793-2 ISBN13: 978-0-415-97793-7: $100.00 Pb: 0-415-97794-0 ISBN13: 978-0-415-97794-4: $26.95

Series: Routledge Studies in Ethnomusicology

Table of Contents: List of Figures Forward by Nguyen T. Phong Acknowledgments Chapter One: Prelude Chapter Two: Cultural and Political Settings for Vietnam’s Popular Music Chapter Three: Vietnamese Pop Music Stars and the Bumpy Road to Stardom Chapter Four: Vietnamese Rock, Pop-Rock, and Pop Music Bands Chapter Five: Vietnamese Songwriters, Social Issues, and Government Persuasion Chapter Six: Performance Venues for (Mostly) Live Popular Music Chapter Seven: Disseminating Popular Music: Pop and Rock Music Concerts, Festivals, and Shows Chapter Eight: Disseminating Popular Music: Audio and Video Recordings Chapter Nine: Vietnamese Karaoke: Place, Pleasure, Politics, and Profit Chapter Ten: Conclusion: The Politics and Economics of Popular Music in Vietnam Notes Glossary Bibliography Index June 2008: 229x152: 306pp Hb: 0-415-98886-1 ISBN13: 978-0-415-98886-5: $95.00

New

The Trauma Question Roger Luckhurst, Birkbeck, University of London The Trauma Question outlines the origins of the concept of trauma across psychiatric, legal and cultural-political sources from the 1860s to the coining of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder in 1980. It further explores the nature and extent of ‘trauma culture’ from 1980 to the present, drawing upon a range of cultural practices from literature, memoirs and confessional journalism through to photography and film. The study covers a diverse range of cultural works, including writers such as Toni Morrison, Stephen King and W. G. Sebald, artists Tracey Emin, Christian Boltanski and Tracey Moffatt, and film-makers David Lynch and Atom Egoyan. June 2008: 234x156: 256pp Hb: 0-415-40272-7 ISBN13: 978-0-415-40272-9: $120.00 Pb: 0-415-40271-9 ISBN13: 978-0-415-40271-2: $35.95

Postmodernism and Popular Culture Angela McRobbie 1994: 234x156: 240pp Pb: 0-415-07713-3 ISBN13: 978-0-415-07713-2: $35.95

In the Culture Society Art, Fashion and Popular Music Angela McRobbie and Angela Mcrobbie 1999: 234x156: 176pp Pb: 0-415-13750-0 ISBN13: 978-0-415-13750-8: $37.95

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CULTURAL STUDIES

New

New

Forthcoming

Production Studies

Irish Media and Popular Culture

Understanding Cultural Geography

Cultural Studies of Media Industries

Conformity, Dissent, Difference

Places and Traces

Edited by John Thornton Caldwell, Vicki Mayer and Miranda Banks

Lance Pettitt, Leeds Metropolitan University, UK

Jon Anderson, Cardiff University, UK

This book maps a new cultural history that explores the media and popular culture of late-twentieth century Ireland and asks:

Understanding Cultural Geography: Places and Traces offers a holistic view of cultural geography. As a popular and expanding discipline cultural geography involves a range of contributing theories and an often bewildering plethora of empirical foci. This book integrates these various ideas and practices through arguing that the essential focus of cultural geography is place. It builds an accessible and engaging configuration of this important concept through arguing that place should be understood as an ongoing composition of traces.

Production Studies is a landmark collection that closely examines the texts, institutions, and practices of media industries in order to allow media studies students and scholars to think more precisely and holistically about media production as a cultural activity. The book is comprised of all new essays exploring the cultures, social organization, work practices, and belief systems of media practitioners. Each section results from a combination of situated fieldwork, empirical or from-the-ground-up studies, and critical analysis. Individual chapters draw upon a diverse array of earlier production studies across a range of ethnographic, sociological, critical, material, and political-economic methodologies as each author presents their own contemporary research. The contributors include distinguished and new scholars from a range of academic disciplines: Film and Media Studies, Communication, Sociology, and Anthropology. The authors and editors are especially interested in how the cultural activities of production workers fit within and animate the new realities of a post-Fordist and neoliberal economy, flexible and outsourced labor practices, multimedia convergence, and multinational, corporate conglomeration. Table of Contents: Introduction: “Of Fields and Disciplines: Considering Cultural Studies of Production,” Vicki Mayer (Tulane University), Miranda Banks (University of Southern California), and John Caldwell (UCLA) Part I. History of Media Production Studies 1. “Bringing the Social Back In: Studies of Production Cultures and Social Theory,” Vicki Mayer (Tulane University) 2. “Examining Industries: Gitlin’s Inside Prime Time and the Contributions of Comprehensive Industrial Studies,” Amanda Lotz (University of Michigan) 3. “Tools and Turmoil in Production Culture: Too Many Cooks in the Kitchen,” John Caldwell (UCLA) Part II. Producers: Selves and Others 4: “It’s Not TV, It’s Brand Management TV: The Collective Author(s) of the Lost Franchise” Denise Mann (UCLA) 5. “Not in Kansas Anymore: Transnational Collaboration in Telefantasy CoProduction,” Jane Landman (Victoria University) 6. “‘Just Be Yourself — Only More So’: The Production of Ordinariness and the Ordinariness of Production in Reality Television,” Laura Grindstaff (UC Davis) Part III. Production Spaces: Centers and Peripheries 7. “Crossing the Border: Studying Canadian Television Production,” Elana Levine (University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee) 8. “Leo C. Rosten’s Hollywood: Power, Status, and the Primacy of Social Networks,” John L. Sullivan, Muhlenberg College) 9. “Liminal Places and Spaces: Public/Private Considerations in The L Word,” Candace Moore (UCLA) Part IV. Production as Lived Experience 10. “Studying Sideways: Ethnographic Access in Hollywood,” Sherry Ortner (UCLA) 11. “Audience Knowledge and the Everyday Lives of Cultural Producers in Hollywood,” Stephen Zafirau (USC) 12. “Lights, Camera, but Where’s the Action? Actor-Network Theory and Film Production,” Oli Mould (University of the Arts, London) Part V. Politicizing Production 13. “Feminism Below the Line?” Miranda Banks (University of Southern California) 14. “Privilege and Distinction in Production Worlds,” Matt Stahl (University of Western Ontario) 15. “Producing a Telenovela in a Time of Crisis: The Case of Venezuela’s Costa Rica” Carolina Acosta-Alzuru (University of Georgia)

•How are modernity, popular culture and the media related in Ireland in ways that disjunctively connect to dominant forms of Anglo-American culture? •How can we engage in the interpretation of symbolic forms across a range of contemporary, mediated and popular cultural activities? •Does an analysis of the forms and activities within this mediascape offer any significant revision of existing narratives of Ireland’s cultural development? December 2008: 234x156: 256pp Hb: 0-415-25902-9 ISBN13: 978-0-415-25902-6: $120.00 Pb: 0-415-25903-7 ISBN13: 978-0-415-25903-3: $33.95

The Citizen Audience Crowds, Publics, and Individuals Richard Butsch, Rider University, USA In The Citizen Audience, Richard Butsch explores the cultural and political history of audiences in the United States from the nineteenth century to the present. He demonstrates that, while attitudes toward audiences have shifted over time, Americans have always judged audiences against standards of good citizenship. 2007: 229x152: 200pp Hb: 0-415-97789-4 ISBN13: 978-0-415-97789-0: $95.00 Pb: 0-415-97790-8 ISBN13: 978-0-415-97790-6: $27.95

Watching Babylon The War in Iraq and Global Visual Culture Nicholas Mirzoeff

2004: 216x138: 216pp Pb: 0-415-34310-0 ISBN13: 978-0-415-34310-7: $29.95

May 2009: 229x152: 304pp Hb: 0-415-99795-X ISBN13: 978-0-415-99795-9: $120.00 Pb: 0-415-99796-8 ISBN13: 978-0-415-99796-6: $38.95

It presents specific chapters investigating: •culture and capitalism •the place of culture in nature •nationalisms, religions and place •ethnicity, language and place •age, ability and place •gendered and sexualized places. Table of Contents: Introduction 1. Where Cultural Geography has Been 2. Representations, Practices and Performances 3. Identifying Place 4. Power and Place 5. Culture, Capitalism and Place 6. The Place of Culture in Nature 7. Nationalism, Religions and Place 8. Ethnicity, Language and Place 9. Age, Ability and Place 10. Gendered and Sexualised Places 11. Methodology and Ethics in Cultural Geography 12. Conclusion December 2009: 246x189: 312pp Hb: 0-415-43054-2 ISBN13: 978-0-415-43054-8: $170.00 Pb: 0-415-43055-0 ISBN13: 978-0-415-43055-5: $47.95

New

Popular Culture, Globalization and Japan Edited by Matthew Allen and Rumi Sakamoto, both at University of Auckland, New Zealand Japanese popular culture is constantly evolving in the face of internal and external influence. Popular Culture, Globalization and Japan examines this evolution from a new and challenging perspective by focusing on the movements of popular culture into and out of Japan. Taking a multidisciplinary approach, the book argues that a key factor behind the changing nature of Japanese popular culture lies in its engagement with globalization. Essays from a team of leading international scholars illustrate this crucial interaction between the flows of Japanese popular culture and the constant development of globalization. Drawing on rich empirical content, this book looks at Japanese popular culture as it traverses international borders flowing out through such forms as manga consumption in New Zealand and flowing in through such forms as foreigners writing about Japan in Japanese and how American influences affected the formation of Japan’s gay identity. Presenting current, confronting and sometimes controversial insights into the many forms of Japanese popular culture emerging within this global context, Popular Culture, Globalization and Japan will make essential reading for those working in Japanese studies, cultural studies and international relations. February 2008: 234x156: 240pp Pb: 0-415-44795-X ISBN13: 978-0-415-44795-9: $40.00

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10

CULTURAL STUDIES • CULTURAL THEORY

Popular Culture in a Globalised India Edited by K. Moti Gokulsing, University of East London, UK and Wimal Dissanayake, University of Hawaii at Manoa, US This textbook presents India’s incredibly rich popular cultural traditions. Chapters provide illuminating insights into various aspects of the social, cultural, economic and political diversity of a globalised India. The book thus represents some of the best thinking of the rising generation of Indian scholars and draws on a broad range of academic disciplines, which address the issue of popular culture. Structured thematically, the book deals with wideranging issues such as: •film, television, tv-soaps, Indian feminisms •folk theatre, myths-mahabharata-ramayana, religious nationalism •music, dance, fashions •comics-cartoons, photographs-posters, advertising •cyberculture, the software industry •sports, tourism •food culture. The textbook offers comprehensive coverage of the emerging discipline of popular culture in India. It will be essential reading for courses on Indian popular culture and a useful resource for more general courses in the field of cultural studies, media studies, history, literary studies and communication studies. December 2008: 234x156: 288pp Hb: 0-415-47666-6 ISBN13: 978-0-415-47666-9: $170.00 Pb: 0-415-47667-4 ISBN13: 978-0-415-47667-6: $42.95

Boys in Children’s Literature and Popular Culture

New

Handbook of Japanese Culture and Society Edited by Theodore C. Bestor, Harvard University, USA and Victoria Bestor, Harvard University, USA The Handbook of Japanese Culture and Society is an interdisciplinary resource that focuses on contemporary Japan and the social and cultural trends that are important at the beginning of the twenty-first century. This handbook provides a cutting-edge and comprehensive survey of significant phenomena, institutions, and directions in Japan today, on issues ranging from gender and family, the environment, race and ethnicity, and urban life, to popular culture and electronic media. As such, it is an invaluable reference tool for anyone interested in Japan’s culture and society. Table of Contents: Japan at Mid-Century: From Radio Tokyo to the Tokyo Olympics Peter Duus. Cultural Approaches to Political Identity and Discourse David Leheny. Politics, Language and Society Nanette Gottlieb. Religion in Contemporary Japanese Lives Mark Mullins. War and Memory Alexis Dudden. Identity and Status Social Class and Identity David Slater. The Politics of Gender Robin Le Blanc. The Japanese Family in Flux Merry White. Race, Ethnicity and Minorities in Japan Richard Siddle. Life on the Margins: The Homeless, Migrant Workers, and the Disabled Carolyn Stevens. Queer Culture Mark McLelland. Mizushobai and Sex Industries Haeng-ja Sachiko Chung. Aging and Social Welfare Leng Leng Thang. Urban Landscapes Paul Waley. Architecture and the Built Environment Bill Coaldrake. Cultural Flows: Japan and East Asia Koichi Iwabuchi. Japanese Education Roger Goodman. Law and Society Lawrence Repeta. The Rise of the Civil Sector Akihiro Ogawa. Popular Japanese Literature and the Culture of Publishing Stephen Snyder. Japanese Manga and Anime Susan Napier. Japanese Film and Television Aaron Gerow. Music Culture Ian Condry. Sports Culture William Kelly. Japanese Cuisine and Food Culture Theodore Bestor and Victoria Bestor January 2009: 246x174: 624pp Hb: 0-415-43649-4 ISBN13: 978-0-415-43649-6: $190.00

Masculinity, Abjection, and the Fictional Child

Routledge Critical Thinkers Series Editor: Robert Eaglestone, University of London, UK New

Theorists of the City Walter Benjamin, Henri Lefebvre and Michel de Certeau Jenny Bavidge, University of Greenwich, UK Theorists of the City have been fundamental to the development of modernism and postmodernism, and are increasingly important in the fields of cultural studies and visual culture. Jenny Bavidge focuses on the work of three leading city theorists - Benjamin, Lefebvre and de Certeau whose work represents key schools of thought or emphases within the areas of cultural geography, urban studies and spatial theory. Theorists of the City is essential reading to further explore issues of locality, social space, architecture and urban aesthetics; key ideas discussed through the work of these three thinkers include: •flaneurie •situationism •psychogeography •heterotopia Table of Contents: 1: Why Benjamin, Lefebvre and De Certeau? 2: Walter Benjamin: The City and Modernity 3: Henri Lefebvre: The City and Space 4: Michel de Certeau: Walking in the City 5: Conclusion: After Benjamin, Lefebvre and De Certeau 6: Further Reading January 2009: 198x129: 224pp eBook: 0-203-44210-5 ISBN13: 978-0-203-44210-4 Hb: 0-415-33851-4 ISBN13: 978-0-415-33851-6: $100.00 Pb: 0-415-33852-2 ISBN13: 978-0-415-33852-3: $23.95

Annette Wannamaker, Eastern Michigan University, USA Series: Children’s Literature and Culture 2007: 229x152 Hb: 0-415-97469-0 ISBN13: 978-0-415-97469-1: $110.00

Forthcoming 2ND EDITION

Forthcoming

Sigmund Freud

Encyclopedia of Social and Cultural Anthropology

Pamela Thurschwell Sigmund Freud provides an invaluable introduction to the life and work of one of the twentieth century’s most important thinkers. Studied on most undergraduate literary and cultural studies courses, Sigmund Freud takes a fresh look at the work of this groundbreaking theorist, offering students a clear introduction to Freud’s importance for psychoanalytic literary criticism, while tracing the scientific and cultural contexts from which he emerged. This book guides readers through Freud’s terminology and key ideas and includes a detailed bibliography of his own and other relevant texts.

Edited by Dr Alan Barnard and Jonathan Spencer,both at the University of Edinburgh, UK “This is one of those few privileged works that may actually redefine a field. Situating current debates in the context of the historical development of anthropology...it charts a contemporary discourse that is vibrant, sophisticated and unexpectedly coherent. This is what post postmodernist anthropology looks like.” —Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute.

October 2009: 198x129: 192pp eBook: 0-203-88806-5 ISBN13: 978-0-203-88806-3 Hb: 0-415-47368-3 ISBN13: 978-0-415-47368-2: $95.00 Pb: 0-415-47369-1 ISBN13: 978-0-415-47369-9: $21.95

October 2009: 246x174: 864pp Hb: 0-415-40978-0 ISBN13: 978-0-415-40978-0: $225.00

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Cultural Theory

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CULTURAL THEORY

New

New

New

Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick

2ND EDITION

Emmanuel Levinas

Jason Edwards, University of York, UK Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick is one of the most significant literary theorists of the last forty years and a key figure in contemporary queer theory. In this engaging and inspiring guide, Jason Edwards: •Introduces and explains key terms such as affects, the first person, homosocialities, and queer taxonomies, performativities and cusps •Considers Sedgwick’s poetry and textile art alongside her theoretical texts •Encourages a personal as well as an academic response to Sedgwick’s work, suggesting how lifechanging it can be •Offers detailed suggestions for further reading

Jean Baudrillard

Seán Hand, University of Warwick, UK

Richard J. Lane, Vancouver Island University, Canada

Best known for his theories of ethics and responsibility, Emmanuel Levinas was one of the most profound and influential thinkers of the last century. In this clear, accessible guide, Se·n Hand examines why Levinas is increasingly fundamental to the study of literature and culture today. Exploring the intellectual and social contexts of his work and the events that shaped it, Hand considers: •the influence of phenomenology and Judaism on Levinas’s thought •key concepts such as the ‘face’, the ‘other’, ethical consciousness and responsibility •Levinas’ work on aesthetics •the relationship of philosophy and religion in his writings •the interaction of his work with historical discussions •His often complex relationships with other theorists and theories Emmanuel Levinas’ unique contribution to theory set an exemplary standard for all subsequent thought. This outstanding guide to his work will prove invaluable to scholars and students across a wide range of disciplines - from philosophy and literary criticism through to international relations and the creative arts.

Table of Contents: Why Sedgwick? Key Ideas 1. Homos 2. Homosocialities 3. Epistemologies of the Closet 4. Queer Taxonomies 5. Queer Performativities 6. Queer Cusps 7. Affects 8. Autobiographies After Sedgwick Further Reading August 2008: 198x129: 200pp Pb: 0-415-35845-0 ISBN13: 978-0-415-35845-3: $21.95

New 2ND EDITION

Edward Said Pal Ahluwalia, University of South Australia, Australia and Bill Ashcroft, University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong Edward Said is perhaps best known as the author of the landmark study Orientalism, a book which changed the face of critical theory and shaped the emerging field of post-colonial studies, and for his controversial journalism on the Palestinian political situation. Looking at the context and the impact of Said’s scholarship and journalism, this book examines Said’s key ideas, including: •the significance of ‘worldliness’, ‘amateurism’, ‘secular criticism’, ‘affiliation’ and ‘contrapuntal reading’ •the place of text and critic in ‘the world’ •knowledge, power and the construction of the ‘Other’ •links between culture and imperialism •exile, identity and the plight of Palestine •a new chapter looking at Said’s later work and style This popular guide has been fully updated and revised in a new edition, suitable for readers approaching Said’s work for the first time as well as those already familiar with the work of this important theorist. The result is the ideal guide to one of the twentieth century’s most engaging critical thinkers.

Jean Baudrillard is one of the most controversial theorists of our time, famous for his claim that the Gulf War never happened and for his provocative writing on terrorism, specifically 9/11. This new and fully updated second edition includes: • An introduction to Baudrillard’s key works and theories such as simulation and hyperreality •Coverage of Baudrillard’s later work on the question of postmodernism •A new chapter on Baudrillard and terrorism •Engagement with architecture and urbanism through the Utopie group •A look at the most recent applications of Baudrillard’s ideas. Richard J. Lane offers a comprehensive introduction to this complex and fascinating theorist, also examining the impact that Baudrillard has had on literary studies, media and cultural studies, sociology, philosophy and postmodernism. Table of Contents: Why Baudrillard? Key Ideas 1. Beginnings: French Thought in the 1960’s. 2. The Technological System of Objects. 3. Narrative of Primitivism: The `Last Real Book.’ 4. Reworking Marxism. 5. Simulation and the Hyperreal. 6. America and Postmodernism. 7. Writing Strategies: Postmodern Performance. 8. Baudrillard and Terrorism. After Baudrillard Works Cited December 2008: 198x129: 192pp Pb: 0-415-47448-5 ISBN13: 978-0-415-47448-1: $21.95

Table of Contents: Why Levinas? Key Ideas 1. Biography 2. Phenomenology and Judaism 3. Totality and Infinity 4. Otherwise than Being 5. Aesthetics 6. Talmudic Readings 7. Difficult Freedom: Politics and Ethics. After Levinas September 2008: 198x129: 160pp Pb: 0-415-40275-1 ISBN13: 978-0-415-40275-0: $21.95

Michel Foucault Sara Mills 2003: 198x129: 176pp Pb: 0-415-24569-9 ISBN13: 978-0-415-24569-2: $21.95

Paul Virilio Ian James, University of Cambridge, UK

Slavoj Žižek

2007: 198x129: 160pp Hb: 0-415-35963-5 ISBN13: 978-0-415-35963-4: $100.00 Pb: 0-415-35964-3 ISBN13: 978-0-415-35964-1: $23.95

Tony Myers

Theodor Adorno Ross Wilson, Emmanuel College, University of Cambridge, UK 2007: 198x129: 160pp Pb: 0-415-41819-4 ISBN13: 978-0-415-41819-5: $19.95

Table of Contents: Why Said? Key Ideas 1. Worldliness: the text 2. Worldliness: the critic 3. Orientalism 4. Culture as imperialism 5. Palestine 6. Said’s Late Style After Said Further Reading

2003: 198x129: 160pp Pb: 0-415-26265-8 ISBN13: 978-0-415-26265-1: $23.95

Roland Barthes Graham Allen 2003: 198x129: 192pp Pb: 0-415-26362-X ISBN13: 978-0-415-26362-7: $21.95

Judith Butler Sara Salih 2002: 198x129: 192pp Pb: 0-415-21519-6 ISBN13: 978-0-415-21519-0: $21.95

October 2008: 198x129: 200pp Pb: 0-415-47689-5 ISBN13: 978-0-415-47689-8: $21.95

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12

CULTURAL THEORY

Routledge Critical Thinkers (cont.)

2ND EDITION

New

Cultural Theory: The Key Concepts

Memory Anne Whitehead, University of Newcastle, UK

New

Hannah Arendt Simon Swift, University of Leeds, UK Hannah Arendt’s work offers a powerful critical engagement with the cultural and philosophical crises of mid-twentieth-century Europe. Her idea of the banality of evil, made famous after her report on the trial of the Nazi war criminal, Adolf Eichmann, remains controversial to this day. In the face of 9/11 and the ‘war on terror’, Arendt’s work on the politics of freedom and the rights of man in a democratic state are especially relevant. Her impassioned plea for the creation of a public sphere through free, critical thinking and dialogue provides a significant resource for contemporary thought. Covering her key ideas from The Origins of Totalitarianism and The Human Condition as well as some of her less well-known texts, and focussing in detail on Arendt’s idea of storytelling, this guide brings Arendt’s work into the twenty-first century while helping students to understand its urgent relevance for the contemporary world. Table of Contents: Why Arendt? 1 Biography, Theory and Politics 2 Thinking and Society 3 Acting 4 Labour, Work and Modernism 5 Judging: From Kant to Eichmann 6 Anti-Semitism 7 Imperialism, Racism and Nation 8 Totalitarianism Coda: Evil After Arendt October 2008: 198x129: 192pp Pb: 0-415-42586-7 ISBN13: 978-0-415-42586-5: $21.95

Feminist Film Theorists Laura Mulvey, Kaja Silverman, Teresa de Lauretis, Barbara Creed Shohini Chaudhuri, University of Essex, UK 2006: 198x129: 160pp Pb: 0-415-32433-5 ISBN13: 978-0-415-32433-5: $25.95

The concept of ‘memory’ has given rise to some of the most exciting new directions in contemporary theory.

Edited by Andrew Edgar and Peter Sedgwick, both at University of Cardiff, UK Series: Routledge Key Guides Now in its second edition, Cultural Theory: The Key Concepts is an up-to-date and comprehensive survey of over 350 of the key terms central to cultural theory today. This second edition includes new entries on:

In this much-needed guide to a burgeoning field of a study, Anne Whitehead: • presents a history of the concept of ‘memory’ and its uses, encompassing both memory as activity and the nature of memory

•colonialism •cybercultur

•examines debates around the term in their historical and cultural contexts •introduces the reader to key thinkers in the field, from ancient Greece to the present day •traces the links between theorisations and literary representations of memory Offering a clear and succinct guide to one of the most important terms in contemporary theory, this volume is essential reading for anyone entering the field of Memory Studies, or seeking to understand current developments in Cultural and Literary Studies. Table of Contents: Introduction 1. Memory and Inscription 2. Memory and the self 3. Involuntary memories 4. Collective memory Conclusion: The Art of Forgetting? Bibliography September 2008: 198x129: 176pp eBook: 0-203-88804-9 ISBN13: 978-0-203-88804-9 Hb: 0-415-40274-3 ISBN13: 978-0-415-40274-3: $95.00 Pb: 0-415-40273-5 ISBN13: 978-0-415-40273-6: $21.95

Cosmopolitan Culture and Consumerism in Chick Lit Caroline J. Smith, The George Washington University, USA

•globalisation •terrorism •visual studies. 2007: 216x138: 447pp Hb: 0-415-39938-6 ISBN13: 978-0-415-39938-8: $120.00 Pb: 0-415-39939-4 ISBN13: 978-0-415-39939-5: $26.95

Forthcoming

Social Movements: The Key Concepts Graeme Chesters, University of Bradford, UK and Ian Welsh, Cardiff University, UK Series: Routledge Key Guides Social Movements: The Key Concepts has relevance for a range of disciplines such as healthcare, development studies, anthropology and globalization. Material covered includes the Civil Rights Movement, direct action, hactyvism, indymedia, feminism and the Anti-Globalization Movement. An A-Z Index and extensive bibliography provides tips for further exploration of this fascinating field. Students of all levels stand to gain much from this up-to-date and compact distillation of all the key facts.

Antonio Gramsci

Series: Literary Criticism and Cultural Theory

Steven Jones, Nottingham Trent University, UK

2007: 229x152: 192pp Hb: 0-415-95662-5 ISBN13: 978-0-415-95662-8: $95.00

Table of Contents: Anti-Globalisation Movement. The Civil Rights Movement. Direct Action. Hacktivism. Indymedia. Feminism

Cultural Theory: The Key Thinkers

June 2009: 216x138: 272pp Hb: 0-415-43114-X ISBN13: 978-0-415-43114-9: $110.00 Pb: 0-415-43115-8 ISBN13: 978-0-415-43115-6: $26.95

2006: 198x129: 168pp Pb: 0-415-31948-X ISBN13: 978-0-415-31948-5: $23.95

Homi K. Bhabha

Edited by Andrew Edgar and Peter Sedgwick

David Huddart

Series: Routledge Key Guides

2005: 198x129: 192pp Pb: 0-415-32824-1 ISBN13: 978-0-415-32824-1: $21.95

2001: 216x138: 304pp Pb: 0-415-23281-3 ISBN13: 978-0-415-23281-4: $26.95

Stuart Hall

Histories of Postmodernism

James Procter 2004: 198x129: 184pp Pb: 0-415-26267-4 ISBN13: 978-0-415-26267-5: $23.95

Edited by Mark Bevir, University of California, Berkeley, USA, Jill Hargis, California State Polytechnic University, Pomona, USA and Sara Rushing, Linfield College, USA

Jacques Derrida

Series: Routledge Studies in Cultural History

Nicholas Royle

2007: 229x152: 274pp Hb: 0-415-95613-7 ISBN13: 978-0-415-95613-0: $95.00

2003: 198x129: 208pp Pb: 0-415-22931-6 ISBN13: 978-0-415-22931-9: $21.95

Communication, Cultural and Media Studies: The Key Concepts John Hartley Series: Routledge Key Guides

Intellectuals and Cultural Policy Edited by Jeremy Ahearne and Oliver Bennett 2007: 246x174: 256pp Hb: 0-415-42090-3 ISBN13: 978-0-415-42090-7: $150.00

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See Order Form on last page of the catalog

Call toll free: 1-800-634-7064

2002: 288pp Pb: 0-415-26889-3 ISBN13: 978-0-415-26889-9: $29.95

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www.routledge.com


CULTURAL THEORY • GENDER AND SEXUALITY

SLAVOJ ŽIŽEK Enjoy Your Symptom! Jacques Lacan in Hollywood and Out

Organs without Bodies

Judith Butler’s Precarious Politics

Deleuze and Consequences

Critical Encounters

Slavoj Žižek

Edited by Terrell Carver, University of Bristol, UK and Samuel A. Chambers, Swansea University, UK

2003: 229x152: 232pp Pb: 0-415-96921-2 ISBN13: 978-0-415-96921-5: $27.95

Slavoj Žižek, University of Ljubljana, Slovenia Series: Routledge Classics

Opera’s Second Death

The title is just the first of many startling asides, observations and insights that fill this guide to Hollywood on the Lacanian psychoanalyst’s couch. Žižek introduces the ideas of Jacques Lacan through the medium of American film, taking his examples from over 100 years of cinema, from Charlie Chaplin to The Matrix and referencing along the way such figures as Lenin and Hegel, Michel Foucault and Jesus Christ. Enjoy Your Symptom! is a thrilling guide to cinema and psychoanalysis from a thinker who is perhaps the last standing giant of cultural theory in the twenty-first century.

Slavoj Žižek and Mladen Dolar

2007: 198x129: 280pp Pb: 0-415-77259-1 ISBN13: 978-0-415-77259-4: $21.95

Judith Butler has been arguably the most important gender theorist of the past twenty years. This edited volume draws leading international political theorists into dialogue with her political theory. Each chapter is written by an acclaimed political theorist and concentrates on a particular aspect of Butler’s work. The book is divided into five sections which reflect the interdisciplinary nature of Butler’s work and activism. Along with its companion volume, Judith Butler and Political Theory, it marks an intellectual event for political theory, with major implications for feminism, women’s studies, gender studies, cultural studies, lesbian and gay studies, queer theory and anyone with a critical interest in contemporary American ‘great power’ politics.

2001: 229x152: 256pp Pb: 0-415-93017-0 ISBN13: 978-0-415-93017-8: $29.95

On Belief

January 2008: 234x156: 248pp Hb: 0-415-38442-7 ISBN13: 978-0-415-38442-1: $150.00 Pb: 0-415-38443-5 ISBN13: 978-0-415-38443-8: $43.95

NEW

Slavoj Žižek

2ND EDITION

Series: Thinking in Action 2001: 198x129: 176pp Pb: 0-415-25532-5 ISBN13: 978-0-415-25532-5: $17.95

Genders David Glover and Cora Kaplan, both at University of Southampton, UK Series: The New Critical Idiom

Žižek’s Politics Jodi Dean, Hobarth & William Smith College, New York, USA A critical introduction to the political thought of one of the most important, original and enigmatic philosophers writing today. 2006: 216x138: 160pp Pb: 0-415-95176-3 ISBN13: 978-0-415-95176-0: $28.95

Everyday Life and Cultural Theory An Introduction Ben Highmore Ben Highmore traces the development of conceptions of everyday life, from Georg Simmel’s cultural sociology, through the MassObservation project of the thirties to theorists such as Michel Curteau.

2001: 234x156: 208pp Pb: 0-415-22303-2 ISBN13: 978-0-415-22303-4: $35.95

The concept of gender continues to be a central issue in literary and cultural studies, with a significance that crosses disciplinary boundaries and provokes lively debate. In this fully revised and updated second edition, David Glover and Cora Kaplan offer a lucid and illuminating introduction to ‘gender’ and its implications.

Gender and Sexuality Judith Butler and Political Theory Troubling Politics Samuel A. Chambers, Swansea University, UK and Terrell Carver, University of Bristol, UK This original study is the first to take a thematic approach to Butler as a political thinker. Starting with an explanation of her terms of analysis, Judith Butler and Political Theory develops Butler’s theory of the political through an exploration of her politics of troubling given categories and approaches. By developing concepts such as normative violence and subversion and by elaborating her critique of heteronormativity, this book moves deftly between Butler’s earliest and most famous writings on gender and her more recent interventions in post-9/11 politics.

Table of Contents: Introduction 1. Femininity and feminism 2. Masculinities 3. Queering the pitch 4. Readers and spectators Conclusion December 2008: 198x129: 224pp eBook: 0-203-88347-0 ISBN13: 978-0-203-88347-1 Hb: 0-415-44243-5 ISBN13: 978-0-415-44243-5: $95.00 Pb: 0-415-44244-3 ISBN13: 978-0-415-44244-2: $21.95

This book, along with its companion volume, Judith Butler’s Precarious Politics, marks an intellectual event for political theory, with major implications for feminism, women’s studies, gender studies, cultural studies, lesbian and gay studies, queer theory and anyone with a critical interest in contemporary American ‘great power’ politics. January 2008: 234x156: 200pp Hb: 0-415-76382-7 ISBN13: 978-0-415-76382-0: $150.00 Pb: 0-415-38366-8 ISBN13: 978-0-415-38366-0: $43.95

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14

GENDER AND SEXUALITY

JUDITH BUTLER Gender Trouble Feminism and the Subversion of Identity Judith Butler Series: Routledge Classics ‘Rereading this book, as well as reading it for the first time, reshapes the categories through which we experience and perform our lives and bodies. To be troubled in this way is an intellectual pleasure and a political necessity.’ —Donna Haraway “Butler is highly theoretical, sphisticated, and original thinker.” — Religious Studies Review

White Weddings

New

Romancing Heterosexuality in Popular Culture

What a Girl Wants?

Chrys Ingraham, Purchase College, New York

Fantasizing the Reclamation of Self in Postfeminism

This is a groundbreaking study of our culture’s obsession with weddings. By examining popular films, commercials, magazines, advertising, television sitcoms and even children’s toys, this book shows the pervasive influence of weddings in our culture and the important role they play in maintaining the romance of heterosexuality, the myth of white supremacy and the insatiable appetite of consumer capitalism. It examines how the economics and marketing of weddings have replaced the religious and moral view of marriage. This second edition includes many new and updated features including: full coverage of the wedding industrial complex; gay marriage and its relationship to white weddings and heterosexuality and demographics shifts as to who is marrying whom and why, nationally and internationally.

2006: 198x129: 272pp Pb: 0-415-38955-0 ISBN13: 978-0-415-38955-6: $21.95

January 2008: 203x203: 304pp eBook: 0-203-93102-5 ISBN13: 978-0-203-93102-8 Hb: 0-415-95194-1 ISBN13: 978-0-415-95194-4: $115.00 Pb: 0-415-95133-X ISBN13: 978-0-415-95133-3: $29.95

Bodies That Matter

New

On the Discursive Limits of “Sex”

Reading Sexualities

Judith Butler

Hermeneutic Theory and the Future of Queer Studies

1993: 229x152: 304pp Pb: 0-415-90366-1 ISBN13: 978-0-415-90366-0: $35.95

Undoing Gender Judith Butler 2004: 229x152: 288pp Pb: 0-415-96923-9 ISBN13: 978-0-415-96923-9: $38.95

What’s Left of Theory? New Work on the Politics of Literary Theory Edited by Judith Butler, John Guillory and Kendall Thomas Series: Essays from the English Institute

Donald E. Hall, West Virginia University, USA Reading Sexualities attempts to invigorate and revitalise the field of radical sexuality studies. Drawing widely on the field of hermeneutic theory and the works of the German philosopher HansGeorg Gadamer, Donald E. Hall: •urges readers to embrace a far-reaching dialogic practice as a mechanism for furthering radical social change •examines the vexed ethical, critical, and political questions arising from modern sexual practices and possibilities •reads the changing landscape of sexual identity, finding great cause for optimism and enthusiastic political engagement Reading Sexualities shows how our sexual desires and bases for identification are being challenged and changed, and argues that by approaching the reading of sexualities responsibly, we become active participants in the political, empowering process of reading the self through the perspective of the other. March 2009: 216x138: 208pp eBook: 0-203-02026-X ISBN13: 978-0-203-02026-5: $35.95 Hb: 0-415-36785-9 ISBN13: 978-0-415-36785-1: $120.00 Pb: 0-415-36786-7 ISBN13: 978-0-415-36786-8: $35.95 £17.99

2000: 229x152: 304pp Pb: 0-415-92119-8 ISBN13: 978-0-415-92119-0: $29.95

Diane Negra, University of East Anglia, UK From domestic goddess to desperate housewife, What a Girl Wants explores the importance and centrality of postfeminism in contemporary popular culture. Focusing on a diverse range of media forms, including film, TV, advertising and journalism, Diane Negra holds up a mirror to the contemporary female subject who finds herself centralized in commodity culture to a largely unprecedented degree at a time when Hollywood romantic comedies, chick-lit, and female-centred primetime TV dramas all compete for her attention and spending power. The models and anti-role models analysed in the book include the chick flick heroines of princess films, makeover movies and time travel dramas, celebrity brides and bravura mothers, ‘Runaway Bride’ sensation Jennifer Wilbanks, the sex workers, flight attendants and nannies who maintain such a high profile in postfeminist popular culture, the authors of postfeminist panic literature on dating, marriage and motherhood and the domestic gurus who propound luxury lifestyling as a showcase for the ‘achieved’ female self. August 2008: 234x156: 200pp Hb: 0-415-45227-9 ISBN13: 978-0-415-45227-4: $140.00 Pb: 0-415-45228-7 ISBN13: 978-0-415-45228-1: $39.95

New

Gender, Ireland and Cultural Change Gerardine Meaney Series: Routledge Studies in Twentieth-Century Literature This study analyzes the role of gender in Irish cultural change from the 1890s to the present, exploring literature, the relationships between gender and national identities, and the recognized major political and cultural movements of the twentieth century. It includes discussion of film, television and, popular music, as well as diverse literary texts by authors such as Joyce, Yeats, Wilde, and Boland. April 2009: 229x152: 192pp Hb: 0-415-95790-7 ISBN13: 978-0-415-95790-8: $95.00

Excitable Speech A Politics of the Performative Judith Butler 1997: 229x152: 200pp Pb: 0-415-91588-0 ISBN13: 978-0-415-91588-5: $35.95

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GENDER AND SEXUALITY

New

New

New

Family Law, Sex & Society

Gender and Labor in Korea and Japan

Sex, Love and Feminism in the Asia Pacific

Sexing Class

A Cross-Cultural Study of Young People’s Attitudes

Peter De Cruz, Liverpool John Moores University, UK Comparative in both approach and framework, with cross-referencing to English law throughout, this invaluable textbook provides students with a critical exposition of the key areas in family law, exploring their evolution and development within their historical, cultural, political and legal context. A critical and lively overview, it pays particular attention to the legal position of unmarried fathers, unmarried cohabitants and same sex couples and the state, within the context and effect of the Human Rights Act 1998. Divided into four parts, it examines: •English family law, in particular the recent focus on children’s rights, property relations and domestic violence, as well as examining other common law and civil law jurisdictions •the common law in Australia, New Zealand, some Far Eastern countries and selected American jurisdictions, alongside civil law jurisdictions such as France, Germany and Sweden •the Russian Federation, as an example of a hybrid jurisdiction; providing a critical analysis of the common issues in family law The only textbook to provide a unified, coherent and comparative approach to the study of family law as it operates in various jurisdictions, this volume gives law students of all levels valuable socio-legal and socio-cultural insights into the practice of family law in different countries that were unavailable until now. Table of Contents: Family Law in England and Wales. Family Law in Britain. Historical Development of English Family law. Definitions and Distinctions. Changing Approaches to Family Law Disputes. Informal Family Unions. Property Relations Within the Family. Children and the Law. Family Law and the Human Rights Act 1998. Comparative Perspectives: Analysis of Family Law in Non-UK Jurisdictions. Civil Law Countries. Family Law in Socialist/Civil Law Perspective. The American Perspective. Family Law in Australia and New Zealand. Asia and Africa. Japan. A Comparative Overview March 2009: 234x156: 250pp Hb: 0-415-48430-8 ISBN13: 978-0-415-48430-5: $160.00 Pb: 1-85941-638-1 ISBN13: 978-1-85941-638-9: $66.00

Drunk with the Glitter Space, Consumption and Sexual Instability in Modern Urban Culture Gillian Swanson, University of the West of England, UK Focusing on public controversies, Drunk with the Glitter examines the ways in which urban modernity reshapes ‘cultural experience’.

Edited by Ruth Barraclough, Australian National University and Elyssa Faison, University of Oklahoma, USA Series: ASAA Women in Asia Series This book explores gender, labor and class in Korea and Japan. It focuses in particular on two forms of labor that have been crucial to understandings of gender, work and class throughout the twentieth century: sexual labor and industrial labor. It shows how these have been central in shaping modern gender and worker identities, and argues that sexuality and labor must be analyzed together if we are to understand the history of capitalism in Korea and Japan. By discussing what happens to sexuality in factories and other sites of industrial labor, it explores how sexuality is inscribed in working-class identities, and shows how sexual and labor relations have shaped the cultures of industrialization in both Japan and Korea. It addresses important historical episodes such as Japanese colonization of Korea and its legacy, wartime labor mobilization, women engaging in forced sex work for the Japanese Imperial Army throughout the Asian continent, and issues of ethnicity and sex in the contemporary workplace. The case studies provide specific examples of the way gender and work have operated across a variety of contexts, including Korean shipyard unions, Japanese hostess clubs employing Korean-Japanese “passing” as Japanese, the poetry of female Japanese unionists and in the autobiographical proletarian literature of Korean female textile workers. Overall, this book provides a compelling account of the relationship between gender and labour in Korea and Japan, both today and across the course of the twentieth century, and shows clearly how ideas about gender have contributed in fundamental ways to conceptions of class and worker identities. April 2009: 234x156: 224pp Hb: 0-415-77663-5 ISBN13: 978-0-415-77663-9: $150.00

Series: ASAA Women in Asia Series This book explores feminism, the women’s movement and gender relations in the Asia Pacific region. Through a comparative analysis of ten countries, both Asian and Western, it examines important issues such as attitudes towards feminism, family relations, sex and same sex sexual relations, abortion rights, nudity and pornography. Table of Contents: Introduction: Global Narratives of Asia, Feminism and Youth 1. The National Samples: Background and Methods 2. Variations on Liberal Feminism: USA, Australia, Canada, Japan, Thailand and South Korea 3. National Development Feminism: India, Indonesia, China and Vietnam 4. Homosexuality and Pornography: The Commodification of Intimacy? 5. ‘Marriage shouldn’t be the end of life’: Sharing the Caring Conclusion: Globalizing Discourses in the Neoliberal Age Appendix 1: Characteristics of countries in the study Appendix 2: The questionnaire Appendix 3: Tables relating to research methods Appendix 4: Charts and tables relating to feminist movement Appendix 5: Charts and tables relating to gender issues October 2008: 234x156: 288pp Hb: 0-415-47006-4 ISBN13: 978-0-415-47006-3: $150.00

New

Gender Pluralism Southeast Asia Since Early Modern Times Michael G. Peletz, Emory University, USA This book examines three big ideas: difference, legitimacy, and pluralism. Of chief concern is: •how people construe and deal with variation among fellow human beings. •Why under certain circumstances do people embrace even sanctify differences, or at least begrudgingly tolerate them •Why in other contexts are people less receptive to difference, sometimes overtly hostile to it and bent on its eradication?

The Culture of Queers Richard Dyer For around a hundred years up to the Stonewall riots, the word used for gay men was ‘queers’. Here Richard Dyer traces the contours of queer culture, examining the differences and continuities with the gay culture which succeeded it. 2001: 234x156: 256pp Pb: 0-415-22376-8 ISBN13: 978-0-415-22376-8: $37.95

2007: 234x156: 224pp Hb: 0-415-06130-X ISBN13: 978-0-415-06130-8: $140.00 Pb: 0-415-06131-8 ISBN13: 978-0-415-06131-5: $34.95

Chilla Bulbeck, University of Adelaide, Australia

•What are the cultural and political conditions conducive to the positive valorization and acceptance of difference? •What conditions undermine or erode such positive views and acceptance? Gender Pluralism examines pluralism in gendered fields and domains in Southeast Asia since the early modern era, which historians and anthropologists of the region commonly define as the period extending roughly from the 15th to the 18th centuries. Table of Contents: 1. Introduction 2. Gender Pluralism and Transgender Practices in Early Modern Times 3. Temporary Marriage, Connubial Commerce, and Colonial Body Politics 4. Transgender Practices, Same-Sex Relations, and Gender Pluralism Since the 1960s 5. Gender, Sexuality, and Body Politics at the Turn of the 21st Century Epilogue: Asylum, Diaspora, Pluralism February 2009: 229x152: 240pp Hb: 0-415-93160-6 ISBN13: 978-0-415-93160-1: $95.00 Pb: 0-415-93161-4 ISBN13: 978-0-415-93161-8: $29.95

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15


16

GENDER AND SEXUALITY • RACE AND ETHNICITY

Forthcoming

New

The International Handbook of Sexuality and Health

Human Sexuality

Edited by Peter Aggleton, Institute of Education, University of London, UK and Richard Parker, Columbia University, USA The last two decades have witnessed a veritable explosion of research on sexuality as the social sciences have worked to find new ways of understanding a rapidly changing world and increasingly visible social movements have emerged. Growing concern for issues such as population, women’s and men’s reproductive health, and the HIV and AIDS pandemic, has since provided new legitimacy for work of relevance to sex, sexuality and health. A detailed and up-to-date reference work, The Handbook of Sexuality and Health provides an authoritative overview of the main issues in the field around the world today. Leading academics and practitioners have been brought together to reflect on past, present and future approaches to understanding and promoting sexual health and rights. Divided into nine parts, it covers: •Foundations of sexuality research •The politics of gender and sexuality •Language, discourse and sexual categories •Sexuality and sexual health •Reproductive health and rights •Sexuality and HIV/AIDS •Sexual violence and abuse •From sexual health to sexual rights This handbook surveys the state of the discipline, including examination and discussion of emerging, controversial and cutting edge areas. It is an essential reference for all academics and researchers in the fields of sexuality studies, sexual health and human rights, as well as very useful reading for more advanced students. November 2009: 246x174: 400pp Hb: 0-415-46864-7 ISBN13: 978-0-415-46864-0: $190.00

Race and Ethnicity

Biological, Psychological, and Cultural Perspectives

bell hooks

Anne Bolin, Elon University, USA and Patricia Whelehan, State University of New York, Potsdam, USA

New

Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Human Sexuality is a unique textbook that provides a broad analysis of this crucial basic aspect of life. Utilizing viewpoints across cultural and national boundaries, and incorporating evolutionary and psychological perspectives, four major lines of evidence and knowledge are comprehensively discussed, including: evolutionary theory, primatology, the cross-cultural record and contemporary issues, and emphasizing anthropological contributions while incorporating psycho-social perspectives. Taking into account the evolution of human anatomy, sexual behavior, attitudes, and beliefs, this far-reaching resource goes beyond what is found in standard United States culture, presenting a wide diversity of beliefs, attitudes, and behaviors found globally. In addition to providing a rich array of photographs, illustrations, tables, an extensive bibliography, and a helpful glossary of terms, topics discussed in Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Human Sexuality: Biological, Psychological, and Cultural Understandings include: •modern human male and female anatomy and physiology •pregnancy and childbirth as a bio-cultural experience •life-course issues related to gender identity, sexual orientations, behaviors, and lifestyle •influences on socioeconomic, political, historical, and ecological systems of sexual behavior •evolutionary history of human sexuality •early childhood sexuality, puberty and adolescence •human sexual response •birth control, fertility, conception, and sexual differentiation •HIV infection, AIDS, AIDS globalization and sex work Fusing biological, socio-psychological, and cultural influences to offer an original perspective to understanding human sexuality, its development over millions of years of evolution, and how sexuality is embedded in specific socio-cultural contexts, it is an important text for educators and students in a variety of human sexuality courses. December 2008: 229x152: 744pp eBook: 0-20388-923-1 ISBN13: 978-0-20388-923-7 Hb: 0-7890-2671-6 ISBN13: 978-0-7890-2671-2: $120.00 Pb: 0-7890-2672-4 ISBN13: 978-0-7890-2672-9: $69.95

Belonging A Culture of Place bell hooks What does it mean to call a place home? Who is allowed to become a member of a community? When can we say that we truly belong? These are some of the questions of place and belonging that renowned cultural critic bell hooks examines in her new book, Belonging: A Culture of Place. Traversing past and present, Belonging charts a cyclical journey in which hooks moves from place to place, from country to city and back again, only to end where she began— her old Kentucky home. hooks has written provocatively about race, gender, and class; and in this book she turns her attention to focus on issues of land and land ownership. Reflecting on the fact that 90% of all black people lived in the agrarian South before mass migration to northern cities in the early 1900s, she writes about black farmers, about black folks who have been committed both in the past and in the present to local food production, to being organic, and to finding solace in nature. Naturally, it would be impossible to contemplate these issues without thinking about the politics of race and class. Reflecting on the racism that continues to find expression in the world of real estate, she writes about segregation in housing and economic racialized zoning. In these critical essays, hooks finds surprising connections that link of the environment and sustainability to the politics of race and class that reach far beyond Kentucky. With characteristic insight and honesty, Belonging offers a remarkable vision of a world where all people—wherever they may call home—can live fully and well, where everyone can belong. Table of Contents: 1. PREFACE: to know where I’m going 2. kentucky is my fate 3. mountains:

consumed by suffering 4. touching the earth 5. reclamation and reconciliation 6. to be whole and holy 7. again — segregation must end 8. representations of whiteness in the black imagination 9. drive through tobacco 10. earthbound: on solid ground 11. an aesthetics of blackness: strange and oppositional 12. inspired eccentricity 13. a place where the soul can rest 14. aesthetic inheritances: history worked by hand 15. piecing it all together 16. on being a kentucky writer 17. returning to the wound 18. healing talk: a conversation 19. take back the night — remake the present 20. habits of the heart 21. a community of care October 2008: 210x140: 240pp eBook: 0-203-88801-4 ISBN13: 978-0-203-88801-8 Hb: 0-415-96815-1 ISBN13: 978-0-415-96815-7: $95.00 Pb: 0-415-96816-X ISBN13: 978-0-415-96816-4: $19.95

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RACE AND ETHNICITY

We Real Cool

New

New

Critical Perspectives on bell hooks

Reel to Real

Edited by Maria del Guadalupe Davidson, Oklahoma University, USA and George Yancy, Duquesne University, USA

Race, Sex and Class at the Movies

Series: Critical Social Thought Although bell hooks has long challenged the dominant paradigms of race, class, and gender, there has never been a comprehensive book critically reflecting upon this seminal scholar’s body of work. Her written works aim to transgress and disrupt those codes that exclude others as intellectually mediocre, and hooks’ challenge to various hegemonic practices has heavily influenced scholars in numerous areas of inquiry. This important resource thematically examines hooks’ works across various disciplinary divides, including her critique on educational theory and practice, theorization of racial construction, dynamics of gender, and spirituality and love as correctives in postmodern life. Ultimately, this book offers a fresh perspective for scholars and students wanting to engage in the prominent work of bell hooks, and makes available to its readers the full significance of her work. Compelling and unprecedented, Critical Perspectives on bell hooks is a must-read for scholars, professors, and students interested in issues of race, class and gender. Table of Contents: Introduction, Maria del Guadalupe Davidson and George Yancy Part One: Critical Pedagogy and Praxis 1. Borderlines: bell hooks and the Pedagogy of Revolutionary Change, Nathalia E. Jaramillo and Peter McLaren 2. Engaging Whiteness and the Practice Freedom: The Creation Of Subversive Academic Spaces, George Yancy 3. Teaching to Transgress: Deconstructing Normalcy and Re-signifying the Marked Body, Cindy LaCom and Susan Hadley 4. bell hooks, White Supremacy, and the Academy, Tim Davidson and Jeanette R. Davidson 5. Engaging bell hooks: How Teacher Educators Can Work to Sustain Themselves and Their Work, Gretchen Givens Generett 6. bell hooks’ Children’s Literature: Writing to Transform the World at its Root, Carme Manuel Part Two: The Dynamics of Race and Gender 7. Talking Back: bell hooks, Feminism, and Philosophy, Donna-Dale L. Marcano 8. bell hooks and the Move from Marginalized Other to Radical Black Subject, Maria del Guadalupe Davidson 9. The Ethics of Blackness: bell hooks’ Postmodern Blackness and the Imperative of Liberation, Clevis Headley 10. The Specter of Race: bell hooks, Deconstruction, and Revolutionary Blackness, Arnold Farr Part Three: Spirituality and Love 11. Love Matters: bell hooks on Political Resistance and Change, Kathy Glass 12. Love, Politics, and Ethics in the Postmodern Feminist Work of bell hooks and Julia Kristeva, Marilyn Edelstein 13. “Revolutionary Interdependence”: bell hooks’ Ethic of Love as a Basis for a Feminist Liberation Theology of the Neighbor, Nancy E. Nienhuis 14. Towards a Love Ethic: Love and Spirituality in bell hooks’ Writing, Susana Vega-González

Black Men and Masculinity bell hooks 2003: 229x152: 160pp eBook: 0-203-64220-1 ISBN13: 978-0-203-64220-7 Pb: 0-415-96927-1 ISBN13: 978-0-415-96927-7: $23.95

bell hooks Series: Routledge Classics ‘hooks...makes a compelling case to filmmakers for creating progressive images that ‘transform the culture we live in.’ —Los Angeles Times Movies matter — that is the message of Reel to Real, bell hooks’ classic collection of essays on film. They matter on a personal level, providing us with unforgettable moments, even life-changing experiences and they can confront us, too, with the most profound social issues of race, sex and class. Here bell hooks — one of America’s most celebrated and thrilling cultural critics — talks back to films that have moved and provoked her, from Quentin Tarantino’s Pulp Fiction to the work of Spike Lee. Including also her conversations with master filmmakers such as Charles Burnett and Julie Dash, Reel to Real is a must read for anyone who believes that movies are worth arguing about.

Where We Stand Class Matters bell hooks 2000: 229x152: 160pp eBook: 0-203-90510-5 ISBN13: 978-0-203-90510-4 Pb: 0-415-92913-X ISBN13: 978-0-415-92913-4: $23.95

October 2008: 235x187: 320pp Pb: 0-415-96480-6 ISBN13: 978-0-415-96480-7: $23.95

Outlaw Culture Resisting Representations bell hooks Series: Routledge Classics ‘[hooks] made a choice to write for the largest possible audience, to change the greatest number of lives.’ —Times Higher Education Supplement

Teaching to Transgress Education as the Practice of Freedom bell hooks

2006: 198x129: 320pp Pb: 0-415-38958-5 ISBN13: 978-0-415-38958-7: $19.95

Teaching Community A Pedagogy of Hope bell hooks 2003: 216x138: 216pp Pb: 0-415-96818-6 ISBN13: 978-0-415-96818-8: $24.95

February 2009: 229x152: 256pp Hb: 0-415-98980-9 ISBN13: 978-0-415-98980-0: $140.00 Pb: 0-415-98981-7 ISBN13: 978-0-415-98981-7: $38.95

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1994: 229x152: 224pp Pb: 0-415-90808-6 ISBN13: 978-0-415-90808-5: $27.95

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RACE AND ETHNICITY

New

New

New

Black Feminist Thought

Challenging Islamic Fundamentalism

Religion in Contemporary China

The Three Principles of Mulla Sadra

Knowledge, Consciousness, and the Politics of Empowerment

Revitalization and Innovation

Patricia Hill Collins

Colin Turner, University of Durham, UK

Edited by Adam Yuet Chau, SOAS, University of London, UK

Series: Routledge Classics

Series: Culture and Civilization in the Middle East

Series: Routledge Contemporary China Series

In Black Feminist Thought, originally published in 1990, Patricia Hill Collins explores the words and ideas of black feminist intellectuals and writers. She provides an interpretive framework for the work of a range of prominent thinkers and draws from fiction, poetry, music and oral history, to provide a superbly crafted and revolutionary book that gave the first synthetic overview of black feminist thought and its canon.

This is the first translation into English of Seh Asl (Three Principles) by the important sixteenth century thinker Mulla Sadra.

This book provides a wide-ranging and in-depth survey of contemporary religious practices in China, explaining how the recent economic reforms and concurrent relaxation of religious polices have provided fertile ground for the revitalization of a wide range of religious practices.

Table of Contents: Preface to the First Edition. Preface to the Second Edition. Acknowledgements Part 1: The Social Construction of Black Feminist Thought 1. The Politics of Black Feminist Thought 2. Distinguishing Features of Black Feminist Thought Part 2: Core Themes in Black Feminist Thought 3. Work, Family and Black Women’s Oppression 4. Mammies, Matriarchs and other Controlling Images 5. The Power of Self-Definition 6. The Sexual Politics of Black Womanhood 7. Black Women’s Love Relationships 8. Black Women and Motherhood 9. Rethinking Black Women’s Activism Part 3: Black Feminism, Knowledge and Power 10. US Black Feminism in Transnational Context 11. Black Feminist Epistemology 12. Toward a Politics of Empowerment

In this book, Camron Amin provides a rich yet concise portrait of Iranian society through the lens of globalization. How is economic and cultural globalization affecting Iranians? How are the nation’s two chief natural resources, militant Islam and oil, tied into larger supraregional economic and political currents? To answer this, Amin, a historian, traces the broad outlines of Iranian history, focusing in particular on Shi’ism and nationalism, the dominant faith there. Shi’ism sets it apart from surrounding Sunni regimes, and its nationalism has certainly been a potent global force for decades. He also contrasts Iran’s intense nationalism with its substantial ethnic diversity.

August 2008: 216x138: 384pp Pb: 0-415-96472-5 ISBN13: 978-0-415-96472-2: $24.95

Select Contents: Translator’s Introduction. The Three Principles of Mulla Sadra. Epilogue. Glossary April 2009: 234x156: 208pp Hb: 0-415-38389-7 ISBN13: 978-0-415-38389-9: $130.00 £65.00

New

Global Iran Camron Michael Amin, University of MichiganDearborn, USA Series: Global Realities

January 2009: 216x138: 208pp Hb: 0-415-95247-6 ISBN13: 978-0-415-95247-7: $120.00 Pb: 0-415-95248-4 ISBN13: 978-0-415-95248-4: $35.95 £60.00

£18.99

Black Sexual Politics New

Patricia Hill Collins

Globalization and the Middle Classes in India The Social and Cultural Impact of Neoliberal Reforms

New

Re-writing Culture in Taiwan Edited by Fang-Long Shih, London School of Economics, UK, Stuart Thompson, School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London, UK and Paul Tremlett, School of Oriental and African Studies, UK Series: Asia’s Transformations Examining issues such as trauma, memory, history, tradition, modernity, post-modernity, and with chapters on nationalism, anthropology, cultural studies, media studies, religion and museum studies, this book offers a comprehensive and critical analysis of contemporary Taiwan. October 2008: 234x156: 232pp Hb: 0-415-46666-0 ISBN13: 978-0-415-46666-0: $150.00

April 2009: 234x156: 288pp Hb: 0-415-45934-6 ISBN13: 978-0-415-45934-1: $150.00

New

Perversion in Modern Japan Psychoanalysis, Literature, Culture Edited by Nina Cornyetz and Keith Vincent, both at New York University, USA Series: Routledge Contemporary Japan Series

African Americans, Gender, and the New Racism 2005: 229x152: 384pp Pb: 0-415-95150-X ISBN13: 978-0-415-95150-0: $25.95

Table of Contents: Introduction Adam Yuet Chau 1. Buddhism in the Reform Era: A Secularized Revival?JI Zhe 2. Giving Back: Morality Texts and the Re-Growth of Lay Buddhism Garesh Fisher 3. The Emerging SpiritMedium Cults in Sishui Village, Hebei Der-ruey Yang 4. Daoist Temple Networks and Monks’ Wandering About Adeline Herrou 5. Temples as Enterprises Selina Chan and Graeme Lang 6. Building Temples across the Border: The Story of a Female Spirit Medium and Her Devotees Tiksang Liu 7. Intertwined Fortunes: Music-Making and Ritual Life in North China Stephen Jones 8. Rationalizing Re-Enchantment: Charisma, Affiliation and Organization in the Post-Mao Qigong Movement David Palmer 9. Global Modernity, Local Community, and Spiritual Power: Innovation and Tradition in the Catholic Church in Shanxi since 1979 Henrietta Harrison 10. Of Stones and Fonts: The Art and Politics of Inscribing and Re-inscribing a Temple Adam Yuet Chau Conclusion

Ruchira Ganguly-Scrase and Timothy J. Scrase, both at University of Wollongong, Australia Series: Routledge Contemporary South Asia Series This book fills an important gap in the literature published so far on economic liberalization and globalization in India by providing much needed ethnographic data from those affected by the liberalization process. October 2008: 216x138: 208pp eBook: 0-203-88439-6 ISBN13: 978-0-203-88439-3: $150.00 Hb: 0-415-44116-1 ISBN13: 978-0-415-44116-2: $150.00

Rethinking Race, Politics, and Poetics

With essays on topics ranging from Yukio Mishima’s “autofictional machine” to the imaginary worlds of otaku sexuality, this volume brings the insights of psychoanalysis to Japanese studies. Perversion in Modern Japan is the first book to focus on the psychoanalytic approach to the study of modern Japan. As such, it will be of huge interest to students and scholars of Japanese literature, history, culture and psychoanalysis more generally. March 2009: 234x156: 320pp Hb: 0-415-46910-4 ISBN13: 978-0-415-46910-4: $150.00

Africa after Modernism Transitions in Literature, Media, and Philosophy Michael Janis, Morehouse College, USA Series: Routledge Studies in Cultural History 2007: 229x152: 280pp Hb: 0-415-95723-0 ISBN13: 978-0-415-95723-6: $95.00

C.L.R. James’ Critique of Modernity Brett St Louis, Goldsmiths College, University of London, UK Series: Routledge Studies in Cultural History 2007: 229x152: 208pp Hb: 0-415-95772-9 ISBN13: 978-0-415-95772-4: $95.00

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RACE AND ETHNICITY

MARK ANTHONY NEAL

New

Bangladesh Cinema and National Identity In Search of the Modern? Zakir Hossain Raju, Monash University, Malaysia

“One of the most brilliant cultural critics of his generation...Neal writes gracefully, thinks sharply, speaks cogently and is old school and new school at once. He’s my favorite cultural critic and one hip brother.” —Michael Eric Dyson, Chicago Sun Times

Series: Routledge Contemporary South Asia Series This book analyses the relationship between cinema and modernity in Bangladesh. It investigates the roles of a non-western ‘national’ film industry in Asia in constructing nationhood and identity within colonial and postcolonial predicaments, and analyses the political, economic and cultural forces that have been active in shaping Bangladesh cinema. Table of Contents: 1. Methods in Film Historiography 2. National Cinema and Non-Western Modernity: Framework to Study Bangladesh Cinema 3. National Cinema Study and Beginning of/in Bangladesh Film History 4. Cinema and Cultural Modernity in Colonial Bengal 5. Film Industry and Bengali-Muslim Modernity in Postcolonial East Pakistan and Bangladesh 6. Film as Popular Culture in between Nation-state and Market Forces in Contemporary Bangladesh 7. Cultural Modernity and Bangladeshi Art Cinemas in National and Global Stage January 2009: 234x156: 240pp Hb: 0-415-46544-3 ISBN13: 978-0-415-46544-1: $170.00

New Black Man

Soul Babies

Mark Anthony Neal, Duke University, USA 2006: 229x152: 208pp Pb: 0-415-97991-9 ISBN13: 978-0-415-97991-7: $22.95

Black Popular Culture and the Post-Soul Aesthetic Mark Anthony Neal 2001: 229x152: 256pp Pb: 0-415-92658-0 ISBN13: 978-0-415-92658-4: $27.95

That’s the Joint! The Hip-Hop Studies Reader Edited by Mark Anthony Neal and Murray Forman 2004: 254x178: 648pp Pb: 0-415-96919-0 ISBN13: 978-0-415-96919-2: $39.95

New

Pirate Culture and Urban Life in Delhi

What the Music Said Black Popular Music and Black Public Culture Mark Anthony Neal

After Media Ravi Sundaram, Centre for the Study of Developing Societies, Delhi Series: Routledge Studies in Asia’s Transformations Focusing on the culture of piracy in the Indian capital, this book looks at what has happened to the city in the wake of the dissemination of the new media and the ways in which it has, and will, affect urban cultures in an age of globalization. Table of Contents: Introduction: The City after Media: Media after the City 1. A City of Order 2. Media Urbanism 3. Circulation and the ‘New Media’ in the City 4. Conflict: Struggle for the Media City 5. Elite Strategies and Disciplinary Urbanism 6. Media Worlds and the Realms of Property: The Courts. Conclusion: Pirate Modernity and the Vision of a City after Media

Songs in the Key of Black Life A Rhythm and Blues Nation Mark Anthony Neal 2003: 229x152: 224pp Pb: 0-415-96571-3 ISBN13: 978-0-415-96571-2: $26.95

February 2009: 234x156: 240pp Hb: 0-415-40966-7 ISBN13: 978-0-415-40966-7: $150.00

Forthcoming

China on Video Small Screen Realities Paola Voci, University of Otago, New Zealand Series: Routledge Studies in Asia’s Transformations This book relocates Chinese independent moviemaking from a film to a visual culture perspective enabling the author to explore the role that other movies (mostly, but not exclusively, popular culture products) play in the making of experimental and non-mainstream visual culture. August 2009: 234x156: 240pp Hb: 0-415-46452-8 ISBN13: 978-0-415-46452-9: $135.00

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1998: 229x152: 336pp Pb: 0-415-92072-8 ISBN13: 978-0-415-92072-8: $29.95

19


20

CELEBRITY AND CULTURE

Celebrity and Culture Framing Celebrity New Directions in Celebrity Culture Edited by Su Holmes, University of Kent at Canterbury, UK and Sean Redmond, University of Wellington, Victoria, New Zealand Celebrity culture has a pervasive presence in our everyday lives — perhaps more so than ever before. It shapes not simply the production and consumption of media content but also the social values through which we experience the world. This collection analyses this phenomenon, bringing together essays which explore celebrity across a range of media, cultural and political contexts. 2006: 234x156: 384pp Pb: 0-415-37710-2 ISBN13: 978-0-415-37710-2: $37.95

America First Naming the Nation in US Film Edited by Mandy Merck, Royal Holloway, University of London, UK At a time when the expanded projection of US political, military, economic and cultural power draws intensified global concern, understanding how that country understands itself seems more important than ever. This collection of new critical essays tackles this old problem in a new way, by examining some of the hundreds of US films that announce themselves as titularly ‘American’. 2007: 234x156: 328pp Pb: 0-415-37496-0 ISBN13: 978-0-415-37496-5: $34.95

Forthcoming

Popular Culture in Indonesia

Global Chinese Cinema

Fluid Identities in Post-Authoritarian Politics

The Culture and Politics of ‘Hero’

Edited by Ariel Heryanto, The University of Melbourne, Australia

Edited by Gary Rawnsley, Ming-Yeh Rawnsley, University of Leeds, UK and Julian Stringer Series: Media, Culture and Social Change in Asia Series The film Hero, produced in 2002, is widely regarded as the first globally successful indigenous Chinese blockbuster, and touched on key questions of Chinese culture, nation and politics. This book explores the reasons for the film’s popularity with its audiences, discussing the factors in the audiences with which the film resonated. Table of Contents: Introduction: Chinese Cinema’s Changing Markets - Local, Regional, Global Gary D. Rawnsley, Ming-Yeh T. Rawnsley, and Julian Stringer Part I: Shifting Narratives of National Heroism 1. Political Narrative(s) of Hero Gary Rawnsley 2. National Unification Overrides All: The Heroism of Hero Yingjie Guo 3. The Emperor and the Assassin: China’s National Hero and the Myth of State Origins Yiyan Wang 4. Hero in the Context of Other Heroic Films Kam Louie 5. Penetrating Experiences: Swords and Sex with Women Warriors Louise Edwards Part II: Intercultural Aesthetics and Genre Transformations 6. Visions of ‘All Under Heaven’ (tian xia): Zhang Yimou’s Political Thought and Aesthetic Values in Hero Xiaoming Chen and Ming-Yeh T. Rawnsley 7. The Format of Chinese Martial Arts Films and the Rewriting of Such Formats by Hero Haizhou Wang 8. The Death of Heros in China Xiaoling Zhang 9. Heroic Music: From Hunan to Hollywood Katy Gow Part II: Anatomy of a Transnational Blockbuster 10. Hero: The Political Economy of Nationalism Anthony Fung and Joseph Chan 11. Lover, Not a Fighter?: Hero and Tony Leung’s Polysemic Masculinity Mark Gallagher 12. Learning to Enjoy Desire for an (Asian) Empire: The Critical Reception of Hero in South Korea Nikki J.Y. Lee 13. Martial Arts, Star Dust and Historical Memory: The Culture of a Blockbuster Yi Zheng 14. Hero: How Chinese Is It? Julian Stringer and Qiong Yu November 2009: 234x156: 256pp Hb: 0-415-45315-1 ISBN13: 978-0-415-45315-8: $160.00

Gertrude Stein and the Making of an American Celebrity Karen Leick, Ohio State University, USA Series: Studies in Major Literary Authors By examining not the ways that Stein portrayed the popular in her work, but the ways the popular portrayed her, this study shows that there was an intimate relationship between literary modernism and mainstream culture and that modernist writers and texts were much more well-known than has been previously acknowledged. Specifically, Leick reveals through the case study of Stein that the relationship between mass culture and modernism in America was less antagonistic, more productive and integrated than previous studies have suggested.

June 2008: 234x156: 216pp Hb: 0-415-46112-X ISBN13: 978-0-415-46112-2: $160.00

New

Post-War Italian Cinema American Intervention, Vatican Interests Daniela Treveri Gennari, Oxford Brookes University, UK Series: Routledge Advances in Film Studies Through a comparative approach of current theories developed on ideology and an analysis of official documents from the Vatican and the United States Department of State, the book investigates the decisive role that American production companies played in the development of the Italian film industry and their links to the Vatican. December 2008: 229x152: 176pp Hb: 0-415-96287-0 ISBN13: 978-0-415-96287-2: $95.00

New

Latsploitation, Latin America, and Exploitation Cinema Edited by Victoria Ruétalo, University of Alberta, Canada and Dolores Tierney, University of Sussex, UK Series: Routledge Advances in Film Studies

New

Lesbianism, Cinema, Space The Sexual Life of Apartments Lee Wallace, University of Auckland, New Zealand

New

Series: Media, Culture and Social Change in Asia Series This book examines popular culture in Indonesia, bringing material on Indonesia’s media and popular culture to an English readership for the first time. It includes analysis of important themes including citizenship, gender, class, age and ethnicity, showing how developments in Indonesian society more generally are inextricably linked to popular culture.

Series: Routledge Advances in Film Studies This book opens with a brief spatial history of lesbian culture in the twentieth century and concludes with an argument about the importance of the lesbian apartment for rethinking the relation of female homosexuality and lesbian sex cultures to private and public space. The apartment appears as the privileged setting in a number of postProduction Code films that tell the lesbian story. Through formal analyses of five lesbian apartment films Wallace demonstrates how the standard Hollywood repertoire of visual techniques and spatial devices are used to scaffold female sexual visibility and a lesbian diegesis. October 2008: 229x152: 210pp Hb: 0-415-99243-5 ISBN13: 978-0-415-99243-5: $95.00

Exploring the much neglected area of Latin American cinema, this anthology challenges established continental and national histories and canons which often exclude exploitation cinema due to its perceived ‘low’ cultural status. It argues that Latin American exploitation cinema makes an important aesthetic and social contribution to the larger body of Latin American cinema — often competing with Hollywood and more mainstream national cinemas in terms of popularity. February 2009: 229x152: 244pp Hb: 0-415-99386-5 ISBN13: 978-0-415-99386-9: $95.00

Film, History and Cultural Citizenship Sites of Production Edited by Tina Mai Chen and David S. Churchill, both at University of Manitoba, Canada Series: Routledge Studies in Cultural History 2007: 234x156 Hb: 0-415-77117-X ISBN13: 978-0-415-77117-7: $135.00

February 2009: 229x152: 224pp Hb: 0-415-99472-1 ISBN13: 978-0-415-99472-9: $95.00

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CELEBRITY AND CULTURE • FASHION

Nation and Identity in the New German Cinema Homeless at Home Inga Scharf, German National Academic Foundation, Germany Series: Routledge Advances in Film Studies In this original study, Scharf investigates issues of national identity in films of the New German Cinema. Using a cultural studies analysis, Scharf argues that the conflict between this generation of critical filmmakers and their ‘German-ness’ translate into feature films that construct, and are pervaded by, a sense of “homelessness” at home. June 2008: 229x152: 250pp Hb: 0-415-96280-3 ISBN13: 978-0-415-96280-3: $95.00

Fashion New

The Fabric of Cultures Fashion, Identity, Globalization Edited by Eugenia Paulicelli, City University of New York, USA and Hazel Clark, Parsons the New School for Design, USA The Fabric of Cultures examines the impact of fashion as a manufacturing industry and as a culture industry that shapes identities of nations and cities in a cross-cultural perspective and within a global framework. Table of Contents: List of Figures Notes on Contributors Acknowledgements Introduction Eugenia Paulicelli and Hazel Clark 1. From Potlach to Wal-Mart: Courtly and Capitalist Hierarchies through Dress Jane Schneider 2. Dressing the Nation: Indian Cinema Costume and the Making of a National Fashion, 1947-1957 Rachel Morris 3. Made in America: Paris, New York, and Postwar Fashion Photography Helena Cunha Ribeiro 4. Framing the Self, Staging Identity: Clothing and Italian Style in the Films of Michelangelo Antonioni (1950-1964) Eugenia Paulicelli 5. The Art of Dressing. Body, Gender and Discourse on fashion in Soviet Russia in the 1950s and 1960s Olga Gurova 6. Making Modernity Appropriate and Tradition Fashionable: Debates about Dress, Identity, and Gender in Ho Chi Minh City Ann Marie Leshkowich 7. Youth, Gender, and Secondhand Clothing in Lusaka, Zambia: Local and Global Styles Karen Tranberg Hansen 8. Fashion Design and Technologies in a Global Context Michiel Scheffer 9. Fabricating Greekness: from Fustanella to the Glossy Page Michael Skafidas 10. Fashion Brazil: South American Style, Culture and Industry Valéria Brandini 11. Fashioning “China Style” in the Twenty First Century Hazel Clark 12. From Factories to Fashion: An Intern’s Experience of a Global Fashion Capital Christina H. Moon Index September 2008: 234x156: 240pp Hb: 0-415-77542-6 ISBN13: 978-0-415-77542-7: $130.00 Pb: 0-415-77543-4 ISBN13: 978-0-415-77543-4: $37.95

New

Fashion Cultures

The Places and Spaces of Fashion, 1800-2007

Theories, Explorations and Analysis

Edited by John Potvin, University of Guelph, Canada Series: Routledge Research in Cultural and Media Studies The Places and Spaces of Fashion, 1800-2007 brings together art, design, fashion, and a much neglected concern for its spatial realities. The spaces and places of fashion have often been overlooked in the writing of fashion history and visual culture. More often than not, however, these environments mitigate, control, inform, and enhance how fashion is experienced, performed, consumed, seen, exhibited, purchased, appreciated and of course displayed. Space, as this volume attempts to illustrate, is itself a representational strategy on par with and influencing the visibility and visuality of fashion. Innovative and challenging, the essays in this volume explore various physical and conceptual spaces, moving from physical environments to the two-dimensional with paintings, illustrations, and photographs to chart similarities, differences, and complex nuanced relationships between environments, fashion, identities, and visuality. The volume also navigates various sites (both permanent and temporary) of production, circulation, exhibition, consumption, and promotion of fashion that define meaning and knowledge about a culture or individual by providing for a bond between embodied consumers/spectators and fashion objects. The Places and Spaces of Fashion, 1800-2007 is compelling with a thematic, theoretical, and historiographic approach that is at once both focused yet far-reaching and original in its implications. The volume engages with questions attending to the ‘modern condition’ by seamlessly weaving interdisciplinary discussions of the visual with material culture to explore the spatial dimension(s) of fashion. Some of the essays explore new and exciting spaces while others offer compelling revisionary analyses of relatively known sources.

Edited by Stella Bruzzi and Pamela Church Gibson 2000: 246x174: 416pp Pb: 0-415-20686-3 ISBN13: 978-0-415-20686-0: $43.95

British Fashion Design Rag Trade or Image Industry? Angela McRobbie 1998: 234x156: 224pp Pb: 0-415-05781-7 ISBN13: 978-0-415-05781-3: $37.95

August 2008: 229x152: 282pp Hb: 0-415-96149-1 ISBN13: 978-0-415-96149-3: $95.00

Fashion Theory A Reader Edited by Malcolm Barnard, University of Derby, UK Series: Routledge Student Readers This collection of essential readings examines how the nature and function of fashion theory has been understood by a wide range of social and cultural thinkers and used to explain, or explain away, the astonishing variety, complexity and beauty of what we call fashion. 2007: 246x174: 616pp Pb: 0-415-41340-0 ISBN13: 978-0-415-41340-4: $48.95

2ND EDITION

Fashion as Communication Malcolm Barnard 2002: 234x156: 224pp Pb: 0-415-26018-3 ISBN13: 978-0-415-26018-3: $33.95

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21


OURNALS JOURN O URN NALS A 2009 009 Atlantic Studies

Cultural Studies

Literary,, Cultural and Historical Literary Perspectives

Editors: Lawrence Grossberg - University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, USA and Della Pollock - University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, USA

BoelhowerEditors: William Boelhower r- Louisianaa State University, Fender-University y, Baton Rouge, USA; Stepthen Steptheen Fender FischerUniversity of Sussex, UK; Dorothea Fis scherH Hornung - University U i it off Heidelberg, H id lb Germany; Germany; Maria Lauret - University of Sussex, UK U and Cambridge, William O' Reilly - University of Camb ridge, UK Volume V olume 6, 2009, 3 issues per year www .informaworld.com/rjas www.informaworld.com/rjas

Critical/ Communication and Crit tical/ Cultural Studies PPublished ublished oonn bbehalf ehalf of of the the National National Communication Association

Volume V olume 23, 2009, 6 issues per er year w ww.informaworld.com/rcus www.informaworld.com/rcus

Cultural TTrends rends University,, London, Editor: Sara Selwood - City University U UK Volume V olume 18, 2009, 4 issues per er year www .informaworld.com/ccut www.informaworld.com/ccut

Visual Early Popular V isuual Culture

NEW W FOR 2008 Cultural Journal of Cu ultural Economy Closely Associated ted with the CRESC project Editors: TTony ony Bennett; tt; Liz McFall and Michael University,, UK Pryke – all at The Open pen University Volume V olume 2, 2009, 3 issues ssues per year www .informaworld.com/rjce .com/rjce www.informaworld.com/rjce

Cultural Research Journal for C Managing Editors: Michael Dillon - University Lancaster,r, UK andd Scott Wilson - University of Lancaster Lancaster,r, UK of Lancaster Volume V olume 13, 2009, 4 issues per year www .informaworld.com/rcuv .com/rcuv www.informaworld.com/rcuv

University, Editor: John Sloop - VVanderbilt anderbilt Univers sity, USA

University Editors: Simon Popple - Unive ersity of Leeds, UK Toulmin VVanessa anessa To oulmin - Universityy of Sheffield, England

Volume V olume 6, 6 2009, 2009 4 issues per year www .informaworld.com/cccs www.informaworld.com/cccs

Volume V olume 7, 7 2009, 2009 3 issues perr year www .informaworld.com/epvvc www.informaworld.com/epvc

International Journal of In nternational and Interculturall Communication C

Consumption Markets & Culture

Ethnomusicology FForum

Published on behalf half of the National Communication Association

Forum Journal of the British Fo orum for Ethnomusicology

Editor: Thomas Nakayama kayama – Northeastern University, University y, USA

University Editors: Andrew Killick - Univ versity of Sheffield, UK University, Laudan Nooshin - City Univer rsity, UK

Volume V olume 2, 2009, 4 issues ssues per year www .informaworld.com/jiic .com/jiic www.informaworld.com/jiic

Editors-in-Chief: Lisa Pe aloza - InteraCT CT Center,r, France and Jonathann Research Center Exeter,r, UK Schroeder - The University of Exeter U Volume V olume 112, 2, 2009, 2009, 4 iissues ssues pper er yyear ea r www .informaworld.com/gcmc www.informaworld.com/gcmc

Continuum: Media C ontinuum: JJournal ournal ooff M edia & Cultural Studies Studies Affiliated with the Cultural Stud dies Association of Australasia (CCS SA) (CCSA) University, Editors: Mark Gibson, Monash Univers sity, Cowan Australia; Panizza Allmark, Edith Cowa an University, University y, Australia and Gregory Noble, le, Western Sydney,, Austral Australia University of W estern Sydney lia Volume V olume 223, 3, 2009, 2009, 6 iissues ssues pper er yyear ea r w ww.informaworld.com/ccon www.informaworld.com/ccon

Critical Arts: A Journal oof South-North Cultural & M Media Studies Editor: Keyan TTomaselli omaselli - University off KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa Volume V olume 23, 2009, 2 issues per year www .informaworld.com/rcrc www.informaworld.com/rcrc

Critique Culture, Theory and Crit ique University Editorial Board: Greg Hainge - Univers sity of Queensland, Australia; Richard King University of Nottingham, UK; Mark Millington M Mireille - University of Nottingham, UK; Mireil le Rosello - University of Amsterdam, The University, Netherlands; Jon Simons - Indiana Un niversity, Walsh USA and Lisa W alsh - University of Nottingham, UK Volume V olume 50, 2009, 2 issues per year w ww.informaworld.com/rctc www.informaworld.com/rctc

Volume V olume 18, 2009, 2 issues per er year www .informaworld.com/ethnomusicologyforum www.informaworld.com/ethnomusicologyforum

Parallax Dawson, Editors: Mark Daws son, Eve Kalyva and Andrew Warstat W arstat – all at the University of Leeds

Journal International Jour nal of Cultural Policy

Volume 15, per year V olume l 15 2009, 4 issues i www .informaworld.com/tpar .com/tpar www.informaworld.com/tpar

University Warwick, Editor: Oliver Bennett - Unive ersity of W arwick, Coventry,, UK Coventry

Photographies Photographi es

Volume V olume 15, 2009, 4 issues per er year www .informaworld.com/gcuul www.informaworld.com/gcul

ROUTLEDGE NEW TO ROUTLED DGE IN 2009 Visual V isual Culture in Britain B General Editor: Ysanne Holt, University of N th b i UK Northumbria,

Editors: David Bate - University of Westminster, W estminsterr, UK; Sarah arah Kember - Goldsmiths, University of London, n, UK; Martin Lister West University of the W e of England, Bristol, UK; est Wells University and Liz W ells - Univ versity of Plymouth, UK Volume V olume 2, 2009, 2 issues ssues per year www .informaworld.com/rpho .com/rpho www.informaworld.com/rpho

Marxism Rethinkingg M

Volume V olume 11, 2009, 3 issues per peer year www .informaworld.com/rvcbb www.informaworld.com/rvcb

A Journal of Economics, onomics, Culture & Society

Visual V isual Studies

Editor: David FF.. Ruccio cio - University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame,, USA

Published on behalf of the t International VVisual isual Sociology Association Association

Volume V olume 21, 2009, 4 issues per year www .informaworld.com/rrmx .com/rrmx www.informaworld.com/rrmx

Birmingham Editor: Darren Newbury - Birm mingham City University,, UK University

Semiotics Social Semio otics

Volume V olume 24, 2009, 3 issues per peer year www .informaworld.com/rvstt www.informaworld.com/rvst www .informaworld.com/cultturalstudies www.informaworld.com/culturalstudies

Terry Editorial Collective: Te erry Threadgold - Cardiff University, Wales, University y, W ales, UK; U Paul Cobley - London University, Metropolitan University rsity, England, UK; David University, Wales, M hi - CCardiff Machin diff U Un i it , W iversity ales, l UK; UK Radhika R dhika University,, W Wales, Mohanram - Cardifff University ales, UK and Judith Pryor - Officee of TTreaty reaty Settlements, Wellington, W ellington, New Zealand ealand Volume V olume 19, 2009, 4 issues per year www .informaworld.com/csos .com/csos www.informaworld.com/csos

Third TText ext Appignanesi, Editor: Richard Appi ignanesi, London, UK Volume V olume 23, 2009, 6 issues per year www .informaworld.com/thirdtext .com/thirdtext www.informaworld.com/thirdtext


INDEX

23

A

C

Culture and Civilization in the Middle East (series) ................................................18

Africa after Modernism ....................................18

Caldwell, John Thornton ....................................9

Culture of Queers, The .....................................15

Aggleton, Peter ................................................16

Campbell, Jan ....................................................7

Ahearne, Jeremy ..............................................12

Campbell, Neil ...................................................8

CultureWork: A Book Series from the Center for Literacy and Cultural Studies at Harvard (series) ........................4, 5

Ahluwalia, Pal ..................................................11

Candlin, Fiona ....................................................3

Allen, Graham..................................................11

Carey, James W. .................................................1

Allen, Matthew ..................................................9

Cartiere, Cameron..............................................6

D

America First ....................................................20

Carver, Terrell ...................................................13

Davidson, Maria del Guadalupe .......................17

American Icons ..................................................6

CCCS Selected Working Papers ..........................7

De Cruz, Peter..................................................15

American Youth Cultures ...................................8

Celebrity Culture Reader, The .............................1

Dean, Jodi ........................................................13

Amin, Camron Michael ....................................18

Cell Phone Culture .............................................7

Deconstruction After 9/11 ..................................6

Anderson, Jon ....................................................9

Chabram-Dernersesian, Angie............................2

Design Culture Reader, The ................................2

Antonio Gramsci ..............................................12

Challenging Islamic Fundamentalism ................18

Diets and Dieting ...............................................7

ASAA Women in Asia Series (series) .................15

Chambers, Samuel A........................................13

Dissanayake, Wimal .........................................10

Ashcroft, Bill.....................................................11

Chan, Dean........................................................7

Dolar, Mladen ..................................................13

Asia’s Transformations (series) ..........................18

Chau, Adam Yuet ............................................18

Dovey, Jon..........................................................3

Chaudhuri, Shohini ..........................................12

Drunk with the Glitter ......................................15

B

Chen, Kuan-Hsing..........................................2, 7

During, Simon ....................................................1

Chen, Tina Mai ................................................20

Dyer, Richard ....................................................15

Badmington, Neil ...............................................3

Chesters, Graeme ............................................12

Dynamics and Performativity of Imagination .......6

Bangladesh Cinema and National Identity ........19

Chicana/o Cultural Studies Reader, The ..............2

Banks, Miranda ..................................................9

Children’s Literature and Culture (series) ..........10

Barnard, Dr Alan ..............................................10

China on Video ................................................19

E

Barnard, Malcolm.............................................21

Chua, Beng Huat ...............................................2

Eaglestone, Robert ...........................................12

Barraclough, Ruth ............................................15

Churchill, David S.............................................20

Ecstasy and Raves...............................................8

Bavidge, Jenny .................................................10

Cities, Citizens, and Technologies .......................5

Edgar, Andrew .................................................12

Belonging.........................................................16

Citizen Audience, The ........................................9

Edward Said .....................................................11

Bennett, Andy ....................................................1

Clark, Hazel .....................................................21

Edwards, Jason.................................................11

Bennett, James...................................................6

Cognitive Poetics and Cultural Memory ..............6

Egenfeldt-Nielsen, Simon ...................................2

Bennett, Oliver .................................................12

Collins, Patricia Hill...........................................18

Emmanuel Levinas ............................................11

Bestor, Theodore C...........................................10

Comedia (series) .................................................8

Emotions: A Cultural Studies Reader ..................4

Bestor, Victoria .................................................10

Communicating in the Third Space.....................6

Bevir, Mark.......................................................12

Communication as Culture, Revised Edition ........1

Encyclopedia of Social and Cultural Anthropology ............................................10

Beyond Subculture .............................................7 Bisexuality and the Eroticism of Everyday Life .....4

Communication, Cultural and Media Studies: The Key Concepts ......................................12

Erickson, Mark ...................................................7

Black Feminist Thought ....................................18

Contemporary Comic Book Superhero, The ........6

Essays from the English Institute (series) ...........14

Black Sexual Politics..........................................18

Contexts of Social Capital ...................................5

Evans, Kristin......................................................8

Bodies That Matter...........................................14

Cornyetz, Nina .................................................18

Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick ....................................11

Bolin, Anne ......................................................16

Cosmopolitan Culture and Consumerism in Chick Lit ....................................................12

Everyday Life and Cultural Theory.....................13

Boys in Children’s Literature and Popular Culture..........................................10

Counihan, Carole ...............................................7

Breiger, Ronald L. ...............................................5

Critical Perspectives on bell hooks ....................17

British Fashion Design ......................................21

Critical Social Thought (series) ..........................17

Brown, Tom........................................................6

Cultural Studies ..................................................6

Bruzzi, Stella ....................................................21

Cultural Studies Birmingham (series) ...................5

Bulbeck, Chilla .................................................15

Cultural Studies Reader, The ..............................1

Butler, Judith ....................................................14

Cultural Studies: A Critical Introduction ..............1

Butsch, Richard ..................................................9

Cultural Theory: The Key Concepts ...................12

Enjoy Your Symptom! ......................................13

Everyday Life Reader, The ...................................1 Excitable Speech ..............................................14

Cultural Theory: The Key Thinkers ....................12

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24

INDEX

F

H

J

Fabric of Cultures, The .....................................21

Hall, Donald E. .................................................14

Jacques Derrida ................................................12 James, Ian ........................................................11

Faison, Elyssa ...................................................15

Hall, Stuart .........................................................5

Family Law, Sex & Society ................................15

Hand, SeĂĄn ......................................................11

Janis, Michael...................................................18

Fashion as Communication...............................21

Handbook of Japanese Culture and Society ......10

Jean Baudrillard ................................................11

Fashion Cultures ...............................................21

Hannah Arendt ................................................12

Jefferson, Tony ...................................................5

Fashion Theory .................................................21

Hanson, Stuart ...................................................7

Jones, Amelia .....................................................4

Feldges, Benedikt ...............................................6

Hanssen, Beatrice ...............................................4

Jones, Steven ...................................................12

Feminism and Visual Culture Reader, The ...........4

Harding, Jennifer................................................4

Judith Butler .....................................................11

Feminist Film Theorists .....................................12

Hargis, Jill.........................................................12

Judith Butler and Political Theory......................13

Field Work .........................................................5

Hartley, John ....................................................12

Judith Butler’s Precarious Politics ......................13

Film and Television After DVD ............................6

Hebdige, Dick ....................................................7

Film, History and Cultural Citizenship ...............20

Heryanto, Ariel .................................................20

Flagging Patriotism .............................................7

Highmore, Ben.........................................1, 2, 13

K

Food and Culture ...............................................7

Histories of Postmodernism ..............................12

Kaplan, Cora ....................................................13

Forman, Murray ...............................................19

Hjorth, Larissa ................................................5, 7

Kelly, Kieran .......................................................3

Framing Celebrity .............................................20

Holmes, Su.......................................................20

Franklin, Paul B. .................................................5

Homi K. Bhabha ...............................................12 hooks, bell .................................................16, 17

L

G

Hsung, Ray-May .................................................5

Landry, Donna....................................................4

Huddart, David.................................................12

Lane, Richard J. ................................................11

Gaming Cultures and Place in Asia-Pacific ..........7

Human Sexuality ..............................................16

Ganguly-Scrase, Ruchira ...................................18

Hunt, Geoffrey ...................................................8

Latsploitation, Latin America, and Exploitation Cinema ......................................................20

Garber, Marjorie.............................................4, 5

Huppauf, Bernd .................................................6

Gelder, Ken ....................................................2, 7

Huq, Rupa..........................................................7

Leick, Karen .....................................................20

Lesbianism, Cinema, Space...............................20 Letters, Postcards, and Email ..............................6

Gender and Labor in Korea and Japan .............15

I

Lin, Nan .............................................................5

Gender, Ireland and Cultural Change ...............14

Ikas, Karin ..........................................................6

Literary Criticism and Cultural Theory (series) ....12

Genders ...........................................................13

In Other Worlds .................................................5

Luckhurst, Roger ................................................9

Gertrude Stein and the Making of an American Celebrity ....................................20

In Sight: Visual Culture (series) .......................3, 4

Geyh, Paula........................................................5

Ingraham, Chrys...............................................14

Gibson, Pamela Church....................................21

Intellectuals and Cultural Policy ........................12

Giddings, Seth ...............................................2, 3

Inter-Asia Cultural Studies Reader, The ...............2

Gilman, Sander L................................................7

Global Chinese Cinema ....................................20

International Handbook of Sexuality and Health, The ................................................16

Global Iran .......................................................18

Introduction to Studying Popular Culture, An .....8

McQuillan, Martin ..............................................6

Global Realities (series) .....................................18

McRobbie, Angela .................................8, 10, 21

Globalization and the Middle Classes in India ...18

Introduction to Theories of Popular Culture, An ...............................................................4

Glover, David....................................................13

Introduction To Visual Culture, An .....................4

Medhurst, Andy .................................................8

Goggin, Gerard..............................................5, 7

Irish Media and Popular Culture .........................9

Media Globalization and the Discovery Channel Networks .......................................5

Gender Pluralism ..............................................15 Gender Trouble ................................................14

In the Culture Society .........................................8

Gokulsing, K. Moti ...........................................10

MacLean, Gerald ................................................4 Marshall, P. David ...............................................1 Matlock, Jann ....................................................5 Mayer, Vicki .......................................................9

Meaney, Gerardine ...........................................14

Media, Culture and Social Change in Asia Series (series) .............................................20

Gray, Ann...........................................................7 Gronas, Mikhail..................................................6

Medusa Reader, The ..........................................4

Grossberg, Lawrence..........................................6

Memory ...........................................................12

Guillory, John ...................................................14

Merck, Mandy..................................................20

Guins, Raiford ....................................................3

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M

Media Spectacles ...............................................5

Grant, Iain..........................................................3

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Lister, Martin ..................................................2, 3

Michel Foucault ................................................11

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INDEX

25

Mills, Sara ........................................................11

Postmodernism and Popular Culture ..................8

Royle, Nicholas .................................................12

Milne, Esther ......................................................6

Post-War Italian Cinema ...................................20

Ruétalo, Victoria...............................................20

Mirzoeff, Nicholas ......................................3, 4, 9

Potvin, John .....................................................21

Rushing, Sara ...................................................12

Mjos, Ole ...........................................................5

Practice of Public Art, The ..................................6

Mobile Technologies ..........................................5

Pribram, Deidre ..................................................4

Morley, David .....................................................7

Procter, James ..................................................12

S

Production Studies .............................................9

Sakamoto, Rumi.................................................9

Przyblyski, Jeannene ...........................................4

Salih, Sara ........................................................11

Myers, Tony......................................................11

Scharf, Inga......................................................21

N Nation and Identity in the New German Cinema ......................................................21

Q

Schwartz, Vanessa..............................................4

Quotation Marks ................................................4

Sedgwick, Peter ...............................................12

Scrase, Timothy J..............................................18

National Joke, A .................................................8 Ndalianis, Angela ...............................................6

Seltzer, Mark ......................................................8

R

Sex, Love and Feminism in the Asia Pacific .......15

Neal, Mark Anthony.........................................19 Negra, Diane ....................................................14

Raju, Zakir Hossain ...........................................19

Shih, Fang-Long ...............................................18

New Accents (series) ..........................................7

Rawnsley, Gary.................................................20

Shohat, Ella ........................................................7

New Black Man ................................................19

Rawnsley, Ming-Yeh .........................................20

Shuker, Roy ........................................................8

New Critical Idiom (series) ................................13

Reading Sexualities ...........................................14

Sigmund Freud .................................................10

New Media ........................................................3

Redmond, Sean................................................20

Slavoj Zizek ......................................................11

New Media and Technocultures Reader, The ......2

Reel to Real ......................................................17

Smith, Caroline J. .............................................12

Nineteenth Century Visual Culture Reader, The ..4

Religion in Contemporary China .......................18

Smith, Jonas Heide.............................................2

Resistance Through Rituals .................................5

Social Movements: The Key Concepts ..............12

O

Rethinking Race, Politics, and Poetics ...............18

Songs in the Key of Black Life ..........................19

Re-writing Culture in Taiwan ............................18

Soul Babies ......................................................19

Object Reader, The.............................................3

Roland Barthes .................................................11

Spencer, Jonathan ............................................10

Olsen, Dale A. ....................................................8

Spivak Reader, The .............................................4

On Belief ..........................................................13

Routledge Advances in Film Studies (series) .................................................20, 21

Spivak, Gayatri Chakravorty ...........................4, 5

One Nation Under God? ....................................5

Routledge Advances in Sociology (series)............5

St Louis, Brett...................................................18

Opera’s Second Death......................................13

Routledge Classics (series) ....5, 13, 14, 17, 18, 20

Stam, Robert ......................................................7

Organs without Bodies .....................................13

Routledge Contemporary China Series (series) .......................................................18

Strinati, Dominic ............................................4, 8

Routledge Contemporary Japan Series (series) .......................................................18

Stuart Hall ....................................................7, 12

Outlaw Culture ................................................17 Outside in the Teaching Machine .......................5

Shank, Barry.......................................................1

Stringer, Julian..................................................20

Routledge Contemporary South Asia Series (series) .................................................18, 19

Studies in Major Literary Authors (series) ..........20 Subcultures ........................................................7

Parker, Richard .................................................16

Routledge Critical and Cultural Theory Reader, The ..............................................................3

Paul Virilio ........................................................11

Routledge Critical Thinkers (series) .......10, 11, 12

Sundaram, Ravi ................................................19

Paulicelli, Eugenia.............................................21

Routledge Key Guides (series) ..........................12

Swanson, Gillian ..............................................15

Peletz, Michael G. ............................................15

Perversion in Modern Japan .............................18

Routledge Research in Cultural and Media Studies (series) ....................5, 6, 7, 21

Pettitt, Lance ......................................................9

Routledge Strudent Readers (series) .................21

Pirate Culture and Urban Life in Delhi ..............19

Routledge Studies in Asia’s Transformations (series) .......................................................19

P

Places and Spaces of Fashion, 1800-2007, The ............................................................21

Subculture..........................................................7 Subcultures Reader, The .....................................2

Swift, Simon ....................................................12

Symptoms of Culture .........................................4

T

Pollock, Della .....................................................6

Routledge Studies in Cultural History (series) .................................................12, 18

Popular Culture in a Globalised India ................10

Routledge Studies in Ethnomusicology (series)....8

Teaching to Transgress .....................................17

Popular Culture in Indonesia ............................20

Routledge Studies in New Media and Cyberculture (series) .....................................7

That’s the Joint! ...............................................19

Routledge Studies in Twentieth-Century Literature (series) .......................................14

Theorists of the City .........................................10

Popular Culture, Globalization and Japan ...........9 Popular Music of Vietnam ..................................8 Popular Music Studies Reader, The .....................1

Teaching Community .......................................17

Theodor Adorno ..............................................11 Thinking in Action (series) ................................13

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26

INDEX

Thomas, Julia .....................................................3 Thomas, Kendall ..............................................14

Y

Thompson, Stuart ............................................18

Yancy, George ..................................................17

Thurschwell, Pamela.........................................10 Tosca, Susana Pajares .........................................2

Z

Toynbee, Jason ...................................................1

Žižek, Slavoj .....................................................13

Trauma Question, The ........................................9

Žižek’s Politics ..................................................13

Tierney, Dolores................................................20

Tremlett, Paul ...................................................18 Treveri Gennari, Daniela ...................................20

True Crime .........................................................8 Turn to Ethics, The .............................................4 Turner, Colin ....................................................18

U Understanding Cultural Geography ....................9 Understanding Popular Music Culture ................8 Understanding Video Games ..............................2 Undoing Gender ..............................................14

V Van Esterik, Penny..............................................7

Vested Interests ..................................................4 Vickers, Nancy J. ................................................5 Vincent, Keith ..................................................18

Visual Culture Reader, The .................................3 Voci, Paola .......................................................19

W Wagner, Gerhard................................................6 Walkowitz, Rebecca .......................................4, 5 Wallace, Lee.....................................................20 Wannamaker, Annette .....................................10

Watching Babylon ..............................................9 We Real Cool ...................................................17 Welsh, Ian ........................................................12

What a Girl Wants? .........................................14 What the Music Said ........................................19 What’s Left of Theory? .....................................14 Whelehan, Patricia ...........................................16

Where We Stand..............................................17 White Weddings ..............................................14 Whitehead, Anne .............................................12 Willis, Shelly .......................................................6 Wilson, Ross.....................................................11 Wood, Helen......................................................7 Wulf, Christoph..................................................6

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NOTES

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