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This book is the first collection of scholarly works fully dedicated to exploring disability and impairment in early Chinese history.
A significant contribution to the discourse on Indigenous filmmaking and provides an accessible overview of the contemporary state of Indigenous film. Essential... Læs mere
The present volume focuses on a two-fold issue: food as a cultural element that united Mediterranean European society, and food as a cultural encounter between European explorers and new worlds during the early Renaissance.
This book examines social change in Hungary, commencing with the period of late-stage socialism, the country’s immediate post-communist transition, its subsequent consolidation and the emergence of authoritarian leadership since 2010.
Taking into account politics, history and aesthetics, this edited volume explores the main expressions of primitivism in Iberian and Transatlantic modernisms.
This fully revised 2nd edition of the Routledge Handbook of Contemporary Taiwan provides a comprehensive overview of both contemporary Taiwan and the Taiwan studies field.
This book brings together a range of established and emerging scholars of Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) migration, race, whiteness and post- and decoloniality to explore these themes from/to and within Central and Eastern Europe.
This book investigates the conflictual relationship between the Islamic world and Western... Læs mere
The Routledge Handbook of Chinese and Eurasian International Relations explores China’s relations with the Eurasian continent’s regions... Læs mere
This book considers the work of the preeminent scholar on decoloniality, Sabelo Ndlovu-Gatsheni, instrumental in theorising how to advance a... Læs mere
This Handbook provides an essential overview of the contemporary dynamics of the Mediterranean region. Conceptualising the Mediterranean as both a socio-cultural area and a geopolitical entity, it considers the basin both as a whole and as a set of interacting subregions.
Bringing together scholars from art history, visual studies, and related disciplines, this edited volume asks why Trumpism looks the way it does and what that look means for American – and global – society.