Writing as a scholar, composer, and musician, Jessie Cox foregrounds the experience of Black Swiss through sound and music. Cox, himself Black Swiss, affirms the value of Black life through sound while critiquing anti-Blackness as a cause of erasure, silence, and limitation.
Sarah A. Whitt exposes how Native American boarding schools and other settler institutions like asylums, factories, and hospitals during the late-nineteenth and early-twentieth centuries worked together as a part of an interconnected system of settler domination.
Examines the entanglements of humans, animals, and technologies across South Korea and the United States at the turn of the... Læs mere
Tells the classic track’s story, charting the relationship between pop music, collective politics, and dominant institutions of state, corporations, and... Læs mere
Over the course of a thirty-eight-year friendship, painter Beauford Delaney and writer James Baldwin shared their private lives and... Læs mere
Colonialism and imperialism
Political ideologies and movements
Todd Meyers reckons with grief in the face of overdose death and the afterlives of loss created by the opioid crisis. Through conversations with friends, lovers, and family members of those... Læs mere
Details the diverse and often precarious strategies that Argentina’s urban poor rely on to survive. Analyzing how these survival strategies... Læs mere
From disappearing coral reefs and ocean acidification to floating great garbage patches, the Pacific Ocean is an ever-present reminder of the... Læs mere
Provoking new ways of thinking, engaging, and narrating art history, Postwar Revisited is essential reading for those interested in debates on global art history... Læs mere