From personal essays, travel writing, and artist profiles to dance and visual art reviews as well as her infamous series of columns in the 1960s for the Village Voice... Læs mere
Drawing on interviews with fans, legendary musicians, and music industry figures as well as analyses of songs, albums, film, and... Læs mere
Drawing on years of archival research and field interviews, Bell provides insight into the Catholic Church’s colonial... Læs mere
Eating is generally understood as a human need that people satisfy in diverse ways. Eating, however, is also an English word. Other languages, using other words, order reality... Læs mere
Lawrence Grossberg introduces the major ways of thinking that provide the backstory for contemporary Western theory. Asking readers to think about thinking, Grossberg traces... Læs mere
Anthropologist Fred Myers and art critic Terry Smith discuss six Papunya paintings displayed at a 2022 exhibition in New York, drawing on several discourses... Læs mere
Calhoun offers a new way of writing about suicide, slavery, and coloniality in relation to literary history. Drawing on scientific... Læs mere
Drawing on interviews with Central American artists and curators, Kency Cornejo theorizes a form of “visual disobedience” in which art... Læs mere
Jennifer R. Nájera explores the intersections of education and activism among undocumented students at the University of California,... Læs mere
Christina Cecelia Davidson explores the extraordinary and complicated life and career of H. C. C. Astwood, who was a preacher, politician, and the first Black man named US consul to the Dominican Republic in the nineteenth century.
Kency Cornejo traces the emergence of new artistic strategies for Indigenous feminist resistance in the wake of torture, disappearance, killings, and US-funded civil wars in Central America.
Performer, activist, and writer Jill Johnston was a major queer presence in the history of dance and 1970s feminism. By bringing together... Læs mere