Duke University Press Spring & Summer 2018 Catalog

Page 47

NEW JOURNALS

Meridians: feminism, race, transnationalism ginet ta e . b . candel ario , editor

Meridians, an interdisciplinary feminist journal, provides a forum for the finest scholarship and creative work by and about women of color in U.S. and international contexts. The journal engages the complexity of debates around feminism, race, and transnationalism in a dialogue across ethnic, national, and disciplin‑ ary boundaries. Meridians publishes work that makes scholarship, poetry, fiction, and memoir by and about women of color central to history, economics, politics, geography, class, sexuality, and culture. The journal provokes the critical interrogation of the terms used to shape activist agendas, theoretical paradigms, and political coalitions. Ginetta E. B. Candelario is Professor of Sociology as well as a faculty affiliate of the programs in Latin American and Latina/o Studies and the Study of Women and Gender at Smith College and the author of Black behind the Ears: Dominican Racial Identity from Museums to Beauty Shops, also published by Duke University Press.

Volume 17 | TWO ISSUES ANNUALLY | Individuals, $44 | Students, $30

The Journal of Korean Studies theodore hughes , editor

The Journal of Korean Studies is the preeminent journal in its field, publishing high-quality articles in all THE JOURNAL OF KOREAN STUDIES

disciplines in the humanities and social sciences on a broad range of Korea-related topics, both historical and contemporary. Korean studies is a dynamic field, with student enrollments and tenure-track posi‑ tions growing throughout North America and abroad. At the same time, the Korean peninsula’s increasing importance in the world has sparked interest in Korea well beyond those whose academic work focuses on the region. Recent topics include the history of the anthropology of Korea, seventeenth-century Korean

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love stories, the Chinese diaspora in North Korea, student activism in colonial Korea in the 1940s, and LGBTQ life in contemporary South Korea. Contributors include scholars conducting transnational work

on the Asia-Pacific as well as on relevant topics throughout the global Korean diaspora. The Journal of Korean Studies is based at the Center for Korean Research at Columbia University. Theodore Hughes is Korea Foundation Associate Professor of Korean Studies in the Humanities and director of the Center for Korean Research at Columbia University. He is the author of Literature and Film in Cold War South Korea: Freedom’s Frontier.

Volume 23 | TWO ISSUES ANNUALLY | Individuals, $50 | Students, $30

English Language Notes l aur a winkiel , editor

A respected forum of criticism and scholarship in literary and cultural studies since 1962, English Language Notes (ELN ) is dedicated to pushing scholarship in literature and related fields in new directions. Issues advance topics of current scholarly concern, providing theoretical speculation as well as interdisciplin‑ ary recalibrations through practical usage. Offering semiannual, topically themed issues, the journal also includes “Of Note,” an ongoing section featuring related topics, review essays, and roundtables of cuttingedge scholarship and emergent concerns. A wide-ranging journal with a broad geographic and transhistorical reach, ELN combines theoretical rigor with innovative interdisciplinary collaboration. Laura Winkiel is Associate Professor of English at the University of Colorado at Boulder and the author of Modernism, Race and Manifestos.

Volume 56 | TWO ISSUES ANNUALLY | Individuals, $40 | Students, $25

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