
Transnational Humans and Transnationalisms in the Humanities
Crossing Boundaries in the Americas
University of New Mexico Press
Will be published approx. on 30. June 2026
Book
Hardback
344 pages
978-0-8263-6870-6 (ISBN)
Description
This unique anthology from scholars across the humanities and allied fields presents a vivid picture of the state of scholarship on transnationalism today.
Are we living in a transnational world? The 900 percent rise in the use of "transnationalism" in publications since 1995 testifies to a defining phenomenon. International migration has increased two-thirds since 1980, and the global circulation of capital, media, and culture has intensified, provoking nationalist political backlash worldwide.
This collection of studies on exile, social science, indigeneity, gender activism, music and dance, gangs, sex work, narcofiction, and cinema examines how transnational forces influence racial difference, national identity, immigrant exclusion, state power, and cultural expression in the Americas. It explores how the physical and symbolic movement of humans and their artifacts shapes ideas and challenges accepted notions of national and conceptual boundaries among them. By addressing the impact of digital technologies on spatialization, by challenging emerging conventions on transnationalism, and by fostering interdisciplinary exchange, the book enriches our understanding of transnational lives and provides tools for exploring the transnational turn.
Are we living in a transnational world? The 900 percent rise in the use of "transnationalism" in publications since 1995 testifies to a defining phenomenon. International migration has increased two-thirds since 1980, and the global circulation of capital, media, and culture has intensified, provoking nationalist political backlash worldwide.
This collection of studies on exile, social science, indigeneity, gender activism, music and dance, gangs, sex work, narcofiction, and cinema examines how transnational forces influence racial difference, national identity, immigrant exclusion, state power, and cultural expression in the Americas. It explores how the physical and symbolic movement of humans and their artifacts shapes ideas and challenges accepted notions of national and conceptual boundaries among them. By addressing the impact of digital technologies on spatialization, by challenging emerging conventions on transnationalism, and by fostering interdisciplinary exchange, the book enriches our understanding of transnational lives and provides tools for exploring the transnational turn.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Albuquerque, NM
United States
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 229 mm
Width: 152 mm
Thickness: 29 mm
Weight
542 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-8263-6870-6 (9780826368706)
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Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Max Paul Friedman is a professor of history and international relations at American University.
Stefan Rinke is a professor of history at the Institute for Latin American Studies and the Friedrich Meinecke Institute at the Freie UniversitAEt Berlin.
Nuria Vilanova is an associate professor of Latin American studies and the associate dean of undergraduate studies in the College of Arts and Sciences at American University.
Stefan Rinke is a professor of history at the Institute for Latin American Studies and the Friedrich Meinecke Institute at the Freie UniversitAEt Berlin.
Nuria Vilanova is an associate professor of Latin American studies and the associate dean of undergraduate studies in the College of Arts and Sciences at American University.