Radical Cultural Studies book series

Since its inception, CCSR has promoted multi-disciplinary debates which engage with the politics of the popular as a site of power struggles, new social movements and their cultural expression, and the analysis of emerging cultural forms with a particular emphasis on the cultural changes emerging from neoliberal economics in a global context.

Therefore, in the fiftieth anniversary year of the Birmingham Centre for Contemporary Cultural Studies, the time is right to launch a book series which encourages a return to the core project of Cultural Studies: to examine the culturopolitical, sociopolitical, aesthetic and ethical implications of international cultures. This concern drives our proposal to publish books covering key thematic issues and looking at a variety of cultural forms from city spaces to music and visual cultures. We will commission work that engages with the lived reality of politics and cultures and is alert to possibilities for social change – to ‘understand … the present in the service of the future’ (Grossberg, 2010: 1). Our interest is in writing that analyses cultures as sites of power, which explicitly engages with the materiality and variety of cultural forms, and looks at new, emerging and radical cultures. The series will be published by Rowman & Littlefield International. We welcome proposals which:

  • Engage with contemporary issues of culture and multidisciplinary debates
  • Further understanding of culture as a field; its politics, history and changes
  • Develop methodologies that produce radical perspectives on contemporary culture
  • Offer arguments for understanding culture and political change
  • Contextualise a variety of cultural forms within social and political structures
  • Produce new critical theories of cultural production and consumption
  • Assess Cultural Studies as a political project

Topics may include:

  • Contemporary cultural forms and their radical potential
  • Geopolitics, Psychogeographies and Cultural Studies across national borders
  • Cultural Communication and Irreconcilable Ethnicities
  • Cultural change and resistant practices
  • Cultural studies and the future of the university
  • New political formations of race, gender and sexuality
  • New cultures articulated by transgendering and transsexuality
  • New perspectives on war, conflict and forced migration
  • New theoretical approaches to cultural change and relational aesthetics
  • Global politics and postcolonialism in contemporary local contexts
  • Science, technology and cultural forms
  • Radical politics and new forms of community
  • Affect, trauma and cultures of memorialization
  • Biocultures and Biopolitics
  • Cultures of Eugenics and Genetics
  • Cultures of Evolution and Devolution

PROPOSAL FORM DOWNLOAD

Please contact: rcs@uel.ac.uk