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Popular Culture
Events about "Popular Culture"
Research
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Sandoval, Edgar, Julian Barr, and David J. Roberts. 2019. “There Are Different Ways of Being Strong: Steven Universe and Developing a Caring Superhero Masculinity.” In Superheroes and Masculinity: Unmasking the Gender Performance of Heroism, edited by Sean Parson and J.L. Schatz. Washington, DC: Lexington Books.
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Atanasoski, Neda, and Erin McElroy. “Postsocialism and the Afterlives of Revolution: Impossible Spaces of Dissent.” In Reframing Critical Literary, and Cultural Theories, edited by Nicoletta Pireddu, 273–97. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2018.
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Barr, Julian and Lydia Hou. 2016. "'Nobody Calls Me Chicken': The MultipleMasculinities of Back to the Future." Journal of Popular Film and Television, 44.4: 184-194.
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MacFarlane, K. 2016. Review of Soundscapes of Wellbeing in Popular Music, edited by G. J. Andrews, P. Kingsbury, and R. Kearns. The Canadian Geographer. early view.
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Net Art Aesthetics
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Review Essay of Joseph Massad, Islam in Liberalism for Dialogues in Human Geography, 2016.
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Farías, Mónica. 2015. "Women’s magazines and socioeconomic change: Para Ti, identity and politics in urban Argentina," Gender, Place & Culture 23 (5): 607-623. DOI: 10.1080/0966369X.2015.1034244
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Margaret Wilson, MA, Ebola exceptionalism: on the intersecting political and health geographies of the 2014-2015 epidemic
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Review of Ash Amin, Land of Strangers for AAG Review of Books, 2, 3, 2014, 108-111.
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Sara Gilbert, MA, Aspirations and Anxieties: the Neoliberal Geopolitics of the NIC
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Ron Smith, PhD, Occupation ‘from the river to the sea’: Subaltern geopolitics of graduated incarceration in the 1967 Occupied Palestinian Territories
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Mitchell, K. 2011. Zero Tolerance, Imperialism, Dispossession, ACME, 10, 2, 293-312.
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Mitchell, K. 2011. Bodies that Matter: A Response to Stuart Elden's Terror and Territory. Dialogues in Human Geography 1, 2, 247-259.
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Critical Geopolitics readings & research group with Charmila Ajmera, Mikail Blyth, Johnny Chan, Chris Paul, and Jasmine Zhang
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Sparke, Matthew, 2009, “American Empire,” “borders,” “borderlands,” “boundary,” “flows,” “geopolitics,” “globalization,” “glocalization,” “nation,” “nationalism,” “nation-state,” “outsourcing,” “Pax Americana,” “terms of trade,” “trade,” and “World Trade Organization” for the 5th edition of the Dictionary of Human Geography, edited by Derek Gregory, Ron Johnston, Geraldine Pratt, Michael Watts, and Sarah Whatmore, Oxford: Blackwell.
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Sparke, Matthew, 2007, “Everywhere but always somewhere: Critical geographies of the Global South,” The Global South, 1(1): 117 – 126.
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Doris Olivers, MA, A critique of neoliberal hegemony and counter-hegemonic alternatives of the World Social Forum
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Olds, Kris, Sidaway, James, and Sparke, Matthew, 2005, “White Death,” Environment and Planning D: Society and Space, 23, 475 – 479. Republished in Fundamentals in Geography, edited by Derek Gregory and Noel Castree, London: Sage, 2012, pp: 439 - 444.
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Brown, Elizabeth, Corva, Dominic, Day, Heather Day, Faria, Carolin, Sparke, Matthew, Sparks, Tony, Varg, Kirsten, 2005, “The World Social Forum and the Lessons for Economic Geography,” Economic Geography, 81 (4) 359 - 380.
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Philip Craft, MA, Redefining Local Autonomy and Women’s Empowerment in Microcredit Discourse: A Study on Hegemony, Rhetorical Strategy, and the Ideology of ‘Development
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Matthew Sparke, "Outsides Inside Patriotism: The Oklahoma Bombing and the Displacement of Heartland Geopolitics” in Critical Geopolitics: A Reader, eds. Simon Dalby and Gerard O. Tuathail, London: Routledge, 1998, pages 198 – 223
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Matthew Sparke, 1995, “Writing on Patriarchal Missiles: The Chauvinism of the Gulf War and the Limits of Critique,” Environment and Planning A,26 (7), pages 1061 - 1089.
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Matthew Sparke, 1995, “Between Demythologising and Deconstructing the Map: Shawnadithit’s New-found-land and the Alienation of Canada” Cartographica, 32 (1), pages 1 - 21. Reprinted in 2010 in Classics in Cartography: Reflections on Influential Articles from Cartographica, edited by Martin Dodge, New York: Wiley.
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