Volume 9, Numbers 1-2
Accounts of globalization often involve a dizzying array of considerations, and often find themselves in uncharted disciplinary and methodological territory. It is not uncommon to find economic, political, ethical, aesthetic and technological considerations intervening with each other in globalization studies. The numerous methodological, disciplinary and theoretical challenges faced by globalization studies suggest a future replete with lively discussion and vigorous debate.
Contents
Jeffrey R. Di Leo
Whose Theory, Which Globalism? Notes on the Double Question of Theorizing Globalism and Globalizing Theory
Vilashini Cooppan
World Literature and Global Theory: Comparative Literature for the New Millennium
Frederick Buell
Globalization without Environmental Crisis: The Divorce of Two Discourses in U.S. Culture
Christian Moraru
The Global Turn in Critical Theory
Thomas Lavazzi
The Global Subject in an Electronic Age: Re(X)Locating The Critical Self
Ian Buchanan
Globalizing Deleuze and Guattari
Sourayan Mookerjea
Montage In Spatial Ethnography: Crystalline Narration And Cultural Studies of Globalization
Josh Parker
Global Advertising’s Failure in Bulgaria
Molly Wallace
The Tropics of Globalization: Reading the New North America