Abstract: Certain limitations arise from the persistent consideration of two common relations of islands in the humanities and social sciences: land and sea, and island and continent/mainland. What remains largely absent or silent are ways of being, knowing and doing—ontologies, epistemologies and methods—that illuminate island spaces as inter-related, mutually constituted and co-constructed: as island and island. Therefore, this paper seeks to map out and justify a research agenda proposing a robust and comprehensive exploration of this third and comparatively neglected nexus of relations. In advancing these aims, the paper’s goal is to (re)inscribe the theoretical, metaphorical, real and empirical power and potential of the archipelago: o...
Islands allure imagination, thought and affect. Imagination, thought and affect conjure islands. Lit...
Abstract: Since the earliest of times, islands have captured the artistic imagination—and, often, fo...
In this essay I examine three artworks featured in this issue: Chris Charteris’s Te ma; Maile Andr...
Certain limitations arise from the persistent consideration of two common relations of islands in th...
Certain limitations arise from the persistent consideration of two common relations of islands in th...
Creative, innovative, and timely research on islands and island futures is warranted and pressing, n...
This paper argues for a shift in the focus of island-themed scholarship away from theories of island...
AbstractLand and water, landscape and seascape, nature and culture, communication and isolation, isl...
Islands have long been part of the tourist imaginary (DeLoughrey, 2013), particularly those with tro...
The present article investigates one of universal literature’s most prolific motifs: the is...
Theoretical thesis.Bibliography: leaves 48-51.Chapter One. From islandness to sense of place -- Chap...
Islands – especially small ones – are now, unwittingly, the objects of what may be the most lavish, ...
From tourist paradises to immigrant detention camps, from offshore finance centres to strategic mili...
This response engages archipelagic thinking and etak/moving islands theories to rhetorically analyze...
AbstractIslands – especially small ones – are now, unwittingly, the objects of what may be the most ...
Islands allure imagination, thought and affect. Imagination, thought and affect conjure islands. Lit...
Abstract: Since the earliest of times, islands have captured the artistic imagination—and, often, fo...
In this essay I examine three artworks featured in this issue: Chris Charteris’s Te ma; Maile Andr...
Certain limitations arise from the persistent consideration of two common relations of islands in th...
Certain limitations arise from the persistent consideration of two common relations of islands in th...
Creative, innovative, and timely research on islands and island futures is warranted and pressing, n...
This paper argues for a shift in the focus of island-themed scholarship away from theories of island...
AbstractLand and water, landscape and seascape, nature and culture, communication and isolation, isl...
Islands have long been part of the tourist imaginary (DeLoughrey, 2013), particularly those with tro...
The present article investigates one of universal literature’s most prolific motifs: the is...
Theoretical thesis.Bibliography: leaves 48-51.Chapter One. From islandness to sense of place -- Chap...
Islands – especially small ones – are now, unwittingly, the objects of what may be the most lavish, ...
From tourist paradises to immigrant detention camps, from offshore finance centres to strategic mili...
This response engages archipelagic thinking and etak/moving islands theories to rhetorically analyze...
AbstractIslands – especially small ones – are now, unwittingly, the objects of what may be the most ...
Islands allure imagination, thought and affect. Imagination, thought and affect conjure islands. Lit...
Abstract: Since the earliest of times, islands have captured the artistic imagination—and, often, fo...
In this essay I examine three artworks featured in this issue: Chris Charteris’s Te ma; Maile Andr...