This article discusses the debate within the Dutch academy on the differentiation between migration and postcolonial writing as a symptom of an area of study in search of consensus. It offers a synthetic reading of the writing of two leading Dutch authors: Hafid Bouazza and Ramsey Nasr based on the assumption that both writers, through their widely different aesthetic and political negotiations, shape the discourse on multicultural literature and society in the Netherlands
Many developments in national histories also mark watersheds in the personal lives of their citizens...
Nine months since the British vote to exit the European Union (“Brexit”), the UK science community's...
The text of a short talk delivered to launch the RIBA Late 'Less is More. Less is a bore' programme ...
Sivamohan Valluvan’s The Clamour of Nationalism offers a convincing diagnosis of how a protean ideol...
Eugenics and sociology are often considered polar opposites, with the former seen as a pseudo-scienc...
Martin Wight’s fragmentary comments entitled ‘The Disunity of Mankind’ are by no means a major work,...
Roman Provinces, Middle Ages and Modern PeriodClassical & Mediterranean Archaeolog
This article examines the intersections between migrant experiences, multilingual practices, and the...
This introduction places the volume in the context of previous scholarship on Munro and anchors the ...
Understanding how a migrant population is viewed and displayed by the host country has been a strugg...
This article reviews studies in second language classroom research from a cross-theoretic perspectiv...
In this article, we show what insights can be gained by considering the relationship between expert ...
In The Oxford Handbook on Women, Peace and Security, editors Sara E. Davies and Jacqui True bring to...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from the publisher via the DO...
Brexit could be seen as the largest popular rebellion against the power elites in the UK modern hist...
Many developments in national histories also mark watersheds in the personal lives of their citizens...
Nine months since the British vote to exit the European Union (“Brexit”), the UK science community's...
The text of a short talk delivered to launch the RIBA Late 'Less is More. Less is a bore' programme ...
Sivamohan Valluvan’s The Clamour of Nationalism offers a convincing diagnosis of how a protean ideol...
Eugenics and sociology are often considered polar opposites, with the former seen as a pseudo-scienc...
Martin Wight’s fragmentary comments entitled ‘The Disunity of Mankind’ are by no means a major work,...
Roman Provinces, Middle Ages and Modern PeriodClassical & Mediterranean Archaeolog
This article examines the intersections between migrant experiences, multilingual practices, and the...
This introduction places the volume in the context of previous scholarship on Munro and anchors the ...
Understanding how a migrant population is viewed and displayed by the host country has been a strugg...
This article reviews studies in second language classroom research from a cross-theoretic perspectiv...
In this article, we show what insights can be gained by considering the relationship between expert ...
In The Oxford Handbook on Women, Peace and Security, editors Sara E. Davies and Jacqui True bring to...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from the publisher via the DO...
Brexit could be seen as the largest popular rebellion against the power elites in the UK modern hist...
Many developments in national histories also mark watersheds in the personal lives of their citizens...
Nine months since the British vote to exit the European Union (“Brexit”), the UK science community's...
The text of a short talk delivered to launch the RIBA Late 'Less is More. Less is a bore' programme ...