The term adaptation enjoys a variety of applications, of which the scientific and cinematic use most immediately come to mind. While the term clearly resonates in these spheres, adaptation certainly can be found beyond them: psychology, education, politics, and economics likewise experience what could be termed adaptation in response to both external and internal forces. In this issue of Dialogue: e Interdisciplinary Journal of Popular Culture and Pedagogy, Adapting Our Approaches: (In)Formal Learning, Stereotype, and Traumas, authors from several fields, ranging from the visual and performing arts to rhetoric to social justice, explore the role of adaptation in a number of contexts. To introduce the concept of adaptation, Laurence ...
<span>The basis of this deliberation is a critical discussion of common perspectives and research me...
Whilst many of the most innovative and progressive texts on adaptation theory still emerge from Lite...
We are happy to present our special issue, “Criminals as Heroes: Problems and Pedagogy in Popular Cu...
Mass media has played, and is currently playing, a role in the way individuals make sense of their i...
Adaptation Studies suffers from a deficiency in the study of black, brown, yellow, and red adaptive ...
Adaptation is defined as one specific, sometimes even quintessential, form of intertextual activity,...
We are happy to announce our latest issue, “Reinterpretation: Situating Culture from Pedagogy to Pol...
The discipline of adaptation studies has come a long way from its academic inception in novel-to-fil...
Everyday we confront changes and find ways to adapt and thrive. In our fifth year of publication, we...
Abstract Storytelling is the process of sharing ideas and teachings across cultures. Common themes ...
The starting point of this dissertation is a history of ideas tacitly organized around the conceptio...
In early 2011, the Southwest Popular/American Culture Association (SWPACA) Executive Team began disc...
We are pleased to present issue 4.1 of Dialogue: The Interdisciplinary Journal of Popular Culture an...
Review of: Lefebvre, Benjamin, ed. Textual Transformations in Children’s Literature: Adaptations, Tr...
Asking why adaptation has been seen as more problematic to theorize than other humanities subjects, ...
<span>The basis of this deliberation is a critical discussion of common perspectives and research me...
Whilst many of the most innovative and progressive texts on adaptation theory still emerge from Lite...
We are happy to present our special issue, “Criminals as Heroes: Problems and Pedagogy in Popular Cu...
Mass media has played, and is currently playing, a role in the way individuals make sense of their i...
Adaptation Studies suffers from a deficiency in the study of black, brown, yellow, and red adaptive ...
Adaptation is defined as one specific, sometimes even quintessential, form of intertextual activity,...
We are happy to announce our latest issue, “Reinterpretation: Situating Culture from Pedagogy to Pol...
The discipline of adaptation studies has come a long way from its academic inception in novel-to-fil...
Everyday we confront changes and find ways to adapt and thrive. In our fifth year of publication, we...
Abstract Storytelling is the process of sharing ideas and teachings across cultures. Common themes ...
The starting point of this dissertation is a history of ideas tacitly organized around the conceptio...
In early 2011, the Southwest Popular/American Culture Association (SWPACA) Executive Team began disc...
We are pleased to present issue 4.1 of Dialogue: The Interdisciplinary Journal of Popular Culture an...
Review of: Lefebvre, Benjamin, ed. Textual Transformations in Children’s Literature: Adaptations, Tr...
Asking why adaptation has been seen as more problematic to theorize than other humanities subjects, ...
<span>The basis of this deliberation is a critical discussion of common perspectives and research me...
Whilst many of the most innovative and progressive texts on adaptation theory still emerge from Lite...
We are happy to present our special issue, “Criminals as Heroes: Problems and Pedagogy in Popular Cu...