In this Issue
For fifteen years Public Culture has been publishing field-defining ethnographies and analyses of cultural studies. Public Culture essays have mapped the capital, human, and media flows drawing cities, peoples, and states into transnational relationships and political economies. Anthropologists, historians, sociologists, artists, and scholars of politics, literatures, architecture, and the arts have made groundbreaking contributions in the pages of Public Culture.
published by
Duke University Pressviewing issue
Volume 14, Number 2, Spring 2002Table of Contents
- 41 Shots
- pp. 305-309
- Scenes of Life/Kentucky Mountains
- pp. 349-359
- The Diasporic Imaginary
- pp. 411-428
- From the Field
- p. 429
- Editor's Note
- pp. vii-ix
- Books Received
- pp. 431-439