In this Issue
- Volume 11, Number 1, Spring 2017
- Issue
- Engaging with the Poetics of Peripheralization
- Guest Editor: Jena Grace Sciuto
The Global South concentrates on the literature and cultures of those parts of the world that have experienced the most political, social, and economic upheaval and have suffered the brunt of the greatest challengs facing the world under globalization: poverty, displacement and diaspora, environmental degradation, human and civil rights abuses, war, hunger, and disease.
published by
Indiana University Pressviewing issue
Volume 11, Number 1, Spring 2017Editorial Board
Editor
Leigh Anne Duck, University of Mississippi
Editorial Assistant
Josh-Wade Ferguson, University of Mississippi
Advisory Board
Bill Ashcroft, University of New South Wales
Mohammed Bamyeh, Macalester College
Eva Cherniavsky, University of Washington
Deborah Cohn, Indiana University
Gaurav Desai, Tulane University
Arif Dirlik, University of Oregon
Toyin Falola, University of Texas-Austin
Matt Guterl, Brown University
George Handley, Brigham Young University
Kenneth Harrow, Michigan State University
James Hall, University of Alabama
John Hawley, Santa Clara University
Mike Hill, Albany University (SUNY)
John Howard, King’s College-University of London
Abdul Jan Mohammed, University of California-Berkeley
McKay Jenkins, University of Delaware
Rosemary Jolly, Queen’s University
Christopher Kelen, University of Macau
Tara McPherson, University of Southern California
Sharon Monteith, University of Nottingham
John Mowitt, University of Minnesota
Diane Roberts, University of Alabama
José David Saldívar, Stanford University
Jon Smith, Simon Fraser University
Matthew Sparke, University of Washington
Harish Trivedi, Delhi University
Gerry Turcotte, The University of Notre Dame Australia
Robyn Wiegman, Duke University
Matt Wray, University of Nevada-Las Vegas