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Culture, Values, and Identities


Section Editor

Dacia Viejo Rose 

University of Cambridge, UK 
dv230@cam.ac.uk

Culture, Values, and Identities 


Culture is one of the most complex social science terms, deeply implicated in diverse and contested discourses. That globalization affects culture and vice versa may seem to be a truism, but it nonetheless involves some of the most vexing questions of our times that remain inadequately documented, analyzed and understood. They challenge systems of meaning and sense-making as well as values and attitudes. The triangle of cultural heritage, identity and memory, long assumed a foundation of societies, has become uncertain and is being transformed. At the same time, culture has become an instrument of economic development and urban revitalization, encapsulated in terms like creative cities or creative economy. Yet culture is also about the arts, and the interpretative frames for cultural artifacts, and who owns, represents, collects, preserves, buys or sells them. The Culture, Values, and Identities Section of Global Perspectives welcomes contributions that speak to these issues.

 

Section Editorial Board

Arjun Appadurai, New York University, USA Stuart Cunningham, Queensland University of Technology, Australia
Seung-Mi Han, Yonsei University, South Korea Michael Hölscher, German University of Administrative Sciences-Speyer, Germany
Raj Isar, American University of Paris, France Mark Juergensmeyer, University of California Santa Barbara, USA
Pippa Norris, Harvard University, USA Andy Pratt, City University of London, UK
Allen J. Scott, University of California Los Angeles, USA

 

Notifications 

 

Call for Papers: (Re)Defining Heritage

Call for Papers: Global Social Sciences?

Call for Papers: Decolonization

 

 

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