Reading the New Global Order: Textual Transformations of 1989

Author:   Kirrily Freeman ,  John Munro
Publisher:   Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
ISBN:  

9781350264939


Pages:   280
Publication Date:   03 November 2022
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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Reading the New Global Order: Textual Transformations of 1989


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Overview

1989 bore witness to a number of seismic events; The fall of the Berlin Wall, protests at Tiananmen Square, the US invasion of Panama, and many more. These notable moments inspired an array of visual, sonic and literary texts that can tell us much about this watershed moment. This edited collection examines these products of 1989 to explore the sense of transformative immediacy, which defined this memorable year, and show how the events of 1989 set the path for the 21st century. Gathering together scholars across a range of disciplines, Reading the New Global Order examines specific texts to reveal key transnational issues of that year, and to highlight fundamental questions about the nature and significance of 1989 as a global moment. From speeches, manifestos and novellas, to a pop album, this book raises questions about what constitutes a ‘text’ in the study of history and what they can reveal about their point in time. Taken together, these chapters highlight 1989 as a cultural, intellectual and political landmark of the 20th century through the global events it saw and the texts it produced.

Full Product Details

Author:   Kirrily Freeman ,  John Munro
Publisher:   Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Imprint:   Bloomsbury Academic
ISBN:  

9781350264939


ISBN 10:   1350264938
Pages:   280
Publication Date:   03 November 2022
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Table of Contents

List of Figures Acknowledgements Introduction, Kirrily Freeman Part I: Intellectual Production 1. The End of History?, Molly Geidel 2. The Rushdie Affair, the Threat of a Globalized Islam, and the Retreat From Multiculturalism, Rita Chin 3. Total Critique: The Condition Of Postmodernity at the End of History, Don Mitchell 4. Beyond Binaries: Stuart Hall and The History of Science, Michell Chresfield 5. Intersectionality as Heuristic: A Conversation, Phanuel Antwi and Amira Ismail Part II: Culture and Politics 6. The New Concerned Intellectuals and Civil Society: Democracy Movements in Taiwan, Song-Chuan Chen 7. The Guildford Four and First Tuesday: Free to Speak, Frances Pheasant-Kelly 8. George H.W. Bush’s Panama War Speech: Realist Policy as “Just Cause”, Wassim Daghrir 9. Poptivism on the Cold War’s Edge: Breakthrough/Rainbow Warriors and the “1989” Sound, Roxanne Panchasi 10. A Tale of Two Periodicities: Indigenous and Settler Continuities Amid Neoliberal Transformation at the St. Alice Hotel, John Munro 11. Germany, the Environment, and the End of Communism: A Conversation, Julia Ault and Thomas Fleischman Conclusion, Ned Richardson-Little Bibliography Index

Reviews

I am grateful for the thinkers willing to hurl themselves into the strange ending that is 1989 to find what is still alive, persistent, emergent. This book of engaged and engaging essays takes on that task, and if it arrives one-third of a century later it comes with perfect timing, at a moment when we are tangled in questions of whether the coils of nostalgia and the snares of repetition can mean anything other then revanchist violence and the stasis of circling the drain. It's a good book for grim times. It reminds me that if history is always ending this means it is always about to begin - that we live still, endure still, in the moments before history can truly commence, before actual emancipation. Ending up at that beginning is not inevitable but neither is catastrophe. We'll need to fight a lot, and we'll need to know a lot, and this book helps. * Joshua Clover, Professor of English and Comparative Literature, University of California Davis, USA * Freeman and Munro have written a fascinating volume that illuminates the complexities of 1989. By focusing on 1989's global contours, they reveal how the year marked a new era in racial, ethnic, gendered, national, spatial, environmental, and affective reforms while also challenging previous historical interpretations. The volume offers a bold intervention! * Tiffany N. Florvil, Associate Professor of History, University of New Mexico, USA *


I am grateful for the thinkers willing to hurl themselves into the strange ending that is 1989 to find what is still alive, persistent, emergent. This book of engaged and engaging essays takes on that task, and if it arrives one-third of a century later it comes with perfect timing, at a moment when we are tangled in questions of whether the coils of nostalgia and the snares of repetition can mean anything other then revanchist violence and the stasis of circling the drain. It's a good book for grim times. It reminds me that if history is always ending this means it is always about to begin - that we live still, endure still, in the moments before history can truly commence, before actual emancipation. Ending up at that beginning is not inevitable but neither is catastrophe. We'll need to fight a lot, and we'll need to know a lot, and this book helps. * Joshua Clover, Professor of English and Comparative Literature, University of California Davis, USA *


Author Information

Kirrily Freeman is Associate Professor of History at Saint Mary’s University, in Halifax, Canada. Her publications include Bronzes to Bullets: Vichy and the Destruction of French Public Statuary, 1940-1944 (2009) and Reading the Postwar Future: Textual Turning Points from 1944 (Bloomsbury, 2019), co-edited with John Munro. John Munro is Lecturer in United States History at the University of Birmingham, UK. His publications include The Anticolonial Front: The African American Freedom Struggle and Global Decolonization, 1945-1960 (2017) and Reading the Postwar Future: Textual Turning Points from 1944 (Bloomsbury, 2019), co-edited with Kirrily Freeman.

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