Studies in Mobilities, Literature, and Culture Edited by Marian Aguiar, Charlotte Mathieson, and Lynne Pearce ABOUT THE SERIES This series represents an exciting new publishing opportunity for scholars working at the intersection of literary, cultural, and mobilities research. The editors welcome proposals that engage with movement of all kinds – ranging from the global and transnational to the local and the everyday. The series is particularly concerned with examining the material means and structures of movement, as well as the infrastructures that surround such movement, with a focus on transport, travel, postcolonialism, and/or embodiment. While we expect many titles from literary scholars who draw upon research originating in cultural geography and/or sociology in order to gain valuable new insights into literary and cultural texts, proposals are equally welcome from scholars working in the social sciences who make use of literary and cultural texts in their theorizing. The series invites monographs that engage with textual materials of all kinds – i.e., film, photography, digital media, and the visual arts, as well as fiction, poetry, and other literary forms – and projects engaging with non-western literatures and cultures are especially welcome. ABOUT THE EDITORS MARIAN AGUIAR is Associate CHARLOTTE MATHIESON is LYNNE PEARCE is Professor Professor of English at Carnegie a Teaching Fellow in the School of of Literary Theory at Lancaster Mellon University, USA, where she English Literature, Languages, and University, UK, and has published specializes in postcolonial and global Linguistics at Newcastle University, widely in the fields of feminist studies. Her first book, Tracking UK. Her research is at the forefront of literary and cultural theory, romance Modernity: India, Trains, and the Culture of Mobility, explores cultural debates around mobility and space studies, reader-theory, and mobilities representations of modernity and in Victorian studies, with a focus on studies since the 1990s. Her most mobility by considering how the the relationship between networks of recent publications include the co- railway was imagined in colonial, mobility, nationhood, and globality authored Postcolonial Manchester nationalist, and postcolonial South in Victorian literature and culture. and Drivetime: Literary Excursions in Asian contexts. Her current book Her publications include Mobility Automotive Consciousness. She is project, Arranged Marriage: the in the Victorian Novel: Placing the currently Director for the Humanities Subject of Agency in the South Asian Diaspora, looks at conjugal narratives Nation and Sea Narratives: Cultural at the Centre for Mobilities Research in the South Asian diaspora in Britain Responses to the Sea, 1600-present. (Lancaster): http://www.lancaster. and North America within the ac.uk/fass/centres/cemore/. context of transnational relations and movements. For more information on this series, or if you would like to submit a proposal, please contact Ryan Jenkins: [email protected] www.palgrave.com.
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