The Edinburgh Companion to the New European Humanities
Hiltraud Casper-Hehne editor Rosi Braidotti editor Marjan Ivković editor Daan F Oostveen editor
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Edinburgh University Press
Published:12th Feb '24
Should be back in stock very soon

This is the first collection that highlights the strengths and contributions of the Humanities, in the European region. The volume stresses the positive and multidimensional impact of the Humanities on core areas of human experience, and their ability to formulate new frames to represent our collective and individual relation to the world. Further, it explores new ethical social imaginaries, gendered scenarios and spaces of decolonial transculturality. This collection also confronts the threats the Humanities face today and proposes ways to respond. These threats include public discourses that question the value of the Humanities; the chronic underfunding of teaching and research at our universities and institutions, and the more fundamental risks to intellectual freedom, democracy and critical discourse, diversity, and the radical imagination posed by political and market forces and organisations. Overall, this volume proposes innovative tools to increase our collective awareness of forms of injustice, exclusion and the suffering of both the human and the non-human inhabitants of this planet. It discusses the posthuman future of the Humanities and makes recommendations for the implementation of innovative approaches to the Humanities.
This stimulating, future-oriented collection clarifies a distinctively European perspective now emerging in the humanities. The critical sophistication of the approach to social relevance, the articulation of close connections with the social, physical and medical sciences, and the alertness to differences in the cultural situations, institutional settings, and the mediating languages and technologies of humanistic knowledge, will do much to sharpen understanding and encourage collaboration in Europe and beyond. -- Helen Small, University of Oxford
ISBN: 9781399505192
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
448 pages