Switch to: Citations

Add references

You must login to add references.
  1. The Invisible Fl'neuse. Women and the Literature of Modernity.Janet Wolff - 1985 - Theory, Culture and Society 2 (3):37-46.
    The literature of modernity, describing the fleeting, anonymous, ephemeral encounters of life in the metropolis, mainly accounts for the experiences of men. It ignores the concomitant separation of public and private spheres from the mid-nineteenth century, and the increasing segregation of the sexes around that separation. The influential writings of Baudelaire, Simmel, Benjamin and, more recently, Richard Sennett and Marshall Berman, by equating the modern with the public, thus fail to describe women's experience of modernity. The central figure of the (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   17 citations  
  • Disjuncture and Difference in the Global Cultural Economy.Arjun Appadurai - 1990 - Theory, Culture and Society 7 (2-3):295-310.
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   110 citations  
  • Cosmopolitan Modernity.Mica Nava - 2002 - Theory, Culture and Society 19 (1-2):81-99.
    Debates about cosmopolitanism in the spheres of political philosophy, sociology and postcolonial criticism have on the whole ignored specific histories of the cosmopolitan imagination and its vernacular expressions in everyday life. This article draws on aspects of the urban and often feminized worlds of entertainment, commerce, the arts and the emotions in metropolitan England during the first decades of the 20th century, in which an interest in abroad and cultural ‘others’ increasingly signalled an engagement with the new, in order to (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   7 citations