[OPE-L] (new journal) New Global Studies

From: glevy@PRATT.EDU
Date: Mon Nov 12 2007 - 11:21:33 EST


---------------------------- Original Message ----------------------------


-----Original Message-----
Subject: New bepress Journal:
New Global Studies


The Berkeley Electronic Press is
pleased to announce the launch of a major
new peer-reviewed journal:


NEW GLOBAL STUDIES (NGS), http://www.bepress.com/ngs

Editors:
Nayan Chanda (Yale University)
Akira Iriye (Harvard
University)
Bruce Mazlish (MIT)

Managing editor:
Kenneth Weisbrode (Harvard University)

New Global Studies is
the first journal to approach contemporary
globalization as a whole,
and across disciplinary lines. It draws from
history, sociology,
anthropology, political science, and international
relations to
study the past and present of today's globalizing process.
Topics
include the patterns and local effects of economic globalization,
global media networks, preservation of the global environment,
transnational
manifestations of culture, and the methodology of
global studies itself. New
Global Studies is an essential resource:
a single journal for those who are
interested in global affairs and
the contemporary history of globalization,
both broadly and in
depth.

To view any of the articles in question, simply click
on the links below
(full citations and abstracts follow at bottom of
message).

VOLUME 1, ISSUE 1, 2007

ARTICLES

David E.H. Edgerton "The Contradictions of Techno-Nationalism
and
Techno-Globalism: A Historical Perspective".
http://www.bepress.com/ngs/vol1/iss1/art1

Jenifer L. Van
Vleck "The 'Logic of the Air': Aviation and the Globalism of
the 'American Century'".
http://www.bepress.com/ngs/vol1/iss1/art2

Timothy H.B.
Stoneman "An 'African' Gospel: American Evangelical Radio in
West Africa, 1954-1970".
http://www.bepress.com/ngs/vol1/iss1/art3

COMMENTARY

Yi-Fu Tuan "Power, Modernity and Traditional Cultures".

http://www.bepress.com/ngs/vol1/iss1/art4

REVIEW ESSAYS


Daniel J. Sargent "School of Zbigniew".
http://www.bepress.com/ngs/vol1/iss1/art5

Phyllis Thompson
"Food for the Masses".
http://www.bepress.com/ngs/vol1/iss1/art6


To submit
your next paper to New Global Studies, visit
http://www.bepress.com/ngs, and click "Submit Article."

_______________________
ABSTRACTS & CITATIONS OF NEWLY
PUBLISHED ARTICLES


David E.H. Edgerton (2007) "The
Contradictions of Techno-Nationalism and
Techno-Globalism: A
Historical Perspective", New Global Studies: Vol. 1: No.
1,
Article 1.
http://www.bepress.com/ngs/vol1/iss1/art1

ABSTRACT:
Techno-nationalism and techno-globalism are descriptive
and prescriptive
categories for understanding the impact of
technology on society and vice
versa. They reflect the underlying
assumptions made by analysts of the place
of technology in the
world, and denote ideologies, rather than technological
policies or
realities. They also help us to realize that standard accounts
of
the nation and globalization are not as securely based as they appear.
Indeed, nations and states are important in ways techno-nationalism does
not
capture, and the international and global dimension is crucial
in ways which
that techno-globalism overlooks. Yet an analysis of
both terms yields
building blocks to a more sophisticated
appreciation of the linkages between
the nation, technological
innovation and globalization.


Jenifer L. Van Vleck
(2007) "The 'Logic of the Air': Aviation and the
Globalism of
the 'American Century'", New Global Studies: Vol. 1: No. 1,
Article 2.
http://www.bepress.com/ngs/vol1/iss1/art2

ABSTRACT:
"The 'Logic of the Air': Aviation and the Globalism
of the 'American
Century'" examines the cultural history of
aviation in relation to the rise
of the United States as a world
power. In the context of World War II, the
so-called air age
entailed new conceptions of American national identity and
global
responsibility. Aviation inspired internationalist visions of "one

world" - a globe divided only by latitudes and longitudes, as
depicted by
the iconic logo of Pan American Airways. However,
aviation also sustained
the nationalist vision of an "American
Century" defined by U.S.
geopolitical, economic, and
ideological power. The airplane promised to
extend America's
frontiers "to infinity," as Pan Am President Juan T. Trippe
was fond of saying. Ultimately, aviation helped define a nationalist
globalism that construed America's interests as the world's interests.
The
cultural "logic of the air" embodied the
universalizing aspirations of
American foreign policy, yet also
signified what was exceptional about the
United States; aviation
both instantiated American empire and denied that it
was such. The
article traces this dynamic by examining both cultural
representations of aviation and U.S. international aviation policy.


Timothy H.B. Stoneman (2007) "An 'African' Gospel:
American Evangelical
Radio in West Africa, 1954-1970", New
Global Studies: Vol. 1: No. 1, Article
3.
http://www.bepress.com/ngs/vol1/iss1/art3

ABSTRACT:
During the second half of the twentieth century, Christianity underwent
an
epochal transformation from a predominantly Western religion to a
world
religion largely defined by non-Western adherents in Africa,
Asia, and Latin
America. Broadcast media, spearheaded by American
evangelical missionaries,
played an important role in the
globalization of Christianity. After WWII,
conservative Protestant
missionaries from the United States established a
"far-flung
global network" of radio stations around the world with the
avowed purpose of proselytizing the entire globe. In Liberia, American

missionaries organized Station ELWA, the first evangelical station
in
Africa. The medium of radio proved well suited to the
"universal" mission of
American evangelicals, particularly
after the expansion of worldwide
ownership in transistor radios
during the 1960s. Yet the success of
missionary radio stations such
as ELWA rested on an extensive process of
translation into local
customs and practices. Between 1954 and 1970, ELWA
officials and
workers constructed transmission platforms, political
relations,
language services, receiver distribution campaigns, and community
networks. These constructs functioned as the crucial grids through which
the
"universal" meaning of evangelicalism was produced at
the grass-roots level.
As the history of ELWA in Liberia makes
clear, American evangelical
broadcasters acquired converts only by
adapting their gospel message to fit
particular churches, cultures,
and contexts across the globe. Localizing
missionary radio required
the appropriation of indigenous cultural capital,
the transposition
of national partners, and the active agency of audiences
on the
ground.


Yi-Fu Tuan (2007) "Power, Modernity and
Traditional Cultures", New Global
Studies: Vol. 1: No. 1,
Article 4.
http://www.bepress.com/ngs/vol1/iss1/art4

ABSTRACT:
A fable and a dream about the intersection of global and
local culture.


Daniel J. Sargent (2007) "School of
Zbigniew", New Global Studies: Vol. 1:
No. 1, Article 5.
http://www.bepress.com/ngs/vol1/iss1/art5

ABSTRACT:
Daniel J. Sargent reviews Zbigniew Brzezinski's Second Chance.


Phyllis Thompson (2007) "Food for the Masses", New
Global Studies: Vol. 1:
No. 1, Article 6.
http://www.bepress.com/ngs/vol1/iss1/art6

ABSTRACT:
Phyllis Thompson reviews Kenneth Kiple's A Movable Feast: Ten Millennia
of
Food Globalization.




If you wish to
be removed from this mailing list, please go to the website
below.


http://www.bepress.com/cgi/unsubscribe.cgi?sending=9920&rr=5207289&email=sag
ha%40pratt.edu

For further information regarding this
message, please contact
info-mailers@bepress.com


This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.5 : Fri Nov 30 2007 - 00:00:03 EST