Skepsi publishes on borders and remembrance

Skepsi, the peer reviewed online journal of European thought and theory in the Humanities and Social Sciences promoted by the School of European Culture and Languages, is delighted to announce the publication of its latest issue.

Skepsi is run by PhD/MA candidates, with the support of established and early career academics, and commits to publishing the work of postgraduate students and emerging scholars.

The journal’s title, which comes from the Ancient Greek ‘σκέψις [skepsis]’ or ‘enquiry’ and the Modern Greek ‘σκέψη [sképsi]’ or ‘thought’, symbolises the will to explore new areas and new methods in the traditional fields of academic research in the Humanities and Social Sciences

The issue combines volumes 9 & 10 and contains articles arising from its 2016 and 2017 conferences, ‘Borders’ and ‘Time to Remember: Anniversaries, Celebration and Commemoration’, respectively.

Contents:

Arianna Dagnino,the University of Ottawa
Translational Practices and Transcultural Commons in the Age of Global Mobility

Nadja Stamselberg, Regent’s University London
On the Right Side — Borders of Belonging

Kimberley Bulgin, University of Kent
The Refugee Identity Crisis: How Athens is Trying to Bridge the Gap Between a Person and their Homeland through Heritage and Meaning Making

Joseph Cronin, Queen Mary University of London
Wladimir Kaminer and Jewish identity in ‘Multikulti’ Germany 

Nihad Laouar, Canterbury Christchurch University
‘It is at the ghosts within us that we shudder’: Voicing the Anxieties of Liminality in Virginia Woolf’s Mrs Dalloway