James Baldwin Review Peng XinJames Baldwin Review (JBR) is an annual journal that brings together a wide array of peer reviewed critical and creative work on the life, writings, and legacy of James Baldwin. This edition brings together all of the articles published in this year's volume.
performances and practices to the material
Provoking the Field invites debate on
Communicating the History of Medicine offers a collection of case studies on academic outreach from historical and current perspectives
Draws upon the methodologies of social and cultural history to better understand the texture of Victorian society
From this position the monograph surveys the major organisational changes of the Labour Party in their period of opposition: the Policy Review (1987–92)
Yiu Fai Chow and Jeroen de Kloet draw on empirical research and industry experience to trace the worldwide flow of popular culture and the people who produce and consume it
Lars Weckbecker focuses on the productions of the National Film Unit in the 1940s and '50s
It reveals the social depth of opposition to the Stuarts and the Church of England
Multifocal attitude which stretches through media and cultural studies
Kelin II raise fundamental questions about the complex functions of the teaching artist in school
and televisual works
from his initial beginnings working with visually and aurally-challenged children to his position as reader in drama at Durham University