Tamesis Studies in Popular and Digital Cultures
Series Editors
Thea Pitman, Professor of Latin American Studies, University of Leeds and President of the Society for Latin American Studies
Stephanie Dennison, Professor of Brazilian Studies and Director of the Centre for World Cinemas and Digital Cultures, University of Leeds
Editorial Board
Tori Holmes (Queen’s University Belfast), Edward King (University of Bristol), Yeidy Rivero (University of Michigan), Paul Julian Smith (Graduate Center, CUNY), Nuria Triana Toribio (University of Kent), Luís Trindade (University of Coimbra), Eduardo Viñuela (University of Oviedo), Scott Weintraub (University of New Hampshire).
This new series aims to publish intellectually enriching and engaging research into the popular cultures of the Hispanic and Lusophone worlds, both analogue and digital. Topics covered in the series include visual and audio-visual art forms (photography, graphic art and comics, advertising, graffiti, animation, film, telenovelas and television more generally), literature (folklore, mass-market novels and novellas, the ‘middlebrow’, visual novels), embodied arts (performance art, theatre, dance, popular and traditional music, body art and fashion), as well as all the potentially ‘viral’ new genres of popular culture facilitated by the Internet and social media platforms (blogs, memes, YouTube videos, hashtag campaigns, video games, and so on). The series encompasses studies both of these particular manifestations and of the industries and practices that accompany them; and it analyses not only ‘grassroots’ cultural expressions but also the ways in which Hispanic and Lusophone cultural forms have been appropriated, commodified and distributed transnationally. Providing a forum for cutting-edge studies on demotic forms of cultural production as well as the new cultural dynamics facilitated by digital technologies, the series seeks to advance scholarly understanding of how people creatively explore, debate and challenge events, attitudes, ideas and identities.
The series is open both to standard monographs and edited collections and short form (35,000 – 60,000 words) monographs. All volumes in the series will be made available in both print and Ebook formats, and Open-Access publishing is also an option.
Thea Pitman, Professor of Latin American Studies, University of Leeds and President of the Society for Latin American Studies
Stephanie Dennison, Professor of Brazilian Studies and Director of the Centre for World Cinemas and Digital Cultures, University of Leeds
Editorial Board
Tori Holmes (Queen’s University Belfast), Edward King (University of Bristol), Yeidy Rivero (University of Michigan), Paul Julian Smith (Graduate Center, CUNY), Nuria Triana Toribio (University of Kent), Luís Trindade (University of Coimbra), Eduardo Viñuela (University of Oviedo), Scott Weintraub (University of New Hampshire).
This new series aims to publish intellectually enriching and engaging research into the popular cultures of the Hispanic and Lusophone worlds, both analogue and digital. Topics covered in the series include visual and audio-visual art forms (photography, graphic art and comics, advertising, graffiti, animation, film, telenovelas and television more generally), literature (folklore, mass-market novels and novellas, the ‘middlebrow’, visual novels), embodied arts (performance art, theatre, dance, popular and traditional music, body art and fashion), as well as all the potentially ‘viral’ new genres of popular culture facilitated by the Internet and social media platforms (blogs, memes, YouTube videos, hashtag campaigns, video games, and so on). The series encompasses studies both of these particular manifestations and of the industries and practices that accompany them; and it analyses not only ‘grassroots’ cultural expressions but also the ways in which Hispanic and Lusophone cultural forms have been appropriated, commodified and distributed transnationally. Providing a forum for cutting-edge studies on demotic forms of cultural production as well as the new cultural dynamics facilitated by digital technologies, the series seeks to advance scholarly understanding of how people creatively explore, debate and challenge events, attitudes, ideas and identities.
The series is open both to standard monographs and edited collections and short form (35,000 – 60,000 words) monographs. All volumes in the series will be made available in both print and Ebook formats, and Open-Access publishing is also an option.

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Popular Culture, Identity, and Politics in Contemporary Catalonia
Price: £70.00
Price: $105.00
ISBN: 9781855664036
Format: Hardcover
The Multimedia Works of Contemporary Latin American Women Writers and Artists
Price: £85.00
Price: $125.00
ISBN: 9781855663947
Format: Hardcover
Mexican Genders, Mexican Genres
Cinema, Television, and Streaming Since 2010
Price: £70.00
Price: $105.00
ISBN: 9781855663466
Format: Hardcover
Decolonising the Museum
The Curation of Indigenous Contemporary Art in Brazil
Price: £55.00
Price: $75.00
ISBN: 9781855663480
Format: Hardcover

Popular Culture, Identity, and Politics in Contemporary Catalonia
Price: £70.00
Price: $105.00
ISBN: 9781855664036
Format: Hardcover
The Multimedia Works of Contemporary Latin American Women Writers and Artists
Price: £85.00
Price: $125.00
ISBN: 9781855663947
Format: Hardcover
Mexican Genders, Mexican Genres
Cinema, Television, and Streaming Since 2010
Price: £70.00
Price: $105.00
ISBN: 9781855663466
Format: Hardcover
Decolonising the Museum
The Curation of Indigenous Contemporary Art in Brazil
Price: £55.00
Price: $75.00
ISBN: 9781855663480
Format: Hardcover