NEBULA: A Journal of Multidisciplinary Scholarship ISSN-1449 7751

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NEBULA6.3, September 2009

Fewer issues have contained such widely divergent articles as this quarter's issue and this poses a challenge for an introductory piece of writing such as this.  Nevertheless, one can grasp the congruity of possible connections between an article on the teleological relationship between mythology and misogyny, and another on the study of English soccer hypermasculinities. Taking us further into this pursuit of the gender question is Omolola Ladele's literary criticism, where intersections between postcolonial and feminist theory are explored. James Arvanitakis's piece poses a genderless question of social rights and provides a much needed historiography for a rapidly forgetful Australian people.  If you come here in search of the cerebral, the theoretically complex abstractions of mind and cognition, Faucher's latest Nebula instalment, together with Fleming and O'Carrol and Roach's articles will fulfil the needs of your search. Homer's piece integrates well into the folds of an issue with a significant presence of cultural studies, best represented by  Redhead's encyclopaedic and extensive scholarship on English Soccer Fandom, while Victor Edo furnishes us with the latest instalment of his extensive Benin historiography. 

Samar Habib
Editor
Nebula

Contents:

Note on Contributors i-iii

Catherine Akca and Ali Gunes.
 “Male Myth-Making: The Origins of Feminism.” 1-15

Steve Redhead. “Hooligan Writing and the Study of Football Fan Culture: Problems and Possibilities.” 16-41

Kane X. Faucher. “Sphacelated Grammars (or: Language Likes to Hide).”  42-52

James Arvanitakis. “Surviving Neo-Liberalism: NGOs Under the Howard Years” 53-69   

Omolola Ladele. “Reconstructing Identities Through Resistance in Postcolonial Women’s Writing: A Reading of Akachi Ezeigbo’s The Last of the Strong Ones.” 70-84
 


Matthew Homer.
 “Beyond the Studio: The Impact of Home Recording Technologies on Music Creation and Consumption.” 85-99


John O’Carroll and Chris Fleming.
 “Is Nothing Sacred? Privatization and the Person.” 100-120

Emmanuel Folorunso Taiwo. “An Interface of the Old and the New: Creating the Conscious Nigerian via an Interrogation of Sophocles’ Antigone in Osofisan’s Tegonni.” 121-133

Victor Osaro Edo. “The 1897 British Expedition in Historical Perspective: Its Lessons and Challenges.” 134-142

Matthew Ingram. “Guitar Hero World Tour:  a Creator of New Sonic Experiences?” 143-154

Thomas J. Roach. “Sense and Sexuality: Foucault, Wojnarowicz, and Biopower.” 155-173


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