Issues

2014

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Citizenship and Work: Space in El Paso del Norte: Veda Kamra 

Through the structures of “citizenship” and “the city,” this essay seeks to develop a rooted understanding of the maquiladoras in Ciudad Juárez, in the state of Chihuahua, Mexico. The paper will focus on this space as a site of production along the US-Mexico Border, and how this concentration of manufacturing affects the cultural, political, economic, and social dynamics of the region.

African American English (AAE) in Key Peele’s “Obama’s Anger Translator”: Elizabeth Grace Cheshire

In their videos, the comedy team Key & Peele display incredible linguistic competence as they code switch or use distinctive varieties of English to create characters. The language they use often takes center stage as integral to their jokes.  Their characters use African American English (AAE) to engage with black culture as well as Standard American English (SAE) to produce a commentary on mainstream culture.

Feminist-Branded Commodities and Capitalist Constraints: Lindsay Karchin

In this paper I explore a recent development in capitalist production: the simultaneous commodification and subversion of women’s language. I approach this topic through a sociolinguistic analysis of feminist-branded products at Bulletin, a female-run company that features products by female-owned brands and donates ten percent of in-store profits to Planned Parenthood.

Constructivism: Fashioning Socialist Modernity: Joseph Weinger 

Constructivism endeavored in the early 1900s to modify and radically restructure the value of material goods through the transfiguration of aesthetics, as well as through attempts at mass production… An analysis of Constructivist fashion as material culture, through which facets of production, consumption, and materiality are considered, allows this movement to be evaluated for its contribution to Soviet sociopolitical life.