2nd Seminar-Mar. 2: Historical Perspectives 1. Section 3 (Chapters 13-14), pp. 179-195 in TS Reader. (Pandemic & World System) 2. Section 3 (Chapters 15-16), pp. 196-216 in TS Reader. (Race & Black Atlantic) 1. 2. 3rd Seminar-Mar. 9: Arts and Culture 1. Aoyama, Yuko. 2007. “The Role of Consumption and Globalization in a Cultural Industry: The Case of Flamenco.” Geoforum (2007): 103-13 2. Levitt, Peggy. 2012. “The Bog and the Beast.” Ethnologia, forthcoming (20 pp.) 3. Dekel, Tal. 2009. "Body, Gender and Transnationalism: Art and Cultural Criticism in a Changing Europe." Studies in Ethnicity and Nationalism 9:175-197. 1. Lukas Michele 2. 3. 4th Seminar-Mar. 16: The Diffusion of Values, Norms and Meanings 1. Section 8 (Chapters 33 and 34), pp. 359-371 in TS Reader – World Society & The Nation State 2. Section 8 (Chapter 36 and 37), pp. 377-406 in TS Reader – Diffusion of Cricket & McDonald’s 1. 2. 5th Seminar-Mar. 23: Transnationalism and the Digital Age 1. Nedelcu, Michaela. 2012. “Migrants’ New Transnational Habitus: Rethinking Migration Through a Cosmopolitan Lens in the Digital Age.” Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 38(9): 1139-1356. 2. Schrooten, Mieke. “Moving Ethnography Online: Researching Brazilian migrants’ online togetherness.” Ethnic and Racial Studies 35(10):1794-1809. 3. Carpenter, R. Charli and Betcy Jose, “Transnational Issue Networks in Real and Virtual Space: The Case of Women, Peace and Security.” Global Networks 12 1. Katarina Teplicka 2. Juraj Havlik 3. 6th Seminar-Mar. 30: Religious Life across Borders and Transnational Islam 1. Section 6 (Chapter 28), pp. 315-332 in TS Reader. (Globalization & Religion) 2. Grillo, Ralph. 2004. "Islam and Transnationalism." Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 30:861-878. 3. van der Veer, Peter. 2004. “Transnational Religion: Hindu and Muslim Movements.” Journal for the Study 1. 2. Gabriele Narkute 3. Aura Greiciute 8th Seminar-Apr. 13: Migration 1. pp. 1- 124 in Transnational Villagers, Peggy Levitt, University of California Press, 2001. 1. 9^th Seminar-Apr 20: Refugees 1. Koser, Khalid. 2007. “Refugees, Transnationalism and the State.” Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 33(2): 233-54. 1. 2. Wall, Melissa, Campbell, Madeline Otis, and Dana Janbek. 2015. “Syrian Refugees and Information Precarity.” New Media & Society. Published online before print July 2, 2015, doi: 10.1177/1461444815591967. 2. Katarina Azzamova 10th Seminar-Apr. 27: Corporations, Classes and Capitalism 1. Mirchandani, Kiran, 2004, “Practices of global capital: gaps, cracks and ironies in transnational call centres in India,” Global Networks 4(4): 355–373. 2. Leslie Sklair, 2000, “The transnational capitalist class and the discourse of globalization,” Cambridge Review of International Affairs 14(1): 67 1. 2. Janina Saarnio 11th Seminar-May 4: Security, Crime and Violence (focus on terrorism) 1. Beck, Ulrich, 2002, “The Terrorist Threat: World Risk Society Revisited,” Theory, Culture & Society 19(4): 39–55. 2. Asal, Victor, Nussbaum, Brian, and D. William Harrington. 2007. “Terrorism as Transnational Advocacy: An Organizational and Tactical Examination.” Studies in Conflict and Terrorism 20:15-39. 1. 2. Viktoriia Zhovnovata 12th Seminar-May 11: Methodological Practices – what does it mean to use a ‘transnational lens’ to study social phenomena? 1. Mazzucato, Valentina, 2008, “Simultaneity and Networks in Transnational Migration: Lessons Learned from an SMS Methodology,” In DeWind, Josh and Holdaway, Jennifer (eds) Migration and development within and across borders: Research and policy perspectives on internal and international migration, Geneva: International Organization for Migration, p. 69-100. 2. Olesen, Thomas, 2007, “The Porous Public and the Transnational Dialectic: The Muhammed Cartoons Conflict,” Acta Sociologica 50(3): 295–308. 1. 2.