Feminism and feminist theory Books
Duke University Press Eros Ideologies
Book SynopsisLaura E. Pérez analyzes Latina art to explore a new notion of decolonial thought and love based on the integration of body, mind, and spirit that offers a means to creating a more democratic and just present and future.Trade Review“Laura E. Pérez renews the precepts of 1950s Third World liberation and extends the contemporary politics of women-of-color freedom fighters into the future. She speaks with many voices—the learned scholar, the analyst, the teacher, the maker of new aesthetics, the poet, the dreamer, and the guide—and offers her readers a multitude of routes for crossing academic and subjective terrains to find new possibilities for thinking, doing, and being. An outstanding work of decolonial writing by one of the great Chicana feminist philosophers of our time, Eros Ideologies is exactly the book I have needed to best teach my undergraduate and graduate students.” -- Chela Sandoval, author of * Methodology of the Oppressed *“Laura E. Pérez’s newest book is a tour de force that integrates the mind-body-spirit through a series of writings that weave together the theoretical and poetical within the context of decolonization. She explores the works of artists like Gloria Anzaldúa, Ester Hernández, and Consuelo Jiménez Underwood as she crosses disciplines to bring the embodied psyche to bear on questions of the erotic and the spiritual.” -- Amalia Mesa-Bains, Professor Emerita, California State University, Monterey Bay"Pérez eloquently reflects on activism, art, philosophy, poetry, politics, and selfhood. She offers radical reappraisals of the art of Frida Kahlo, Ana Mendieta, Esther Hernández, and Liliana Wilson, among many artists whose histories have been obfuscated by Eurocentric ideas and whose praxes she creatively reexamines. This cross-disciplinary study powerfully recombines theoretical and literary sources that speak to academic practice, lived experience, and poetic meditation. Writing in multiple authorial voices, Pérez shatters the high/low art dichotomy that has often segregated Latinx art history from mainstream US culture. Recommended. Lower-division undergraduates through faculty." -- L. Estevez * Choice *"Readers unfamiliar with Latina, especially Chicana, art and politics are treated to eye-opening beauty mixed with expressions of suffering and resistance. Readers already immersed in the culturally rich world of protest art foregrounding gender and eroticisim will find new ways into the multilayered visionaries featured here." -- Marjorie Mandelstam Balzer * Religion *"Eros Ideologies is a teacherly text: Pérez shows us not only how to look at, but also how to be with, art of the Americas.… Certainly, the use of personal prose in scholarly publications is not unprecedented in the discourses of ethnic studies, anthropology, history, literature, art, and cultural studies; but Pérez's approach is tactical as readers enter her classroom—a space of 'heart and hearth'—where she interweaves decades of close study of theoretical and spiritual texts, lifelong contemplations of artwork, and the conversations she has maintained with the many artists who made them." -- Ella Maria Diaz * Latino Studies *"Eros Ideologies can serve as an approachable and valuable introduction to very urgent concerns." -- Andrew William Lee * Religion and the Arts *"It is Pérez’s mindful contributions of eros, agape, philia, In lak’ech, love, and respect for art that mark this book as a starting point in discussion of works by people of color, mostly Latinx and women artists. . . . As beautiful as Pérez’s writings on the subjects can be, as rich with historical connections calling upon syncretism and community care, these analyses are primers for further work to be done." -- Helman Alejandro Sosa * Latin American and Latinx Visual Culture *Table of ContentsList of Illustrations xi Preface xv Acknowledgments xxi 1. The Social Body of Love: Crafting Decolonial Methodologies 1 2. Eros Ideologies and Methodology of the Oppressed 17 3. Long Nguyen: Flesh of the Inscrutable 24 4. Hidden Avant-Gardes: Contemporary U.S. Latina/o Art 27 5. Freedom and Gender in Ester Hernández's Libertad 34 6. 'Ginas in the Atelier 40 7. The Poetry of Embodiment: Series and Variation in Linda Arreola's Vaguely Chicana 52 8. Art and Museums 56 9. The@-Erotics in Alex Donis's My Cathedral 70 10. Con o sin permiso (With or without Permission): Chicana Badgirls: Las hociconas 77 11. Maestrapeace: Picturing the Power of Women's Histories of Creativity 82 12. Decolonizing Self-Portraits of Frida Kahlo, Ana Mendieta, and Yreina D. Cervántez 91 13. Undead Darwinism and the Fault Lines of Neocolonialism in Latina/o Art Worlds 112 14. The Inviolate Erotic in the Paintings of Liliana Wilson 126 15. The Performance of Spirituality and Visionary Politics in the Work of Gloria Anzaldúa 133 16. Daughters Shaking Earth 147 17 Fashioning Decolonial Optics: Days of the Dead Walking Altars and Calavera Fashion Shows in Latina/o Los Angeles 155 18. On Jean Pierre Larochette and Yael Lurie's Water Songs 174 19. Prayers for the Planet: Reweaving the Natural and the Social: Consuelo Jimenez Underwood's Welcome to Flower-Landai 179 20. "Undocu Nation," Creativity, Integrity 192 21. Writing with Crooked Lines 201 Notes 211 References 245 Index 263
£80.10
Duke University Press Eros Ideologies
Book SynopsisLaura E. Pérez analyzes Latina art to explore a new notion of decolonial thought and love based on the integration of body, mind, and spirit that offers a means to creating a more democratic and just present and future.Trade Review“Laura E. Pérez renews the precepts of 1950s Third World liberation and extends the contemporary politics of women-of-color freedom fighters into the future. She speaks with many voices—the learned scholar, the analyst, the teacher, the maker of new aesthetics, the poet, the dreamer, and the guide—and offers her readers a multitude of routes for crossing academic and subjective terrains to find new possibilities for thinking, doing, and being. An outstanding work of decolonial writing by one of the great Chicana feminist philosophers of our time, Eros Ideologies is exactly the book I have needed to best teach my undergraduate and graduate students.” -- Chela Sandoval, author of * Methodology of the Oppressed *“Laura E. Pérez’s newest book is a tour de force that integrates the mind-body-spirit through a series of writings that weave together the theoretical and poetical within the context of decolonization. She explores the works of artists like Gloria Anzaldúa, Ester Hernández, and Consuelo Jiménez Underwood as she crosses disciplines to bring the embodied psyche to bear on questions of the erotic and the spiritual.” -- Amalia Mesa-Bains, Professor Emerita, California State University, Monterey Bay"Pérez eloquently reflects on activism, art, philosophy, poetry, politics, and selfhood. She offers radical reappraisals of the art of Frida Kahlo, Ana Mendieta, Esther Hernández, and Liliana Wilson, among many artists whose histories have been obfuscated by Eurocentric ideas and whose praxes she creatively reexamines. This cross-disciplinary study powerfully recombines theoretical and literary sources that speak to academic practice, lived experience, and poetic meditation. Writing in multiple authorial voices, Pérez shatters the high/low art dichotomy that has often segregated Latinx art history from mainstream US culture. Recommended. Lower-division undergraduates through faculty." -- L. Estevez * Choice *"Readers unfamiliar with Latina, especially Chicana, art and politics are treated to eye-opening beauty mixed with expressions of suffering and resistance. Readers already immersed in the culturally rich world of protest art foregrounding gender and eroticisim will find new ways into the multilayered visionaries featured here." -- Marjorie Mandelstam Balzer * Religion *"Eros Ideologies is a teacherly text: Pérez shows us not only how to look at, but also how to be with, art of the Americas.… Certainly, the use of personal prose in scholarly publications is not unprecedented in the discourses of ethnic studies, anthropology, history, literature, art, and cultural studies; but Pérez's approach is tactical as readers enter her classroom—a space of 'heart and hearth'—where she interweaves decades of close study of theoretical and spiritual texts, lifelong contemplations of artwork, and the conversations she has maintained with the many artists who made them." -- Ella Maria Diaz * Latino Studies *"Eros Ideologies can serve as an approachable and valuable introduction to very urgent concerns." -- Andrew William Lee * Religion and the Arts *"It is Pérez’s mindful contributions of eros, agape, philia, In lak’ech, love, and respect for art that mark this book as a starting point in discussion of works by people of color, mostly Latinx and women artists. . . . As beautiful as Pérez’s writings on the subjects can be, as rich with historical connections calling upon syncretism and community care, these analyses are primers for further work to be done." -- Helman Alejandro Sosa * Latin American and Latinx Visual Culture *Table of ContentsList of Illustrations xi Preface xv Acknowledgments xxi 1. The Social Body of Love: Crafting Decolonial Methodologies 1 2. Eros Ideologies and Methodology of the Oppressed 17 3. Long Nguyen: Flesh of the Inscrutable 24 4. Hidden Avant-Gardes: Contemporary U.S. Latina/o Art 27 5. Freedom and Gender in Ester Hernández's Libertad 34 6. 'Ginas in the Atelier 40 7. The Poetry of Embodiment: Series and Variation in Linda Arreola's Vaguely Chicana 52 8. Art and Museums 56 9. The@-Erotics in Alex Donis's My Cathedral 70 10. Con o sin permiso (With or without Permission): Chicana Badgirls: Las hociconas 77 11. Maestrapeace: Picturing the Power of Women's Histories of Creativity 82 12. Decolonizing Self-Portraits of Frida Kahlo, Ana Mendieta, and Yreina D. Cervántez 91 13. Undead Darwinism and the Fault Lines of Neocolonialism in Latina/o Art Worlds 112 14. The Inviolate Erotic in the Paintings of Liliana Wilson 126 15. The Performance of Spirituality and Visionary Politics in the Work of Gloria Anzaldúa 133 16. Daughters Shaking Earth 147 17 Fashioning Decolonial Optics: Days of the Dead Walking Altars and Calavera Fashion Shows in Latina/o Los Angeles 155 18. On Jean Pierre Larochette and Yael Lurie's Water Songs 174 19. Prayers for the Planet: Reweaving the Natural and the Social: Consuelo Jimenez Underwood's Welcome to Flower-Landai 179 20. "Undocu Nation," Creativity, Integrity 192 21. Writing with Crooked Lines 201 Notes 211 References 245 Index 263
£25.19
Duke University Press Politics with Beauvoir
Book SynopsisIn Politics with Beauvoir Lori Marso treats Simone de Beauvoir's feminist theory and practice as part of her political theory, arguing that freedom is Beauvoir's central concern and that this is best apprehended through the notion of the encounter.Trade Review"[Marso's] work on de Beauvoir demonstrates convincingly the inaccuracy of reading feminist theory as a species of thinking separated from politics." -- Kathleen B. Jones * Los Angeles Review of Books *"A gripping and novel reading of Simone de Beauvoir’s politics of freedom and Beauvoirian feminism. . . . A welcome contribution to Beauvoir scholarship and feminist political theory." -- Megan Burke * H-France, H-Net Reviews *"Marso brilliantly demonstrates the way in which encounter is at the very center of everything Beauvoir wrote . . . . An important new contribution that extends studies on Beauvoir." -- Mary Walsh * Review of Politics *"This book has a wide appeal. . . . Informative and accessible." -- Angela Shepherd * Feminist Theory *“Politics with Beauvoir is an essential text for any scholar who is interested in expanding their engagement with Beauvoir’s work. Just as the Beauvoirian encounters Marso stages in this text illuminate the fecundity of real engagement with alterity and difference, so, too, does the text itself show the possibilities for encounters in a world where Beauvoir truly becomes ours.” -- Qrescent Mali Mason * Asian Journal of Social Science *Table of ContentsAcknowledgments vii Introduction: Our Beauvoir 1 1. (Re)Encountering The Second Sex 17 Part I. Enemies: Monsters, Men, and Misogynist Art 2. "An Eye for an Eye" with Hannah Arendt's Eichmann in Jerusalem 41 3. The Marquis de Sade's Bodies in Lars von Trier's Antichrist 67 Part II. Allies: Antinomies of Action in Conditions of Violence 4. Violence, Pathologies, and Resistance in Frantz Fanon 97 5. In Solidarity with Richard Wright 122 Part III. Friends: Conversations that Change the Rules 6. Perverse Protests from Chantal Akerman to Lars von Trier 153 7. Unbecoming Women with Violette Leduc, Rahel Varnhagen, and Margarethe von Trotta 176 Conclusion: A Happy Ending 203 Notes 209 References 235 Index 247
£72.25
Duke University Press In the Name of Womens Rights
Book SynopsisSara R. Farris examines the calls for gender equality from an unlikely collection of European right-wing nationalist political parties, neoliberals, and some feminist theorists and policymakers, showing how their exploitation of feminist ideals justifies anti-Islam and anti-immigrant rhetoric and policies.Trade Review"[Farris's] reading of 'femonationalism' as a symptom of neoliberal capitalism gives little hope that a quick or effective solution is possible for the crises at hand. So we are left without certain answers, and that’s as it should be." -- Joan W. Scott * The Nation *"The pertinence of Farris’s volume, especially in the development of immigration policies, is undeniable." -- Visnja Krstic * Cultural Sociology *"Brilliant. . . . Through [Farris's] careful analysis of the political economic dimensions of femonationalism, certain elements of our contemporary landscape are illuminated with startling and disturbing clarity." -- Catherine Rottenberg * Jadaliyya *"A brave monograph." -- Judith Whitehead * Monthly Review *"In the Name of Women’s Rights is a timely book with an impressive scope and rich theoretical diversity. . . . A must-read for anyone concerned with the appropriation of feminism or the operation of Islamophobia in contemporary Europe." -- Julie E. Dowsett * International Feminist Journal of Politics *"Welcome and invigorating." -- Peter Coviello * The Immanent Frame *“In the Name of Women’s Rights is an important and timely contribution to the fields of sociology, gender and women studies, and migration studies. Highly recommended." -- Maya El Helou * Refuge *"An incisive intervention in how we understand rescue narratives of Muslim and non-Western migrant men as perpetrators of violence against Muslim and non-Western migrant women. . . . An important contribution to a range of fields including but not limited to critical race theory, transnational studies, gender and sexuality studies, political science, and sociology." -- Sasha A. Khan * Feminist Formations *"A highly readable, insightful and alarming account of the deployment of a discourse of women’s rights by racist and nationalist movements in Europe. . . . This is a work that deserves to be widely read." -- Gargi Bhattacharyya * Ethnic and Racial Studies *"Farris’s book is comprehensive, thorough, and masterly in accomplishing her key objective, which is, to draw feminist attention toward a new political economic configuration in which neoliberal conditions, feminist politics of gender equality, and right-wing nationalism coalesce to sustain exploitative ideological and material relations between western and nonwestern women. It is indeed a timely and needed study of the political and ethical costs to feminism of the concurrence of civilizational politics and neoliberal economics and thus has applications beyond the European context." -- Amina Jamal * American Journal of Sociology *Table of ContentsAbbreviations ix Acknowledgments xi Introduction: In the Name of Women's Rights 1 1. Figures of Femonationalism 22 2. Femonationalism Is No Populism 57 3. Integration Policies and the Institutionalization of Femonationalism 78 4. Femonationalism, Neoliberalism, and Social Reproduction 115 5. The Political Economy of Femonationalism 146 Notes 183 Bibliography 229 Index 253
£72.25
Duke University Press Politics with Beauvoir
Book SynopsisIn Politics with Beauvoir Lori Marso treats Simone de Beauvoir's feminist theory and practice as part of her political theory, arguing that freedom is Beauvoir's central concern and that this is best apprehended through the notion of the encounter.Trade Review"[Marso's] work on de Beauvoir demonstrates convincingly the inaccuracy of reading feminist theory as a species of thinking separated from politics." -- Kathleen B. Jones * Los Angeles Review of Books *"A gripping and novel reading of Simone de Beauvoir’s politics of freedom and Beauvoirian feminism. . . . A welcome contribution to Beauvoir scholarship and feminist political theory." -- Megan Burke * H-France, H-Net Reviews *"Marso brilliantly demonstrates the way in which encounter is at the very center of everything Beauvoir wrote . . . . An important new contribution that extends studies on Beauvoir." -- Mary Walsh * Review of Politics *"This book has a wide appeal. . . . Informative and accessible." -- Angela Shepherd * Feminist Theory *“Politics with Beauvoir is an essential text for any scholar who is interested in expanding their engagement with Beauvoir’s work. Just as the Beauvoirian encounters Marso stages in this text illuminate the fecundity of real engagement with alterity and difference, so, too, does the text itself show the possibilities for encounters in a world where Beauvoir truly becomes ours.” -- Qrescent Mali Mason * Asian Journal of Social Science *Table of ContentsAcknowledgments vii Introduction: Our Beauvoir 1 1. (Re)Encountering The Second Sex 17 Part I. Enemies: Monsters, Men, and Misogynist Art 2. "An Eye for an Eye" with Hannah Arendt's Eichmann in Jerusalem 41 3. The Marquis de Sade's Bodies in Lars von Trier's Antichrist 67 Part II. Allies: Antinomies of Action in Conditions of Violence 4. Violence, Pathologies, and Resistance in Frantz Fanon 97 5. In Solidarity with Richard Wright 122 Part III. Friends: Conversations that Change the Rules 6. Perverse Protests from Chantal Akerman to Lars von Trier 153 7. Unbecoming Women with Violette Leduc, Rahel Varnhagen, and Margarethe von Trotta 176 Conclusion: A Happy Ending 203 Notes 209 References 235 Index 247
£19.79
Duke University Press Considering Emma Goldman
Book SynopsisClare Hemmings examines the significance of the anarchist activist and thinker Emma Goldman for contemporary feminist politics, showing how the contradictory and ambivalent aspects of Goldman's thought for feminism can be used to open new avenues for theorizing gender, sexuality, and race.Trade Review"Incredibly thorough and deeply researched, Considering Emma Goldman is a valuable continuation in conversations of feminist theory, race, capitalism, sexuality, and of course Emma Goldman herself." -- Sarah Moazeni * American Communist History *"Hemmings offers a rich, complex and searching new engagement with Goldman’s life and politics. . . . By considering Goldman, Hemmings shines a light on a life lived with panache to urge continuing, unbound and imperfect engagement with the dilemmas that feminists too often struggle to resolve." -- Ruth Kinna * LSE Review of Books *"Clare Hemmings has written a rich and thoughtful book from which we can learn a great deal." -- Kathy F. Ferguson * Theory & Event *"Considering Emma Goldman is a must-read, invariably insightful, sometimes painful, always provocative and, in my humble opinion, uncomfortably spot-on." -- Kathy Davis * European Journal of Women's Studies *"Clare Hemmings is an extremely astute reader and user of both the subjective and the critical archive on Emma Goldman. She is as well-versed in the literature as one could possibly hope. She is a passionate and determined author. Too, she is convincing that we should turn to rather than away from uncomfortable passages in those whose work we study, as these are potentially among the more fruitful, revealing moments." -- Penny Weiss * Hypatia Reviews Online *"This volume challenges us to be willing to take risks—as Goldman did—both in our theorizing and in our lives, and to highlight and examine the contradictions we experience, rather than denying them." -- Martha Ackelsberg * American Historical Review *Table of ContentsAcknowledgments ix Introduction 1 1. Women and Revolution 37 2. Race and Internationalism 80 3. Sexual Politics and Sexual Freedom 125 4. A Longing for Letters 168 Conclusion: From Passion to Panache 217 Notes 237 References 259 Index 285
£75.65
Duke University Press Considering Emma Goldman
Book SynopsisClare Hemmings examines the significance of the anarchist activist and thinker Emma Goldman for contemporary feminist politics, showing how the contradictory and ambivalent aspects of Goldman's thought for feminism can be used to open new avenues for theorizing gender, sexuality, and race.Trade Review"Incredibly thorough and deeply researched, Considering Emma Goldman is a valuable continuation in conversations of feminist theory, race, capitalism, sexuality, and of course Emma Goldman herself." -- Sarah Moazeni * American Communist History *"Hemmings offers a rich, complex and searching new engagement with Goldman’s life and politics. . . . By considering Goldman, Hemmings shines a light on a life lived with panache to urge continuing, unbound and imperfect engagement with the dilemmas that feminists too often struggle to resolve." -- Ruth Kinna * LSE Review of Books *"Clare Hemmings has written a rich and thoughtful book from which we can learn a great deal." -- Kathy F. Ferguson * Theory & Event *"Considering Emma Goldman is a must-read, invariably insightful, sometimes painful, always provocative and, in my humble opinion, uncomfortably spot-on." -- Kathy Davis * European Journal of Women's Studies *"Clare Hemmings is an extremely astute reader and user of both the subjective and the critical archive on Emma Goldman. She is as well-versed in the literature as one could possibly hope. She is a passionate and determined author. Too, she is convincing that we should turn to rather than away from uncomfortable passages in those whose work we study, as these are potentially among the more fruitful, revealing moments." -- Penny Weiss * Hypatia Reviews Online *"This volume challenges us to be willing to take risks—as Goldman did—both in our theorizing and in our lives, and to highlight and examine the contradictions we experience, rather than denying them." -- Martha Ackelsberg * American Historical Review *Table of ContentsAcknowledgments ix Introduction 1 1. Women and Revolution 37 2. Race and Internationalism 80 3. Sexual Politics and Sexual Freedom 125 4. A Longing for Letters 168 Conclusion: From Passion to Panache 217 Notes 237 References 259 Index 285
£20.69
Duke University Press Terrorist Assemblages Homonationalism in Queer
Book SynopsisIn this tenth anniversary expanded edition of Jasbir K. Puar’s pathbreaking book—which features a new preface by Tavia Nyong’o and a new postscript by the author—Puar argues that configurations of sexuality, race, gender, nation, class, and ethnicity are realigning in relation to contemporary forces of securitization, counterterrorism, and nationalism.Trade Review“A profound and challenging book that should be read widely and repeatedly, Puar’s latest work contains revelations about contemporary power that offer avenues for transforming academic knowledge and our own subjectivities.” -- Liz Philipose * Signs *“Terrorist Assemblages is brilliant, hyperkinetic, and perhaps, most of all, ferocious. It is ferocious in its analysis and critique not only of networks of control over and unrelenting superpanopticism of queer, racialized bodies but also of queer, feminist, and critical race theory and activism.” -- Victor Román Mendoza * Journal of Asian American Studies *“Few points of identification, cherished political practices, or progressive claims are left unimplicated in Puar's analysis of the war on terror. . . . Terrorist Assemblages exemplifies the most difficult and yet most important work that critical theory can offer its readers and practitioners: a thoroughgoing interrogation of the inequalities, oppressions and injustices that shape the present, which refuses to leave its authors' and readers' own investments outside its critiques.” -- Elisabeth Anker * Theory & Event *“Puar provides compelling and convincing examples of the unwitting effects of homonormative discourse.” -- Celia Jameson * Parallax *“Jasbir Puar’s Terrorist Assemblages: Homonationalism in Queer Times is a powerful, energetic, and highly insightful read. The book absorbs a surprising amount of intellectual, political, and emotional labour. . . . [R]eaders can have that rare and golden experience of emerging from these pages transformed. Indeed, the demands that Puar places on her reader are substantial, but the rewards well worth it. Cutting, courageous, and prescient, Terrorist Assemblages is well worth the read.” -- Deborah Cowen * Antipode *"It is her ability to traverse the theoretical terrains between theories of affect and nonrepresentation as well as discourse and identity that exemplifies how these seemingly opposed poststructuralisms do, in fact, enrich each other and make Terrorist Assemblages a critically important work." -- Lauren L. Martin * Annals of the AAG *"Terrorist Assemblages is a challenging and urgent book that pushes studies of the sexual beyond their comfort zone. . . . The chapters offer a series of bold and creative readings that aim to rewrite emergent orthodoxies within both critical and not so critical discourses on the 'war on terror.' Where such discourses perpetuate separation and distance, Puar strikingly demonstrates connectivity and coincidence." -- Natalie Oswin * Social & Cultural Geography *"Terrorist Assemblages will appeal to scholars who wish to push the limits of interdisciplinary thinking and writing. In both form and content, this book energetically experiments with different theoretical frameworks and disparate sources to produce fresh insights on a variety of issues. For these and many other reasons, Terrorist Assemblages is bound to become a mainstay in graduate courses across a range of disciplines, and will certainly be cited as a key text in scholarship that examines how discourses surrounding sexuality are mobilized in the service of war, nation-building, and imperialism." -- Sean McCarthy * E3W Review of Books *"Terrorist Assemblages is a rich and textured read that lays bare the perniciousness of liberal politics while asking for the hard work it takes to build radical solidarity." -- Rupal Oza * Social & Cultural Geography *". . . I think it only appropriate that we succumb to this project’s velocity, that we explore Puar’s virtuosic, methodological interventions, while acknowledging the captivating intellectual performance at the heart of Terrorist Assemblages. . . . Puar importantly provides a salient and scathing political critique of nationalism in its hetero, homo, religious and racialized incarnations." -- Karen Tongson * Women & Performance *“Puar’s project brings what we might describe as a racial politics of tolerance to the production of queers. . . . In doing so, she challenges those of us engaged in human rights theory and advocacy for sexual minorities to a serious consideration of what it is that enables such advocacy to be effective in the first instance, and what the effectiveness of such campaigns means for the re-positioning of LGBT subjects in mainstream political economies. . . . Her examination of terrorist discourses foregrounds a dimension of Foucault’s characterization of contemporary power that has been largely ignored by theorists who take up this framework for speaking of power: namely, the instrumentality of death—that is, the extent to which the protection and management of some life/lives is contingent on letting others die.” -- Margaret Denike * Feminist Legal Studies * "Since the publication of Puar’s book, the presence of Islamophobic and openly gay politicians like Pim Fortuyn and Geert Wilders—who had seemed exceptional in the early 2000s—has become rather the norm. . . . Puar’s book has been extremely important in the effort to make sense of these phenomena." -- Sara R. Farris * Social Text *Table of ContentsForeword / Tavia Nyong'o xi Preface: Tactics, Strategies, Logistics xvii Introduction: Homonationalism and Biopolitics 1 1. The Sexuality of Terrorism 37 2. Abu Ghraib and U.S. Sexual Exceptionalism 79 3. Intimate Control, Infinite Direction: Rereading the Lawrence Case 114 4. "The Turban is Not a Hat": Queer Diaspora and the Practices for Profiling 166 Conclusion: Queer Times, Terrorist Assemblages 203 Postscript: Homonationalism in Trump Times 223 Acknowledgments 243 Notes 249 References 307 Index 342
£80.75
University of Pittsburgh Press Equality and Revolution
Book SynopsisRuthchild's study reveals that Russian feminists were an integral force for revolution and social change, particularly during the monumental uprisings of 1905-1917.
£42.75
University of Pittsburgh Press Celebrating Women
Book SynopsisChoi Chatterjee analyzes both Bolshevik attitudes towards women and the invented state rituals surrounding Women's Day to demonstrate the ways these celebrations helped construct gender notions in the Soviet Union.
£38.95
Fordham University Press Technologies of Life and Death
Book SynopsisUsing deconstruction, this book approaches contemporary problems raised by technologies of life and death from cloning to capital punishment; and thereby, provides new insights into current debates from a perspective outside of mainstream philosophy with its assumptions of individual and political sovereignty.Trade Review"In Technologies of Life and Death Kelly Oliver addresses some of the most intractable ethical issues of our day. The relevance of continental philosophy in general and of Derridean deconstruction in particular has rarely been demonstrated with such lucidity." -- -Robert Bernasconi Penn State University "In this creative, fascinating, witty, and remarkably fearless book, Oliver takes on the most important questions of human existence (including the meaning of birth and death and the limits of the human) and reframes them for us in thought-provoking ways." -- -Elissa Marder Emory University
£74.70
Fordham University Press Technologies of Life and Death
Book SynopsisUsing deconstruction, this book approaches contemporary problems raised by technologies of life and death from cloning to capital punishment; and thereby, provides new insights into current debates from a perspective outside of mainstream philosophy with its assumptions of individual and political sovereignty.Trade Review"In Technologies of Life and Death Kelly Oliver addresses some of the most intractable ethical issues of our day. The relevance of continental philosophy in general and of Derridean deconstruction in particular has rarely been demonstrated with such lucidity." -- -Robert Bernasconi Penn State University "In this creative, fascinating, witty, and remarkably fearless book, Oliver takes on the most important questions of human existence (including the meaning of birth and death and the limits of the human) and reframes them for us in thought-provoking ways." -- -Elissa Marder Emory University
£24.29
Fordham University Press The Queer Turn in Feminism
Book SynopsisLooks at gender and queer theories through lenses that are simultaneously retrospective and anticipatory, "American" and "French".Trade Review"Berger's work spans two academic idioms and cultures-that of the United States on the one hand, and of France on the other-to examine the conceptual, performative, indeed theatrical work produced by the examination of gender. From a consideration of how gender produces all sorts of translational conundra, to how the theoretical apparatus for gender analysis is borrowed from one continent, developed in another, and then shuttles back and forth, she discusses how the forms of resignification that take place constitute the ground of queer critique and its relation to gender, identity, and non-binary, and non-identitarian thinking. Thinking through "gender" and "sexual difference" and understanding the possibilities ascribed to these traveling terms allows Berger also to consider the production and reproduction of difference in relation to the history of feminist and queer link to the advance of capital. Through a brilliant final chapter on prostitution or sex work, she questions the manner in which feminist and queer critiques embody a contradictory relationship to capitalist development even as they espouse a Marxist critique. She does not dwell on contradiction for the sake of it, but rather considers it as a lesson about the frames that break apart potentially under the pressure of current thinking around gender, sexual difference, and queer theory. The book is both intellectually stimulating and thoroughly teachable." -- -Ranjana Khanna Duke University "Even the most practiced readers of queer theory and feminist theory-perhaps especially those readers-will find that The Queer Turn in Feminism takes them into unexpected and exhilarating critical terrain. By staging the numerous critical encounters between "French theory" and "American theory" that continue into the present, by offering readings that are as theoretically nuanced as they are rhetorically engaging, Anne Berger reinvigorates old debates in order to open up crucial questions still to be addressed." -- -Elizabeth Weed Brown University "The scholarship of the book is a treat, as is the care with which Berger attends to distinctions or crafts a sentence." -- -E.S. Burt University of California, Irvine "Brilliantly exploring the paradoxes of an American feminism inspired and invigorated by French theory and a French etudes du genre stimulated by American queer theory, Anne Berger offers a fascinating romp through the vicissitudes of feminist and post-feminist ideas, performance studies, and identity politics on both sides of the Atlantic, shrewdly articulating the differences as she explores the translatability of progressive ideas." -- -Jonathan Culler Cornell UniversityTable of ContentsAcknowledgments 1. Parabasis (Before the Act) 2. Queens and Queers: The Theater of Gender in "America" 3. Paradoxes of Visibility in / and Contemporary Identity Politics 4. The Ends of an Idiom, or Sexual Difference in Translation 5. Roxana's Legacy: Feminism and Capitalism in the West Notes Works Cited Index
£85.50
Fordham University Press Dynamis of Healing
Book SynopsisTable of ContentsIntroduction | 1 1 Psyche and Creation: Initial Reflections on Orthodox Theology and Depth Psychology | 19 2 “That Which Is Not Assumed Is Not Healed” | 40 3 An Ontology of Healing? | 78 4 Eros: Healing Fire | 105 Conclusion | 149 Acknowledgments | 155 Notes | 157 Bibliography | 201 Index | 211
£23.39
Fordham University Press Called Back My Reply to Cancer My Return to Life
Book SynopsisTable of ContentsChapter 1 Diagnosis: news Chapter2 Surgery: measure Chapter 3 Chemotherapy: feelings Chapter4 Radiation: story coda Called Back: the voyage out Afterword to the 2021 Edition
£16.14
Fordham University Press Her Wilderness Will Be Her Manners
Book SynopsisTable of ContentsForeword | vii Her Wilderness Will Be Her Manners | 1 Notes & | 81
£15.19
University of Hawai'i Press Under the Shadow of Nationalism Politics and
Book SynopsisExploring nationalism and gender in the context of modern Japan, this text combines field research with an examination of the documents produced at various levels of society. It provides a look at the women as national subjects through the critical chapters of Japanese modernity and postmodernity.
£25.56
University of Hawai'i Press Rethinking Japanese Feminisms
Book SynopsisRethinking Japanese Feminisms offers a broad overview of the great diversity of feminist thought and practice in Japan from the early twentieth century to the present. Drawing on methodologies and approaches from anthropology, cultural studies, gender and sexuality studies, history, literature, media studies, and sociology, each chapter presents the results of research based on some combination of original archival research, careful textual analysis, ethnographic interviews, and participant observation. The volume is organized into sections focused on activism and activists, employment and education, literature and the arts, and boundary crossing. Some chapters shed light on ideas and practices that resonate with feminist thought but find expression through the work of writers, artists, activists, and laborers who have not typically been considered feminist; others revisit specific moments in the history of Japanese feminisms in order to complicate or challenge the dominant scholarly
£60.00
University of Hawai'i Press Rethinking Japanese Feminisms
Book SynopsisOffers a broad overview of the great diversity of feminist thought and practice in Japan from the early twentieth century to the present. Drawing on a range of methodologies, each chapter presents the results of research based on original archival research, careful textual analysis, ethnographic interviews, and participant observation.
£23.96
University of Missouri Press Betsy Ann Plank
Book SynopsisIn 1973, Betsy Ann Plank became the first woman to chair the Public Relations Society of America in its twenty-five-year history. This book explores how she managed to navigate the very real barriers of gender-based discrimination that existed in PR at least through the 1970s, and how she ultimately became devoted to PR education.
£47.70
University of Missouri Press Gravity
Book SynopsisIn this new volume of letters, readers are invited to meet Olivia Louise Langdon Clemens on her own terms, in her own voice - as complementary partner to her world-famous spouse, Mark Twain, and as enduring friend, mother to four children, world traveller, and so much more.Trade Review“Barbara Snedecor's Gravity lays a firm cornerstone for all future studies of a remarkable woman. Olivia Langdon Clemens’ reputation has suffered the frequent fate of famous writers' spouses. She has for too long been viewed as an intellectual lightweight and chronic invalid who somehow, for mysterious reasons, managed to wed one of the most celebrated authors of American literature. Kudos to Dr. Snedecor, for rescuing a gifted and adaptable personality from the unfavorable imputations of various Mark Twain biographers.”—Alan Gribben, author, Mark Twain's Literary Resources “Barbara Snedecor’s exemplary edition of Olivia Clemens’ letters is not only a significant contribution to Mark Twain scholarship but the invaluable personal history of an intellectual distinguished in her own right. In these letters Livy speaks eloquently about women’s rights, her travels across the U.S. and Europe and around the world, her anti-imperialism, and her roles as spouse, mother, companion, and literary adviser.”—Gary Scharnhorst, Distinguished Professor Emeritus of English, University of New Mexico, author of The Life of Mark Twain Vols. 1-3 "To refresh our understanding of Mark Twain as an American icon, we need to know the temperament and interests of the woman with whom he kept company for nearly forty years. It was a surprising marriage: this ‘Wild Humorist’ from everywhere and nowhere, and Olivia Langdon, a cultured young woman with frail health from an Upstate New York aristocracy. For exciting clues about what drew them together and how it all worked, Barbara Snedecor’s carefully-edited collection provides new insights into Olivia’s passions and personality.”—Bruce F. Michelson, University of Illinois, author of Printer’s Devil: Mark Twain and the American Publishing Revolution
£53.10
Boydell & Brewer Ltd Women of Quality Accepting and Contesting Ideals
Book SynopsisAn examination of the interaction between ideology and experience in the lives of English women during a period of great social and intellectual change.Focusing on the complex relationship between discourse and experience, Women of Quality examines the role of gender in aristocratic women's daily lives during a period of significant cultural change. In the years followingthe Glorious Revolution, didactic writers and other social critics responded to a perceived crisis of gender relations by creating a new discourse of 'natural' feminine behavior in opposition to the luxury and decadence of fashionable women. Modern scholars have often portrayed this agenda as representing the rise of a middle-class ideology, but Ingrid Tague argues that the new rhetoric held enormous appeal for those women who would appear to be its greatest targets: wealthy, fashionable 'women of quality'. Using the correspondence and diaries of these women, Tague traces the ways in which they adopted, adapted, and exploited ideals of femininity. In their hands, feminine values could become powerful tools that enabled them to compete for status and reputation. Ironically, by identifying femininity with private, trivial concerns, these ideals created unique opportunities for elite women. Female participation in informal social and political activities placed women at the heart of aristocratic power in the early eighteenth century, even as they employed the language of wifely subordination and domesticity. Ingrid Tague is Assistant Professor of History at the University of Denver.Trade ReviewA subtle study of early eighteenth-century elite women. The book is well written and comprehensively referenced and provides a valuable addition to existing research, as well as an extremely useful undergraduate textbook. * HISTORY *[Written with] interpretive skill, imagination and panache. The result is a book of fundamental importance for all who are interested in the development of English Society and an absorbing contribution to gender studies.... Deserves to be widely read. * CONTINUITY AND CHANGE *Table of ContentsIdeals of femininity; the attack on fashionable society; marriage; household management; consumption and fashion; politeness and sociability; public life, influence and politics.
£76.00
MP-MAS Uni of Massachusetts The Wall in My Backyard East German Women in
Book SynopsisSince German unification, East Germany has entered a period of rapid change. In this collection of interviews, 18 East German women describe the adjustments they have made and express the excitement, chaos and frustration of this transitional period.
£21.80
MP-OSU Oregon State Universi rough house a memoir
Book SynopsisA story of growing up in turmoil, of a childhood split between a charming, mercurial, abusive father in the forests of the Pacific Northwest and a mother struggling with poverty in The Dalles. It is also a story of generational turmoil, of violent men, societal restrictions, of children not always chosen and often raised alone.Trade Review“The title of Tina Ontiveros' new memoir, rough house, says it all, describing both the delight of her clever father and his menacing flip-side. Ontiveros pulls no punches in portraying a hardscrabble childhood in Pacific Northwest logging camps and her desperate love for a darkly complicated man."- Debra Gwartney, author of I am a Stranger Here Myself;"In spite of her struggle, there is something so plucky and honest about this book's narrator, you will be converted to a new view of your own troubles. You will look at your own life through the lens of this book, knowing with Ontiveros that "certain beauties can only be seen in the complication of hardship." This kid's got the goods to survive, and this book's got a big story for you."- Kim Stafford, author of Singer Come from Afar
£17.06
University of Iowa Press Waking Sleeping Beauty
a huge range and FREE tracked UK delivery on ALL orders.
£16.10
MP-MTB University of Manitoba Press Finding a Way to the Heart Feminist Writings on Aboriginal and Womens History in Canada
a huge range and FREE tracked UK delivery on ALL orders.
£52.20
MP-CSP Canadian Scholars Gender Sex and Tech An Intersectional Feminist
Book SynopsisIn this timely collection, gender, sex, and technology are explored through an intersectional and interdisciplinary lens. Gender, Sex, and Tech! provides insight into the ways that technology affects, and is affected by, cultural perceptions of gender and sex.Trade Review"Gender, Sex, and Tech! is a rich, fresh, and nuanced volume of essays considering unexpected relationships and interactions amongst different bodies, identities, and technologies, and it does this in accessible yet conceptually strong ways. The series of essays is engaging from the first page, and leads the reader through analyses of technologies we think we might know, but in formative uses of that tech that may not be well known or even recognizable to many audiences. The chapters are followed by considerate and genuinely thought-provoking questions for discussion, making this volume especially useful not only for classrooms but for students looking for technology studies with a little more bite."—Jennifer Dyer, Associate Professor and Head, Department of Gender Studies, Memorial University of Newfoundland"A unique resource to reflect on the ways in which gender and sex are key to our use and awareness of tech from dating apps to video gaming to surveillance. The editors provide comprehensive introductions to core feminist research approaches that bring readers to an understanding of intersectionality as a lens for social transformation."—Janice Dodd, Professor Emerita, Women's and Gender Studies, University of ManitobaTable of Contents Acknowledgements A Brief Introduction to Sex and Tech: From Everyday to Extraordinary - Jennifer Jill Fellows and Lisa SmithPart I: Disrupt Chapter 1: Birth Control Pills, Baby Bottles, and Bikes: Dancing on the Edge of Social Transformation - Lisa Smith Chapter 2: Flowing with Tech: Bringing an Intersectional Lens to Menstruation Technologies - Lauren Friesen and Ana Brito Chapter 3: Technology-Facilitated Sexual Violence, Student Sexuality, and Post-Secondary Institutions - Shaina McHardyPart II: Connect Chapter 4: Neither Crone nor Cougar: Navigating Intimacy and Ageism on Dating Apps - Treena Orchard Chapter 5: "I'm Not Your Fantasy": Sexual Racism, Racial Fetishization, and the Exploitation of Racialized Men Who Have Sex with Men - Christopher Dietzel Chapter 6: Smartphones and Committed Relationships: Navigating the Intersection of Sex, Gender, and Other Social Variables - Noorin ManjiPart III: Surveillance Chapter 7: A Harem of Computers and a Mummery of Bondage - Jennifer Jill Fellows Chapter 8: Empowerment through Participatory Surveillance? Menstrual and Fertility Self-Tracking Apps as Postfeminist Biopedagogies - Jessica Polzer, Anna Sui, Kelly Ge, Laura Cayen Chapter 9: Artificial Unintelligence: How "Smart" and AI Technologies Perpetuate Bias and Systemic Discrimination - Sahar RazaPart IV: Bodies Chapter 10: Gatekeeping "Authentic" Gender: The Somatechnics of Transition Surgery and "Male Enhancement" - Jennifer Hites-Thomas Chapter 11: "So, You Wanna Live Forever?" Representations of Disability, Gender, and Technology in Cyberpunk 2077 - Tamara Banbury and Kelly FritschPart V: Reclaim Chapter 12: Holding Space for Future Matriarchs: Digital Platforms for Resurging Solidarity - Amber Brown and Angela Knowles Chapter 13: The Ethics of Care and Online Teaching: Personal Reflections on Pandemic Post-Secondary Instruction - Kira Tomsons Chapter 14: Zines and Ezines as Holistic Technologies: DIY Feminism in the Transnational Classroom - Jaime YardConclusion: Coming Home to the Future: Start, Pause, Repeat … - Jennifer Jill Fellows and Lisa Smith Contributor Biographies
£49.30
University of Chicago Press No Higher Court Contemporary Feminism and the
Book SynopsisThis work traces the roots of the contemporary abortion debate in the tradition of existential philosophy of the Sartrian type. It studies the geneology of contemporary feminist theory and theology with Simone de Beauvoir as the founding mother.
£17.66
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Gendered Marketing
Book SynopsisPerforming an in-depth exploration of the gendered nature of marketing theory and practice, this timely book unpacks the many ideological assumptions embedded in marketing thought and action.Trade Review‘Gendered Marketing, by Maclaran and Chatzidakis, offers a compelling and clear synthesis of contemporary feminist and gender theories and their uses in debates in this field of Marketing and Consumer Behaviour. By providing the conceptual tools for re-writing the texts of this field that so often render gender and its consequences surreptitiously invisible, Gendered Marketing demonstrates how gender and feminism continue to challenge and matter.’ -- Lydia Martens, Keele University, UK‘With remarkable elegance and precision, Pauline Maclaran and Andreas Chatzidakis explore and overturn the traditional male-centred nature of marketing and consumer scholarship. Astutely deploying a range of feminist and other critical insights, Gendered Marketing enables us to think through diverse solidarities to envision altogether more creative, progressive and egalitarian marketing and consuming practices. Not to be missed in any progressive pedagogy!’ -- Lynne Segal, Birkbeck, University of London, UK‘Maclaran and Chatzidakis offer a palette of feminist theories and marketing applications, covering a range of topics from history to ad representations, products and services to technoporn, ecology to macho organization culture. Equal parts critique and pragmatic intervention, this book is essential reading for students and practitioners to better understand and traverse today’s gender minefield. The authors explain why things change, yet remain the same, and how marketers and consumers can and must do better.’ -- Lisa Peñaloza, KEDGE Business School, France‘Gendered Marketing is a must-read for those interested in the intersection of gender(s) and marketing. It offers rich and historically contextualized insights on both practice and research related to gendered marketing. And it offers a productive reflection on whether, and how, marketing might eventually be “de-gendered”. Its messages are timely, and relevant for scholars, activists and practitioners alike.’ -- Eileen Fischer, Professor of Marketing, Schulich School of Business, York University, Canada‘Gendered Marketing, by Maclaran and Chatzidakis, offers a compelling and clear synthesis of contemporary feminist and gender theories and their uses in debates in this field of Marketing and Consumer Behaviour. By providing the conceptual tools for re-writing the texts of this field that so often render gender and its consequences surreptitiously invisible, Gendered Marketing demonstrates how gender and feminism continue to challenge and matter.’ -- Lydia Martens, Keele University, UK‘With remarkable elegance and precision, Pauline Maclaran and Andreas Chatzidakis explore and overturn the traditional male-centred nature of marketing and consumer scholarship. Astutely deploying a range of feminist and other critical insights, Gendered Marketing enables us to think through diverse solidarities to envision altogether more creative, progressive and egalitarian marketing and consuming practices. Not to be missed in any progressive pedagogy!’ -- Lynne Segal, Birkbeck, University of London, UK‘Maclaran and Chatzidakis offer a palette of feminist theories and marketing applications, covering a range of topics from history to ad representations, products and services to technoporn, ecology to macho organization culture. Equal parts critique and pragmatic intervention, this book is essential reading for students and practitioners to better understand and traverse today’s gender minefield. The authors explain why things change, yet remain the same, and how marketers and consumers can and must do better.’ -- Lisa Peñaloza, KEDGE Business School, France‘Gendered Marketing is a must-read for those interested in the intersection of gender(s) and marketing. It offers rich and historically contextualized insights on both practice and research related to gendered marketing. And it offers a productive reflection on whether, and how, marketing might eventually be “de-gendered”. Its messages are timely, and relevant for scholars, activists and practitioners alike.’ -- Eileen Fischer, Professor of Marketing, Schulich School of Business, York University, CanadaTable of ContentsContents: 1. Introduction: an overview of gendered marketing 2. Breaking the silences: women in the history of marketing thought and practice 3. Marketing communications: selling or smashing stereotypes? 4. Gendering products and services: from design to brand 5. Marketing’s free externalities: the well-being of human and non-human others 6. Who cares for the marketing organisation? 7. Can marketing be de-gendered? References Index
£25.95
Edward Elgar Publishing Handbook of Feminist Research Methodologies in
Book Synopsis
£44.60
John Wiley and Sons Ltd Wonder Woman and Philosophy
Book SynopsisWonder Woman and Philosophy: The Amazonian Mystique explores a wide range of philosophical questionssurrounding the most popular female superhero of all time, from her creation as feminist propaganda during World War II up to the first female lead in the blockbuster DC movie-franchise. The first book dedicated to the philosophical questions raised by the complex and enduringly iconic super-heroine Fighting fascism with feminism since 1941, considers the power of Wonder Woman as an exploration of gender identity and also that of the human condition what limits us and what we can overcome Confronts the ambiguities of Wonder Woman, from her roles as a feminist cause and fully empowered woman, to her objectification as sexual fantasy Topics explored include origin stories and identity, propaganda and art, altruism and the ethics of care, Amazonians as transhumanists, eroticism and graphic novels, the crafting of a heroine, domination, relaTable of ContentsContributors: The Myndi Mayer Foundation xi Acknowledgments xvii Editor’s Note xix Introduction: In and For a World of Ordinary Mortals 1 Jacob M. Held Part I You Are a Wonder Woman 3 1 Becoming a (Wonder) Woman: Feminism, Nationalism, and the Ambiguity of Female Identity 5 J. Lenore Wright 2 The God of War is Wearing What? Gender in the New 52 19 Sarah K. Donovan 3 Wonder Woman vs. Harley Quinn: The Paradox of the Moral Hero 31 Jill Hernandez and Allie Hernandez 4 Great Hera! Considering Wonder Woman’s Super Heroism 44 Trip McCrossin Part II Dispatches from Man’s World 55 5 Wonder Woman: Feminist Faux Pas? 57 Andrea Zanin 6 Feminist Symbol or Fetish? iek, Wonder Woman, and Final Crisis 72 Matthew William Brake 7 When Clark Met Diana: Friendship and Romance in Comics 81 Matthew A. Hoffman and Sara Kolmes Part III When I Deal with Them, I Deal with Them 91 8 Bound to Face the Truth: The Ethics of Using Wonder Woman’s Lasso 93 Melanie Johnson-Moxley 9 “What I Had to Do”: The Ethics of Wonder Woman’s Execution of Maxwell Lord 104 Mark D. White 10 Can a Warrior Care? Wonder Woman and the Improbable Intersection of Care Ethics and Bushido 115 Steve Bein 11 Wonder Woman: Saving Lives through Just Torture? 126 Adam Barkman and Sabina Tokbergenova 12 Wonder Woman Winning with Words: A Paragon of Wisdom, Disarming Threats One at a Time 133 Francis Tobienne Jr. Part IV God(s), Country, Sorority 141 13 Wonder Woman, Worship, and Gods Almighty: Purpose in Submission to Loving Authority 143 Jacob M. Held 14 Merciful Minerva in a Modern Metropolis 151 Dennis Knepp 15 Wonder Woman and Patriarchy: From Themyscira’s Amazons to Wittig’s Guérrillères 162 Mónica Cano Abadía Part V Tying Up Loose Ends 171 16 The Lasso of Truth? 173 James Edwin Mahon 17 Loving Lassos: Wonder Woman, Kink, and Care 188 Maria Chavez, Chris Gavaler, and Nathaniel Goldberg 18 Golden Lassos and Logical Paradoxes 198 Roy T. Cook and Nathan Kellen Index 209
£11.66
John Wiley and Sons Ltd Feminist Anthropology
Book SynopsisFeminist Anthropology surveys the history of feminist anthropology and offers students and scholars a fascinating collection of both classic and contemporary articles, grouped to highlight key themes from the past and present. * Offers vibrant examples of feminist ethnographic work rather than synthetic overviews of the field.Trade Review“Feminist Anthropology says it all: from the early debates on universal oppression of women, to the continued rethinking of resistance and political creativity, this wonderful collection highlights the important work that feminist anthropologists have done, and beckons others to continue this important work.” Rayna Rapp, New York University “Ellen Lewin contributes outstanding commentaries and analyses that introduce and connect some of the most valuable and timeless work in feminist anthropology. This book is an extraordinary resource for teaching in anthropology and across the disciplines.” A. Lynn Bolles, University of Maryland, and past President of the Association for Feminist Anthropology “This well-selected anthology is a treasure trove, guiding readers through more than three decades of feminist anthropology—from the pioneers to the next generation of cutting-edge scholars in the field.” Florence E. Babb, University of Florida “A unique and useful compilation… Highly recommended” ChoiceTable of ContentsAcknowledgments. Introduction: Ellen Lewin.. Part I. Discovering Women across Cultures. Introduction. 1. Belief and the Problem of Women and The "Problem" Revisited (Edwin Ardener). 2. A Note on the Division of Labor by Sex (Judith K. Brown). 3. Is Woman to Man as Nature is to Culture? (Sherry Ortner). 4. The Traffic in Women: Notes on the "Political Economy" of Sex (Gayle Rubin). 5. The Use and Abuse of Anthropology: Reflections on Feminism and Cross-Cultural Understanding (Michelle Z. Rosaldo). 6. Toward a Unified Theory of Class, Race, and Gender (Karen Brodkin). Part II. Questioning Positionality. Introduction. 7. Writing against Culture (Lila Abu-Lughod). 8. My Best Informant’s Dress: The Erotic Equation in Fieldwork (Esther Newton). 9. Feminist Insider Dilemmas: Construction Ethnic Identity with Chicana Informants (Patricia Zavella). 10. Contingent Stories of Anthropology, Race, and Feminism (Paulla Ebron). Part III. Interpreting Instability and Fluidity. Introduction. 11. Bringing the Family to Work: Women’s Culture on the Shop Floor (Louise Lamphere). 12. Procreation Stories: Reproduction, Nurturance, and Procreation in Life Narratives of Abortion Activists (Faye Ginsburg). 13. Ethnically Correct Dolls: Toying with the Race Industry (Elizabeth Chin). 14. Strategic Naturalizing: Kinship in an Infertility Clinic (Charis Thompson). Part IV. Maintaining Commitments. Introduction. 15. Dirty Protest: Symbolic Overdetermination and Gender in Northern Ireland (Begoña Aretxaga). 16. Women’s Rights are Human Rights: The Merging of Feminine and Feminist: Interests among El Salvador’s Mothers of the Disappeared (CO-MADRES) (Lynn Stephen). 17. Searching for "Voices: Feminism, Anthropology, and the Global Debates over Female Genital Operations (Christine J. Walley). 18. Imagining the Unborn in the Ecuadoran Andes (Lynn M. Morgan). Part V. Interpreting Instability and Fluidity. Introduction. 19. "Like a Mother to Them": Stratified Reproduction and West Indian Childcare Workers and Employers in New York (Shellee Colen). 20. Femininity and Flexible Labor: Fashioning Class through Gender on the Global Assembly Line (Carla Freeman). 21. Tombois in West Sumatra: Constructing Masculinity and Erotic Desire (Evelyn Blackwood). 22 "What’s Identity Got to Do with It?" Rethinking Identity in Light of the Mati Work (Gloria Wekker). Index.
£99.86
John Wiley and Sons Ltd Feminist Anthropology
Book SynopsisFeminist Anthropology surveys the history of feminist anthropology and offers students and scholars a fascinating collection of both classic and contemporary articles, grouped to highlight key themes from the past and present. * Offers vibrant examples of feminist ethnographic work rather than synthetic overviews of the field.Trade Review“Feminist Anthropology says it all: from the early debates on universal oppression of women, to the continued rethinking of resistance and political creativity, this wonderful collection highlights the important work that feminist anthropologists have done, and beckons others to continue this important work.” Rayna Rapp, New York University “Ellen Lewin contributes outstanding commentaries and analyses that introduce and connect some of the most valuable and timeless work in feminist anthropology. This book is an extraordinary resource for teaching in anthropology and across the disciplines.” A. Lynn Bolles, University of Maryland, and past President of the Association for Feminist Anthropology “This well-selected anthology is a treasure trove, guiding readers through more than three decades of feminist anthropology—from the pioneers to the next generation of cutting-edge scholars in the field.” Florence E. Babb, University of Florida “A unique and useful compilation… Highly recommended” ChoiceTable of ContentsAcknowledgments. Introduction: Ellen Lewin.. Part I. Discovering Women across Cultures. Introduction. 1. Belief and the Problem of Women and The "Problem" Revisited (Edwin Ardener). 2. A Note on the Division of Labor by Sex (Judith K. Brown). 3. Is Woman to Man as Nature is to Culture? (Sherry Ortner). 4. The Traffic in Women: Notes on the "Political Economy" of Sex (Gayle Rubin). 5. The Use and Abuse of Anthropology: Reflections on Feminism and Cross-Cultural Understanding (Michelle Z. Rosaldo). 6. Toward a Unified Theory of Class, Race, and Gender (Karen Brodkin). Part II. Questioning Positionality. Introduction. 7. Writing against Culture (Lila Abu-Lughod). 8. My Best Informant’s Dress: The Erotic Equation in Fieldwork (Esther Newton). 9. Feminist Insider Dilemmas: Construction Ethnic Identity with Chicana Informants (Patricia Zavella). 10. Contingent Stories of Anthropology, Race, and Feminism (Paulla Ebron). Part III. Interpreting Instability and Fluidity. Introduction. 11. Bringing the Family to Work: Women’s Culture on the Shop Floor (Louise Lamphere). 12. Procreation Stories: Reproduction, Nurturance, and Procreation in Life Narratives of Abortion Activists (Faye Ginsburg). 13. Ethnically Correct Dolls: Toying with the Race Industry (Elizabeth Chin). 14. Strategic Naturalizing: Kinship in an Infertility Clinic (Charis Thompson). Part IV. Maintaining Commitments. Introduction. 15. Dirty Protest: Symbolic Overdetermination and Gender in Northern Ireland (Begoña Aretxaga). 16. Women’s Rights are Human Rights: The Merging of Feminine and Feminist: Interests among El Salvador’s Mothers of the Disappeared (CO-MADRES) (Lynn Stephen). 17. Searching for "Voices: Feminism, Anthropology, and the Global Debates over Female Genital Operations (Christine J. Walley). 18. Imagining the Unborn in the Ecuadoran Andes (Lynn M. Morgan). Part V. Interpreting Instability and Fluidity. Introduction. 19. "Like a Mother to Them": Stratified Reproduction and West Indian Childcare Workers and Employers in New York (Shellee Colen). 20. Femininity and Flexible Labor: Fashioning Class through Gender on the Global Assembly Line (Carla Freeman). 21. Tombois in West Sumatra: Constructing Masculinity and Erotic Desire (Evelyn Blackwood). 22 "What’s Identity Got to Do with It?" Rethinking Identity in Light of the Mati Work (Gloria Wekker). Index.
£38.90
John Wiley and Sons Ltd The Politics of Violence
Book SynopsisThe Politics of Violence develops an interdisciplinary feminist perspective grounded in original ethnographic research on everyday forms of violence in El Salvador. Hume challenges dominant theories of violence through foregrounding subaltern vocabularies that have been historically ignored in debates on violence. Unites a critical analysis of theories of violence with original ethnographic research on its use and broader responses to its different manifestations Makes an important theoretical contribution to debates on violence, through developing in-depth accounts of the violence of everyday life from a feminist perspective Examines the vocabularies of violence of those who live with it on an everyday basis, locating these vocabularies in a critical analysis of the relations of domination that have shaped Salvadoran history Table of ContentsPreface. Acknowledgements. Introduction. 1. Questioning Violence: Meanings, Myths and Realities. 2. (Mis)recognising Violence in Latin America. 3. ‘Terror as Usual’: Uniting Past and Present Accounts of Violence. 4. Gendered Hierarchies of Violence. 5. ‘Kill Them, Attack Them at the Roots and Kill Them All’: Examining Responses to Violence. Conclusions. References. Index.
£18.99
Johns Hopkins University Press Beloved Lady
Book SynopsisOriginally published in 1967. Jane Addams was one of the most creative thinkers and activists in the history of American social reform. She pioneered the settlement house movement. She was a leader in the attempt to relate education to the new urban environment for millions of Americans in the early twentieth century. She was a vocal advocate of the Progressive movement and active in the drive for women's rights. She was also an outstanding spokesman for international understanding and world peace. Although Jane Addams is well known as one of the originators of social work in the United States, as an early advocate of a War on Poverty, and as the proponent of ideas that led to the creation of the modern welfare state, the convictions that motivated her prodigious energy had not, prior to Dr. Farrell's investigation, been carefully examined. He traces the relation between her philanthropic principles and her Progressive politics, her feminism, and her efforts to achieve world peace. He Table of ContentsForewordChapter 1. IntroductionChapter 2. Rockford Female Seminary – and AfterChapter 3. Hull House – The First DecadeChapter 4. Educational ThoughtChapter 5. Urban RecreationChapter 6. Climax and Dissatisfactions: The Progressive Campaign of 1912Chapter 7. NeutralityChapter 8. The War Years and AfterChapter 9. PacifismBibliographyIndex
£35.10
American Psychological Association Transnational Psychology of Women
Book SynopsisThis book explains how transnational approaches to women's psychology can address a range of topics including human trafficking, sexuality, migration, human rights, healing, empowerment, domestic violence, education, and work.Trade Review“The complex conceptualization of transnational feminist psychology, as posited in this volume, advocates for a paradigm shift in the ways psychology approaches the intersectional and international psychology of women. Emerging from multiple disciplines, including sociology, political science, economics, history, and women’s studies, transnational feminist psychology makes visible the voices and experiences of the ‘Global Majority,’ roughly 85 percent of the world’s non-Western population.” —Choice * Choice *Table of ContentsContributors Series ForewordMary Wyer Acknowledgments IntroductionLynn H. Collins, Sayaka Machizawa, and Joy K. Rice Chapter 1. Transnational Psychology of WomenLynn H. Collins, Sayaka Machizawa, and Joy K. Rice Chapter 2. The Transnational Turn: Looking Back and Looking AheadJanet M. Conway Chapter 3. Strategies and Considerations for Transnational Feminist Research: Reflections From Research in UgandaJennifer J. Mootz and Sally D. Stabb Chapter 4. Transnational Psychological Perspectives on Assessment and InterventionLynn H. Collins Chapter 5. A Transnational Feminist Perspective on the Psychology of MigrationOliva M. Espín and Andrea L. Dottolo Chapter 6. Transnational Feminist Perspectives on Women's Education, Work, and LeadershipEdwina Pio Chapter 7. Using Transnational Feminist Theory to Expand Domestic Violence UnderstandingsAlisha Guthery, Nicole Jeffrey, Sara Crann, and Elizabeth Schwab Chapter 8. Toward a Transnational Feminist Psychology of Women's Reproductive ExperiencesJeanne Marecek Chapter 9. Transnational Feminist Perspectives on Human Trafficking: Centering Structures, Institutions, and SubjectsJulietta Hua and Jessica Tjiu Chapter 10. Transnational Psychology in the Classroom: A Pluralistic ApproachLynn H. Collins, Jennifer J. Mootz, Jeanne Marecek, Alisha Guthery, Sayaka Machizawa, Oliva M. Espin, Andrea L. Dottolo, Julietta Hua, Sara Crann, Nicole Jeffrey, and Elizabeth Schwab Chapter 11. Toward an Inclusive, Affirmative Transnational PsychologyJoy K. Rice and Shelly Grabe Glossary Index About the Editors
£63.90
Temple University Press,U.S. The Politics of State Feminism
Book SynopsisAddressing essential questions of women's movement activism and political change in Western democraciesTrade Review"The book is sure to be a classic for scholars focused on advanced research on women, gender, institutions, and politics, and for those studying women's policy apparatus in government as it connects with women's movements in the majority of nations (i.e., in the non-Western world). Summing Up: Highly recommended."—CHOICE"[A] long awaited culmination of a 15- year-long international collaborative project on comparative state feminism which was initiated by two prominent feminist political scientists.... This book is a celebrated finale of this collective odyssey that addresses essential questions of women’s movement activism and political change in Western democracies through a comprehensive comparative analysis of the effectiveness of women’s policy agencies and women’s movements on a range of important policy issues. The book presents a unique combination of conceptual sophistication, first-hand original data, wide-ranging review of interconnected literatures, methodological rigor, and thought-provoking theoretical conclusions. This book will be widely read by scholars and students interested in gender politics, institutional and policy change, social movements, and democratization.... The study’s conclusions are very important and timely." —The Journal of PoliticsTable of ContentsPrefacePart I. Framework and Foundations 1. The State Feminism Project 2. Concepts and Mixed Methods 3. Mapping Women’s Policy AgenciesPart II. Exploring State Feminism 4. Women’s Policy Agencies and Women’s Movement Success 5. Women’s Policy Agency Success and Failure: The Search for Explanations 6. What’s Feminist about State Feminism?Part III. Unpacking State Feminism 7. Social Movements and Women’s Movements – Joyce Outshoorn 8. Political Representation – Joni Lovenduski and Marila Guadagnini 9. Framing and Gendering – Birgit Sauer 10. Gendering New Institutionalism – Amy G. Mazur and Dorothy E. McBridePart IV. Conclusion 11. The New Politics of State FeminismNotes Glossary References Index
£53.55
Temple University Press,U.S. Transfeminist Perspectives in and beyond
Book SynopsisLambda Literary Award for Best Book in Transgender Nonfiction, 2013Trade Review"Transfeminist Perspectives in and beyond Transgender and Gender Studies is a very worthwhile book. Enke is knowledgeable about the field, and frames the issues nicely, explicitly addressing some of the core problems in feminism and women’s studies. This anthology shrewdly demonstrates how transgender studies can do feminist work, and it goes a long way toward furthering that important critical/political task."—Susan Stryker, Professor of Gender & Women's Studies at the University of Arizona, and author of Transgender History"Transfeminist Perspectives in and beyond Transgender and Gender Studies, is a smart, well-written, and appealing book. Enke has defined, explained, and situated the concept of ‘transfeminism’ vis-à-vis the study of gender. The book is truly multi-disciplinary and the essays address the challenges that trans students, researchers of transgender subjects, and teachers of trans/feminist theory and activism face. This will be an important book." —Paisley Currah, Professor of Political Science at the Brooklyn College of New York, and co-editor (with Richard Juang and Shannon Minter) of Transgender Rights"Enke’s book is crucial to teaching how gender identity and trans issues have shifted and will continue to push gender studies. There is no other collection on transgender theory and action that has this level of detail and focus on higher education and gender studies-related disciplinary concerns. Transfeminist Perspectives in and beyond Transgender and Gender Studies, examines how institutions as lived contexts shape everyday life and thus the context for thinking, learning and researching trans issues. Enke’s introductory essay is superb, and the collection's interdisciplinary range is comprehensive—it covers key topics in gender studies, and it provides theoretical and experiential critiques of the field of gender studies as well. This is an indispensable volume." —Cris Mayo, Associate Professor of Education Policy, Organization and Leadership at University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, and author of Disputing the Subject of Sex: Sexuality and Public School ControversiesTable of ContentsAcknowledgements; Introduction: Transfeminist Perspectives; Anne Enke; Terms and Concepts; Anne Enke; Part I: "This Much Knowledge:" Flexible Epistemologies; Vic Munoz; Gender/Sovereignty; Kate Forbes; 'Do These Earrings Make Me Look Dumb?' Diversity, Privilege, and Heteronormative Perceptions of Competence within the Academy; Bobby Noble; Trans. Panic. Some Thoughts Toward a Theory of Feminist Fundamentalism; Anne Enke; The Education of Little Cis: Cisgender and the Discipline of Opposing Bodies; Part II: Categorical Insufficiencies and "Impossible People"; Clark Pomerleau; College Transitions: Recommended Policies for Trans Students and Employees; Pat Griffin; "Ain't I a Woman?" Transgender and Intersex Student-Athletes in Women's Collegiate Sports; Christoph Hanssmann; Training Disservice: The Productive Potential and Structural Limitations of Health as a Terrain for Trans Activism; Aren Aizura; Transnational Transgender Rights and Immigration Law; Part III: Valuing Subjects: Toward Unexpected Alliances; Dan Irving; Elusive Subjects: Notes on the Relationship Between Critical Political Economy and Trans Studies; Julia Serano; Reclaiming Femininity; Dean Spade; What's Wrong with Trans Rights?; Ryka Aoki; When Something Is Not Right; Bibliography.
£64.80
Temple University Press,U.S. The Archival Turn in Feminism
Book SynopsisChronicles these important cultural artifacts and their collection, cataloging, preservation, and distribution.Trade Review"Eichhorn has produced an original and incisive addition to the increasingly lively and crowded international debate around archives, feminism and activism... Her book is a particularly welcome intervention into current debates inasmuch as she is prepared to move well beyond those nostalgic, over-simplified and unreflective gestures towards 'recovering' and 'memorializing' feminist cultural heritage in order to engage in a seriously nuanced discussion of what it means to put 'outrage in order' or to see the cultural products of resistance movements transferred into formal spaces of preservation and - more often than not - into academic institutions marked by money, power and privilege... [A]n intelligently written history of a moment in feminist activism and an equally compelling interrogation of the conditions that ultimately shape one's capacity to think in historical terms about feminism as a movement." - Australian Feminist StudiesTable of Contents PrefaceIntroduction1 The “Scrap Heap” Reconsidered: Selected Archives of Feminist Archiving2 Archival Regeneration: The Zine Collections at the Sallie Bingham Center3 Redefining a Movement: The Riot Grrrl Collection at Fales Library and Special Collections4 Radical Catalogers and Accidental Archivists: The Barnard Zine LibraryConclusionNotesWorks CitedIndex
£50.15
Temple University Press,U.S. The Archival Turn in Feminism
Book SynopsisIn the 1990s, a generation of women born during the rise of the second wave feminist movement plotted a revolution. These young activists funneled their outrage and energy into creating music, and zines using salvaged audio equipment and stolen time on copy machines. By 2000, the cultural artifacts of this movement had started to migrate from basements and storage units to community and university archives, establishing new sites of storytelling and political activism.The Archival Turn in Feminism chronicles these important cultural artifacts and their collection, cataloging, preservation, and distribution. Cultural studies scholar Kate Eichhorn examines institutions such as the Sallie Bingham Center for Women's History and Culture at Duke University, The Riot Grrrl Collection at New York University, and the Barnard Zine Library. She also profiles the archivists who have assembled these significant feminist collections.Eichhorn shows why young feminist activists, cultural producers, anTrade Review"Eichhorn uses this book to argue passionately that collecting-that is, archiving-feminism and its by-products is never without deep context, rich history, and radical foresight."-Bitch magazine"Eichhorn has produced an original and incisive addition to the increasingly lively and crowded international debate around archives, feminism and activism.... Her book is a particularly welcome intervention into current debates."-Australian Feminist StudiesTable of Contents PrefaceIntroduction1 The “Scrap Heap” Reconsidered: Selected Archives of Feminist Archiving2 Archival Regeneration: The Zine Collections at the Sallie Bingham Center3 Redefining a Movement: The Riot Grrrl Collection at Fales Library and Special Collections4 Radical Catalogers and Accidental Archivists: The Barnard Zine LibraryConclusionNotesWorks CitedIndex
£21.84
Temple University Press,U.S. Getting Paid While Taking Time
Book SynopsisThe United States remains the only industrialized nation in the world that does not provide paid family leave at the national level for either men or women. In the more than two decades since the passage of the Family and Medical Leave Act, there have been numerous unsuccessful attempts to expand family leave benefits nationally. However, in the United States, it is common for innovations in family policies to arise at the state level. In her timely book, Getting Paid While Taking Time, Megan Sholar explains the development of family leave policies at both the national and state levels in the United States. She provides cogent studies of states that have passed and proposed family leave legislation, and she pays special attention to the ways in which women's movement actors and other activists (e.g., labor unions) exert pressure on public officials to help influence the policymaking process. In her conclusion, Sholar considers the future of paid family leave policies in the United StTable of ContentsChapter 1: Women’s Movements and the Passage of Family Leave Policies Chapter 2: The Passage of the National Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA) Chapter 3: From the FMLA to the FAMILY Act: Family Leave Policy at the National Level since 1993 Chapter 4: Success in the States: Paid Family Leave in California, New Jersey, Rhode Island, and New York Chapter 5: When Paid Family Leave Fails to Pass in the States: Washington, Oregon, Massachusetts, and Hawaii Chapter 6: The Future of Family Leave in the United States
£66.30
Temple University Press,U.S. Getting Paid While Taking Time
Book SynopsisTable of ContentsChapter 1: Women’s Movements and the Passage of Family Leave Policies Chapter 2: The Passage of the National Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA) Chapter 3: From the FMLA to the FAMILY Act: Family Leave Policy at the National Level since 1993 Chapter 4: Success in the States: Paid Family Leave in California, New Jersey, Rhode Island, and New York Chapter 5: When Paid Family Leave Fails to Pass in the States: Washington, Oregon, Massachusetts, and Hawaii Chapter 6: The Future of Family Leave in the United States
£22.79
Temple University Press,U.S. Insubordinate Spaces
Book SynopsisInsubordinate spaces are places of possibility, products of acts of accompaniment and improvisation that deepen capacities for democratic social change. Barbara Tomlinson and George Lipsitz's Insubordinate Spaces explores the challenges facing people committed to social justice in an era when social institutions have increasingly been reconfigured to conform to the imperatives of a market society. In their book, the authors argue that education, the arts, and activism are key terrains of political and ideological conflict. They explore and analyze exemplary projects responding to current social justice issues and crises, from the Idle No More movement launched by Indigenous people in Canada to the performance art of Chingo Bling, Fandango convenings, the installation art of Ramiro Gomez, and the mass protests proclaiming Black Lives Matter in Ferguson, MO. Tomlinson and Lipsitz draw on key concepts from struggles to advance ideas about reciprocal recognition and co-creation as compon
£70.20
Temple University Press,U.S. Insubordinate Spaces
Book SynopsisInsubordinate spaces are places of possibility, products of acts of accompaniment and improvisation that deepen capacities for democratic social change. Barbara Tomlinson and George Lipsitz's Insubordinate Spaces explores the challenges facing people committed to social justice in an era when social institutions have increasingly been reconfigured to conform to the imperatives of a market society. In their book, the authors argue that education, the arts, and activism are key terrains of political and ideological conflict. They explore and analyze exemplary projects responding to current social justice issues and crises, from the Idle No More movement launched by Indigenous people in Canada to the performance art of Chingo Bling, Fandango convenings, the installation art of Ramiro Gomez, and the mass protests proclaiming Black Lives Matter in Ferguson, MO. Tomlinson and Lipsitz draw on key concepts from struggles to advance ideas about reciprocal recognition and co-creation as compon
£23.39
Temple University Press,U.S. Feminist PostLiberalism
Book SynopsisFeminism and liberalism need each other, argues Judith Baer. Her provocative book, Feminist Post-Liberalism, refutes both conservative and radical critiques. To make her case, she rejects classical liberalism in favor of a welfareand possibly socialistpost-liberalism that will prevent capitalism and a concentration of power that reinforces male supremacy. Together, feminism and liberalism can better elucidate controversies in American politics, law, and society. Baer emphasizes that tolerance and self-examination are virtues, but within both feminist and liberal thought these virtues have been carried to extremes. Feminist theory needs liberalism's respect for reason, while liberal theory needs to incorporate emotion. Liberalism focuses too narrowly on the individual, while feminism needs a dose of individualism. Feminist Post-Liberalism includes anthropological foundations of male dominance to explore topics ranging from crime to cultural appropriation. Baer develops a theory that
£73.80
Temple University Press,U.S. Feminist PostLiberalism
Book SynopsisFeminism and liberalism need each other, argues Judith Baer. Her provocative book, Feminist Post-Liberalism, refutes both conservative and radical critiques. To make her case, she rejects classical liberalism in favor of a welfareand possibly socialistpost-liberalism that will prevent capitalism and a concentration of power that reinforces male supremacy. Together, feminism and liberalism can better elucidate controversies in American politics, law, and society. Baer emphasizes that tolerance and self-examination are virtues, but within both feminist and liberal thought these virtues have been carried to extremes. Feminist theory needs liberalism's respect for reason, while liberal theory needs to incorporate emotion. Liberalism focuses too narrowly on the individual, while feminism needs a dose of individualism. Feminist Post-Liberalism includes anthropological foundations of male dominance to explore topics ranging from crime to cultural appropriation. Baer develops a theory that
£25.19
Temple University Press,U.S. Refounding Democracy through Intersectional
Book SynopsisInRefounding Democracy through Intersectional Activism,Wendy Sarvasy recovers the unacknowledged Progressive Era social democratic feminist refounders who used collective political agency to reshape the body politic. Through intersectional activism, or the bridging of different movements, the refounders, who include Ida Wells-Barnett, Rose Schneiderman, and Jane Addams, created an intersectional, social democratic feminist understanding of democracy that allowed them to imagine their full inclusion. Sarvasy shows how these activists worked to incorporate women by combining political democracy with the creation of a welfare state. They embedded this nation-state project within a new humanitarian transnational level as they evolved their multileveled social citizenship. Refounding Democracy through Intersectional Activism demonstrateshow a theory-activist dynamic played out in experimental socializing spaces and democratic conversations. Itoffers an inspirational method for intersec
£88.40
University of Toronto Press The Fragrance of SweetGrass
Book SynopsisWhen it originally appeared, Elizabeth Rollins Epperly’s The Fragrance of Sweet-Grass was one of the first challenges to the idea that L.M. Montgomery’s books were unworthy of serious study. Examining all of Montgomery’s fiction, Epperly argues that Montgomery was much more than a master of the romance genre and that, through her use of literary allusions, repetitions, irony, and comic inversions, she deftly manipulated the normal conventions of romance novels. Focusing on Montgomery’s memorable heroines, from Anne Shirley to Emily Byrd Starr, Valancy Stirling, and Pat Gardiner, Epperly demonstrates that Montgomery deserves a place in the literary canon not just as the creator of Anne of Green Gables but as an artist in her chosen profession.Since its publication more than twenty years ago, The Fragrance of Sweet-Grass has become a favourite of scholars, writers, and Montgomery fans. This new edition adds a preface in which ETrade Review'Epperly's discerning treatment of the heroines should prove of interest not only to Montgomery devotees but to any reader interested in social history and particularly in attitudes toward women reflected in popular fiction.' -- Genevieve Wiggins American Review of Canadian Studies 'Now you don't have to hide that Montgomery novel when an intellectual friend drops by. Flaunt it and enjoy.' -- Patricia Morley Ottawa Citizen '[The] first book-length critical study of L.M. Montgomery's works ... There is no doubt that Epperly's work will be valued as a reference for Montgomery scholars and teachers of Canadian literature and children's literature.' -- Lalage Grauer University of Toronto QuarterlyTable of ContentsPreface to the 2014 Edition Permissions Acknowledgements Abbreviations Introduction Part I: Anne Romancing the Voice: Anne of Green Gables Romance Awry: Anne of Avonlea Recognition: Anne of the Island 'This Enchanted Shore': Anne's House of Dreams Heroism's Childhood: Rainbow Valley Womanhood and War: Rilla of Ingleside Recapturing the Anne World: Anne of Windy Poplars and Anne of Ingleside Part II: Emily The Struggle for Voice: Emily of New Moon Testing the Voice: Emily Climbs Love and Career: Emily's Quest Part III: The Other Heroines Romancing the Home: Pat of Silver Bush, Mistress Pat, Jane of Lantern Hll A Changing Heroism: An Overview of the Other Novels Epilogue Notes Works Cited Index
£24.29