Feminist and Queer Theory : An Intersectional and Transnational Reader

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Feminist and Queer Theory : An Intersectional and Transnational Reader

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  • 製本 Paperback:紙装版/ペーパーバック版/ページ数 555 p.
  • 言語 ENG
  • 商品コード 9780190841799
  • DDC分類 305.4201

Full Description


As women's studies departments and programs undergo rapid transformation in higher education, there has been a burgeoning demand for instructional material that addresses feminist and queer studies at all levels in the curricula. Feminist and Queer Theory: An Intersectional and Transnational Reader reflects this vibrantly expanding field and meets the urgent need for theory courses.Feminist and Queer Theory: An Intersectional and Transnational Reader is not simply a feminist theory text that includes queer theories; rather, it theorizes at the intersection of feminist and queer theories, and by doing so, transforms and reshapes the boundaries of the fields. The book invites students to think critically about the limitations of understanding feminist theory as separate, but tangentially related, to queer theory and moves them beyond transnationalism as "additive"to U.S.-centered intersectional perspectives. The book frames feminist and queer inquiry as being articulated through each other and within a global context. It also provide new voices-scholarly, activist, and creative-inside and outside the U.S. that are shaping the field and selections that highlight theimportance of im/migration and borders as well as science, technology, and digital cultures.

Contents

PrefaceSection I: Theories, Stories, HistoriesIntroductionTelling Stories, Historicizing Theories 1. bell hooks, "Theory as Liberatory Practice" (1991)2. Clare Hemmings, Introduction from Why Stories Matter: The Political Grammar of Feminist Theory (2011)3. Moon Charania, "Speaking in Tongues: Furtive Knowledge and/in the Pakistani GeoBody" (new)4. Leila J. Rupp, from Sapphistries: A Global History of Love between Women 5. Inderpal Grewal, Caren Kaplan, "Global Identities: Theorizing Transnational Studies of Sexuality" 6. E. Patrick Johnson and Mae G. Henderson, "Quare Studies, or (almost) Everything I know about Queer Studies I learned from My Grandmother" 7. Susan Stryker, "Transgender Studies: Queer Theory's Evil Twin" Theoretical Devices and Modes of Theory Production8. Chandra Mohanty, "Transnational Feminist Crossings: On Neoliberalism and Radical Critique" 9. Akiko Takeyama, "Possessive Individualism in the Age of Postfeminism and Neoliberalism: Self-Ownership, Consent, and Contractual Abuses in Japan's Adult Video Industry" 10. Amrita Banerjee, "A Transnational Intervention into an Ethic of Care: Quandaries of Care Ethics for Transnational Feminisms" 11. Megan Sibbett, "Breaking Into Bad: The New Privileged Monsters, or, Straight, Middle-Class, White Guys" 12. Sarah E.S. Sinwell, "#MakeReyAsexual and #KeepJugheadAsexual: Asexuality, Queerness and Representation on Twitter" 13. Diza Edgina H., "Praise and Prejudice" Theorizing and Transforming: Intersectionality and Beyond14. Donna Haraway, "Situated Knowledges: The Science Question in Feminism and the Privilege of Partial Perspective" 15. Neha Vora, "A Transnational Feminist Critique of the March for Science" 16. Avery Dame-Griff, "Algorithms Are a Feminist Issue" 17. Kimberle Crenshaw, "Demarginalizing the Intersection of Race and Sex: A Black Feminist Critique of Antidiscrimination Doctrine, Feminist Theory, and Antiracist Politics" 18. Mel Michelle Lewis, "A Bridge Across Our Fears: Queer Feminist Intersectional Ethnic Studies as Interdisciplinary Praxis" 19. Alison Kafer, from Feminist, Queer, Crip 20. Marivel Danielson, "Our Art is Our Weapon: Women of Color Transforming Academia" Section II: Theorizing and Troubling the BodyIntroduction Returning to the Body21. Trinh T. Minh-Ha, "Write Your Body" 22. James Burford and Sam Orchard, "Chubby Boys with Strap-ons: Queering Fat Transmasculine Embodiment" 23. Christina Lux, "Wildlife Refuge" 24. Chikako Takeshita, "'Keep Life Simple': Body/Technology Relationship in Racialized Global Contexts" 25. Stacy Alaimo, "Eluding Capture: The Science, Culture, and Pleasure of 'Queer' Animals" 26. Joanne Clarke Dillman, "'Dominated, Opened and Entered': Theorizing the Dead Woman in Contemporary Media Representation" Troubling Bodies, Troubled Bodies27. Judith Butler, "Gender Trouble, Feminist Theory and Psychoanalytic Discourse" 28. Hendri Yulius, "The Queer Child in Transnational Indonesia: Fear, Futurity, and Rectum Politics" 29. Vanita Reddy, "Family Togetherness, Affect Aliens, and the Ugly Feelings of Being Included" 30. Kimberly Dark, "It Was a Lovely Dinner" Bodies, Sex, and Desire: Embodying Power31. Audre Lorde, "The Uses of the Erotic: the Erotic as Power" 32. Annamarie Jagose, "Counterfeit Pleasures: Fake Orgasm and Queer Agency" 33. Karina Eileraas Karakus, "An (Im)modest Revolution?: Nudity, Modest Fashion, and Cultural Appropriation on the Global Runway" Section III: Crossing Borders and Transnational MovementsIntroductionCrossing Borders34. Heidi Mirza, "'A Second Skin': Embodied Intersectionality, Transnationalism, and Narratives of Identity and Belonging among Muslim Women in Britain" 35. Isis Nusair, "Permanent Transients: Gendering the Narratives of Iraqi Women Refugees in Jordan" 36. M. Soledad Caballero, "The Spell" 37. Gayatri Gopinath, "Impossible Desires" 38. Aren Aizura, "Transnational Transgender Rights and Immigration" 39. Martin Manalansan, "Migrancy, Modernity, Mobility: Quotidian Struggles and Queer Diasporic Intimacy" 40. Gloria Anzaldua, "La Conciencia de la Mestiza: Towards a New Consciousness" Transnational Justice Movements41. Christina Holmes, "Feminist Approaches to Environmentalism: Ecofeminism, Ecowomanism, and Borderlands Environmentalism" 42. Karma Chavez, "Queer Migration Politics as Transnational Activism" 43. Elora Chowdhury, "'Transnationalism Reversed': Engaging Religion, Development, and Women's Organizing in Bangladesh" 44. S.M. Rodriguez, "Invisibility Matters: Queer African Organizing and Visibility Management in a Transnational Age" 45. Brandy Nalani McDougall, "Sovereign Bodies, Sovereign Chic: Indigenous Women's Activist Fashion and the Fashioning of Protection Movements" 46. Jennifer Nish, Kimberly A. Williams, and L. Ayu Saraswati, ""Marching and Crossing Borders: A Transnational Conversation"Section IV: Resistance, Resilience and Decolonizing PraxisIntroductionViolence, Resistance, and Resilience47. Qwo-Li Driskill, "Stolen from our Bodies: First Nations Two-Spirits/Queers and the Journey to a Sovereign Erotic" 48. Jenny Heijun Wills, "Transnational Adoption and the Paradox of Reproductive Rights" 49. Dean Spade, "What's Wrong with Rights?" 50. Ashwini Tambe, "Indian Americans in the Trump Era: A Transnational Feminist Analysis"51. Barbara Boswell, "African Women's Literature as Feminist Theory" 52. Cherrie Moraga, "La Guera" Feminist and Queer Horizons53. Sara Ahmed, "Lesbian Feminism" 54. Jose Munoz, "Queerness as Horizon: Utopian Hermeneutics in the Face of Gay Pragmatism" 55. Angela Willey, "Biopossibility: A Queer Feminist Materialist Science Studies Manifesto, with Special Reference to the Question of Monogamous Behavior"56. AnaLouise Keating and Kakali Bhattacharya. "Decolonizing Religion, Transforming Spirit: The Imaginal in Gloria Anzaldua's Autohistoria-Teoria" 57. Eli Clare, "Moving through Cure: Choosing Disability" 58. Jayna Brown, "A World on Fire: Radical Black Feminism in a Dystopian Age" 59. Angela Davis, "Transnational Solidarities"

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