Details

Women in Culture


Women in Culture

An Intersectional Anthology for Gender and Women's Studies
2. Aufl.

von: Bonnie Kime Scott, Susan E. Cayleff, Anne Donadey, Irene Lara

31,99 €

Verlag: Wiley-Blackwell
Format: EPUB
Veröffentl.: 16.06.2016
ISBN/EAN: 9781119120193
Sprache: englisch
Anzahl Seiten: 576

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Beschreibungen

<p>The thoroughly revised <i>Women in Culture 2/e</i> explores the intersections of gender, race, sexuality, gender identity, and spirituality from the perspectives of diverse global locations. Its strong humanities content, including illustrations and creative writing, uniquely embraces the creative aspects of the field.</p> <ul> <li>Each of the ten thematic chapters lead to creative readings, introducing a more </li> <li>Readings throughout the text encourage intersectional thinking amongst students humanistic angle than is typical of textbooks in the field</li> <li>This textbook is queer inclusive and allows students to engage with postcolonial/decolonial thinking, spirituality, and reproductive/environmental justice</li> <li>A detailed timeline of feminist history, criticism and theory is provided, and the glossary encourages the development of critical vocabulary</li> <li>A variety of illustrations supplement the written materials, and an accompanying website offers instructors pedagogical resources</li> </ul>
<p>Acknowledgments x</p> <p>List of Sources xi</p> <p>General Introduction xvii</p> <p><b>1 Introduction to Feminist Concepts and Issues 1<br /></b><i>By Anne Donadey</i></p> <p>1.1 My Name 11<br /><i>Sandra Cisneros</i></p> <p>1.2 The New Pronoun They Invented Suited Everyone Just Fine (illustration) 12<br /><i>Jacinta Bunnell and Nat Kusinitz</i></p> <p>1.3 Oppression 13<br /><i>Marilyn Frye</i></p> <p>1.4 Age, Race, Class, and Sex: Women Redefining Difference 16<br /><i>Audre Lorde</i></p> <p>1.5 Womanist 23<br /><i>Alice Walker</i></p> <p>1.6 Masculinity as Homophobia: Fear, Shame, and Silence in the Construction of Gender Identity 24<br /><i>Michael S. Kimmel</i></p> <p>1.7 Abandon Your Tedious Search: The Rulebook Has Been Found! 33<br /><i>Kate Bornstein</i></p> <p>1.8 Feminists Theorize Colonial/Postcolonial 39<br /><i>Rosemary Marangoly George</i></p> <p><b>2 Stories of Identity and Community 50<br /></b><i>By Irene Lara</i></p> <p>2.1 To Live in the Borderlands Means You 62<br /><i>Gloria Anzaldúa</i></p> <p>2.2 Los Intersticios: Recasting Moving Selves 63<br /><i>Evelyn Alsultany</i></p> <p>2.3 Where I Come from is Like This 68<br /><i>Paula Gunn Allen</i></p> <p>2.4 Introduction to <i>Global Woman: Nannies, Maids, and Sex Workers in the New Economy </i>74<br /><i>Barbara Ehrenreich and Arlie Russell Hochschild</i></p> <p>2.5 From In Gerangl/<i>In Struggle: A Handbook for Recognizing and Resisting Anti-Semitism and for Rebuilding Jewish Identity and Pride </i>84<br /><i>Melanie Kaye/Kantrowitz and Irena Klepfisz with Bernice Mennis</i></p> <p>2.6 losing home 86<br /><i>eli clare</i></p> <p><b>3 Histories of Feminism 92<br /></b><i>By Bonnie Kime Scott</i></p> <p>3.1 The Women at the Gate 99<br /><i>Evelyn Sharp</i></p> <p>3.2 And A’n’t I a Woman? 104<br /><i>Sojourner Truth</i></p> <p>3.3 When We Dead Awaken: Writing as Re-Vision 106<br /><i>Adrienne Rich</i></p> <p>3.4 From <i>Separate Roads to Feminism </i>114<br /><i>Benita Roth</i></p> <p>3.5 Feminist Consciousness and African Literary Criticism 120<br /><i>Carole Boyce Davies</i></p> <p>3.6 The Historical Denial of Lesbianism 129<br /><i>Blanche Wiesen Cook</i></p> <p>3.7 The Historian as Curandera 134<br /><i>Aurora Levins Morales</i></p> <p><b>4 Women and Gender in Arts and Media 148<br /></b><i>By Bonnie Kime Scott</i></p> <p>4.1 Obasan 154<br /><i>Joy Kogawa</i></p> <p>4.2 The Tag Project: Executive Order 9066 (illustration) 157<br /><i>Wendy Maruyama</i></p> <p>4.3 Do Women Have to be Naked to Get into the Met. Museum? (illustration) 158<br /><i>Guerrilla Girls</i></p> <p>4.4 The Mythic Mannish Lesbian: Radclyffe Hall and the New Woman 158<br /><i>Esther Newton</i></p> <p>4.5 Shakespeare’s Sister 169<br /><i>Virginia Woolf</i></p> <p>4.6 Creative Expressions 174<br /><i>Maythee Rojas</i></p> <p>4.7 Beauty and the Beast of Advertising 183<br /><i>Jean Kilbourne</i></p> <p>4.8 Pop and Circumstance: Why Pop Culture Matters 186<br /><i>Andi Zeisler</i></p> <p><b>5 Sexualities and Genders 195<br /></b><i>By Susan E. Cayleff</i></p> <p>5.1 poem on trying to love without fear 203<br /><i>Maiana Minahal</i></p> <p>5.2 Uses of the Erotic: The Erotic as Power 205<br /><i>Audre Lorde</i></p> <p>5.3 The Happiest Day of My Life (illustration) 210</p> <p>5.4 An Immodest Proposal 210<br /><i>Heather Corinna</i></p> <p>5.5 “Charity Girls” and City Pleasures: Historical Notes on Working-Class Sexuality, 1880–1920 214<br /><i>Kathy Peiss</i></p> <p>5.6 When You Meet a Lesbian: Hints for the Heterosexual Woman 224<br /><i>Indiana University Empowerment Workshop</i></p> <p>5.7 Heterosexuality Questionnaire 225<br /><i>Gay and Lesbian Speakers’ Bureau</i></p> <p>5.8 Aligning Bodies, Identities, and Expressions: Transgender Bodies 226<br /><i>Judith Lorber and Lisa Jean Moore</i></p> <p>5.9 Masculinity Politics on a World Scale 234<br /><i>R. W. Connell</i></p> <p>5.10 Brown Boi Health Manifesto 239<br /><i>Prentis Hemphill</i></p> <p><b>6 Body Politics 241<br /></b><i>By Susan E. Cayleff</i></p> <p>6.1 Recipe 247<br /><i>Janice Mirikitani</i></p> <p>6.2 A History of Women’s Bodies 248<br /><i>Rose Weitz</i></p> <p>6.3 If Men Could Menstruate 256<br /><i>Gloria Steinem</i></p> <p>6.4 Women and Disability and Poetry (Not Necessarily in That Order) 258<br /><i>Laura Hershey</i></p> <p>6.5 Do We Call You Handicapped? (illustration) 260<br /><i>Morrie Turner</i></p> <p>6.6 Maintaining Masculinity: Homophobia at Work 261<br /><i>Eric Anderson</i></p> <p>6.7 The Story of My Body 267<br /><i>Judith Ortiz Cofer</i></p> <p>6.8 veiled intentions: don’t judge a muslim girl by her covering 274<br /><i>maysan haydar</i></p> <p><b>7 Reproductive and Environmental Justice 279<br /></b><i>By Bonnie Kime Scott</i></p> <p>7.1 Sequel to Love 285<br /><i>Meridel le Sueur</i></p> <p>7.2 Just Choices: Women of Color, Reproductive Health and Human Rights 288<br /><i>Loretta J. Ross, Sarah L. Brownlee, Dazon Dixon Diallo, Luz Rodriquez, and SisterSong Women of Color Reproductive Health Project</i></p> <p>7.3 Depo Diaries and the Power of Stories 297<br /><i>Etobssie Wako and Cara Page</i></p> <p>7.4 Women, People of Color, Children, and Health <i>and </i>Women and Environmental Justice 302<br /><i>Karen J. Warren</i></p> <p>7.5 Healing the Wounds: Feminism, Ecology, and the Nature/Culture Dualism 309<br /><i>Ynestra King</i></p> <p>7.6 Mad Cows and Sacred Cows 315<br /><i>Vandana Shiva</i></p> <p>7.7 Green our Communities! Plant Urban Gardens (illustration) 323<br /><i>Favianna Rodriguez</i></p> <p>7.8 Toward a Queer Ecofeminism 323<br /><i>Greta Gaard</i></p> <p><b>8 Violence and Resistance 335<br /></b><i>By Anne Donadey</i></p> <p>8.1 The Yellow Wallpaper 343<br /><i>Charlotte Perkins Gilman</i></p> <p>8.2 Scope of the Problem 355<br /><i>Carol Bohmer and Andrea Parrot</i></p> <p>8.3 Sexual Assault Prevention Tips 367<br /><i>Feminally</i></p> <p>8.4 Legal Images of Battered Women 367<br /><i>Martha R. Mahoney</i></p> <p>8.5 <i>Feminicidio</i>: The “Black Legend” of the Border 381<br /><i>Alicia Gaspar de Alba and Georgina Guzmán</i></p> <p>8.6 Hermaphrodites with Attitude: Mapping the Emergence of Intersex Political Activism 389<br /><i>Cheryl Chase</i></p> <p>8.7 Heteropatriarchy and the Three Pillars of White Supremacy: Rethinking Women of Color Organizing 404<br /><i>Andrea Smith</i></p> <p><b>9 Healing and Spirituality 413<br /></b><i>By Irene Lara</i></p> <p>9.1 The Moths 422<br /><i>Helena María Viramontes</i></p> <p>9.2 My Guardian Spirits 426<br /><i>Ama R. Saran</i></p> <p>9.3 Honor and Ceremony in Women’s Rituals 428<br /><i>E. M. Broner</i></p> <p>9.4 My World of the Unknown 435<br /><i>Alifa Rifaat</i></p> <p>9.5 From <i>Seeing Red: American Indian Women Speaking about Their Religious and Political Perspectives </i>445<br /><i>Inés Maria Talamantez</i></p> <p>9.6 The Clan of One-Breasted Women 450<br /><i>Terry Tempest Williams</i></p> <p>9.7 Life out of Balance 455<br /><i>Lori Arviso Alvord and Elizabeth Cohen Van Pelt</i></p> <p><b>10 Activism for the Future 463<br /></b><i>By Susan E. Cayleff</i></p> <p>10.1 Feminism: A Transformational Politic 467<br /><i>bell hooks</i></p> <p>10.2 Smash Patriarchy (illustration) 474</p> <p>10.3 Fat Liberation Manifesto 475<br /><i>Judy Freespirit and Aldebaran</i></p> <p>10.4 Fighting Back 476<br /><i>Jenny Morris</i></p> <p>10.5 Expanding Environmental Justice: Asian American Feminists’ Contribution 484<br /><i>Julie Sze</i></p> <p>10.6 El Mundo Zurdo and the Ample Space of the Erotic 491<br /><i>M. Jacqui Alexander</i></p> <p>10.7 Lessons for Transformation 496<br /><i>AnaLouise Keating</i></p> <p>10.8 All Sleeping Women Now Awake and Move (illustration) 507</p> <p>10.9 Still I Rise 507<br /><i>Maya Angelou</i></p> <p>Glossary 509</p> <p>Timeline 520</p> <p>Index 529</p>
<b>Bonnie Kime Scott</b> is Professor Emerita of Women’s Studies at San Diego State University. She is the author of <i>Joyce and Feminism</i> (1984), <i>The Gender of Modernism</i> (1990), the two volume study of Virginia Woolf, Djuna Barnes, and Rebecca West, <i>Refiguring Modernism</i> (1995), <i>Selected Letters of Rebecca West</i> (2000), and <i>In the Hollow of the Wave: Virginia Woolf and Modernist Uses of Nature</i> (2012).<br /><br /><b>Susan E. Cayleff</b> is a Professor of Women’s Studies at San Diego State University. She is the author of <i>Wings of Gauze: Women of Color and the Experience of Health and Illness </i>(1993) and<i> Babe: The Greatest All-Sport Athlete of All-Time</i> (2001). Her biography <i>Babe: The Life and Legend of Babe Didrikson Zaharias</i> (1996) was a Pulitzer Prize nominee.<br /><br /><b>Anne Donadey</b> is Professor of French and Women’s Studies at San Diego State University. She is the author of <i>Recasting Postcolonialism</i> (2001), co-editor of <i>Postcolonial Theory and Francophone Literary Studies </i>(with H. Adlai Murdoch, 2005), and editor of <i>Approaches to Teaching the Works of Assia Djebar</i> (2016). She was also editor of a special issue of the journal <i>L’Esprit créateur</i> dedicated to the works of Assia Djebar (Winter 2008).<br /><br /><b>Irene Lara </b>isAssociate Professor at San Diego State University’s Department of Women’s Studies. She has published a co-edited volume, <i>Fleshing the Spirit: Spirituality and Activism in Chicana, Latina, and Indigenous Women’s Lives </i>(with Elisa Facio, 2014).

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