Literature and History

Literature and History PDF

Author: Nancy Porter

Publisher: Feminist Press

Published: 2000-08-01

Total Pages: 191

ISBN-13: 9781558611276

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This issue is of WSQ is about writing and reading, a celebration of twenty years of feminist publishing and some of the books, scholarships, and people that have made a difference.

Women's Studies Quarterly: (98:3-4)

Women's Studies Quarterly: (98:3-4) PDF

Author: Deborah S. Rosenfelt

Publisher: Feminist Press at CUNY

Published: 1998

Total Pages: 292

ISBN-13: 9781558612105

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Invaluable resource for teachers that suggests strategies for successfully internationalizing the curriculum.

Women's Studies Quarterly (96:3-4)

Women's Studies Quarterly (96:3-4) PDF

Author: Liza Fiol-Matta

Publisher: Feminist Press at CUNY

Published: 1996-08

Total Pages: 260

ISBN-13: 9781558611610

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A focus on the state of women's studies in two-year community colleges, presenting the results of two curriculum transformation projects that took place at over twenty community colleges.

Women's Nontraditional Literature

Women's Nontraditional Literature PDF

Author: Janet Zandy

Publisher: Feminist Press

Published: 2000-08-01

Total Pages: 160

ISBN-13: 9781558611238

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This issue of WSQ stems from discussions about the need to expand the "traditional" literary canon by the study of women's "nontraditional" literary forms-diaries, letters, and oral life history. It suggests that the texturing of the historical record with details of everyday experience and the addition to literature of the art of the everyday have been major contributions to the women's studies movement.

Gender, Violence and Security

Gender, Violence and Security PDF

Author: Laura Shepherd

Publisher: Zed Books Ltd.

Published: 2013-07-04

Total Pages: 168

ISBN-13: 1848136811

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How do understandings of the relationships between gender, violence, security and the international inform policy and practice in which these notions are central? What are the practical implications of basing policy on problematic discourses? In this highly original poststructural feminist critique, the author maps the discursive terrains of institutions, both NGOs and the UN, which formulate and implement resolutions and guides of practice that affect gender issues in the context of international policy practices. The author investigates UN Security Council Resolution 1325, passed in 2000 to address gender issues in conflict areas, in order to examine the discursive construction of security policy that takes gender seriously. In doing so, she argues that language is not merely descriptive of social/political reality but rather constitutive of it. Moving from concept to discourse, and in turn to practice, the author analyses the ways in which the resolution's discursive construction had an enormous influence over the practicalities of its implementation, and how the resulting tensions and inconsistencies in its construction contributed to its failures. The book argues for a re-conceptualisation of gendered violence in conjunction with security, in order to avoid partial and highly problematic understandings of their practical relationship. Drawing together theoretical work on discourses of gender violence and international security, sexualised violence in war, gender and peace processes, and the domestic-international dichotomy with her own rigorous empirical investigation, the author develops a compelling discourse-theoretical analysis that promises to have far-reaching impact in both academic and policy environments.

Rethinking Women's Peace Studies

Rethinking Women's Peace Studies PDF

Author: Linda Forcey

Publisher: Feminist Press

Published: 1995-01

Total Pages: 250

ISBN-13: 9781558611344

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Major scholars offer new insight on current and emerging trends in women's and peace studies.

The Methodological Dilemma

The Methodological Dilemma PDF

Author: Kathleen Gallagher

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2008-05-19

Total Pages: 289

ISBN-13: 1134044704

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Both thought-provoking and challenging to the way research is planned and undertaken this vital new book will equip researchers with a variety of critical, creative and post-positivist solutions to dilemmas that plague qualitative research.

Borders, Asylum and Global Non-Citizenship

Borders, Asylum and Global Non-Citizenship PDF

Author: Heather L. Johnson

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 2014-06-12

Total Pages: 261

ISBN-13: 1139993186

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The experience of border crossing for refugees and irregular migrants challenges global border and migration controls in multiple contexts. Using qualitative field research in Tanzania, Spain, Morocco and Australia, Heather L. Johnson asks how a global regime of migration management and control can be perceived through the dynamics of particular border spaces: refugee camps, border zones and detention centres. She explores how irregular migrants are impacted by the increasingly security-oriented practices of border control, and how they confront these practices. Johnson rejects the characterization of border spaces as exceptional, abject and exclusionary, arguing instead for an understanding of politics as everyday contestation that reveals a radical political agency, re-imagining the global non-citizen as a transgressive and powerful figure. Building on recent scholarship that rethinks irregularity and non-citizenship, her conclusions have broad implications for how we understand irregular migration from a position of dialogue and solidarity.