BodySpace: Destabilising Geographies of Gender and SexualityNancy Duncan Routledge, 1996 M09 5 - 288 páginas BodySpace brings together some of the best known geographers writing on gender and sexuality today. Together they explore the role of space and place in the performance of gender and sexuality. The book takes a broad perspective on feminism as a theoretical critique, and aims to ground - and destabilize - notions of citizenship, work, violence, "race" and disability in their geographical contexts. The book explores the idea of knowledge as embodied, engendered and embedded in place and space. Gender and sexuality are explored - and destabilized - through the methodological and conceptual lenses of cartography, fieldwork, resistance, transgression and the divisions between local/global and public/private space. Contributors: Linda Martin Alcoff, Kay Anderson, Vera Chouinard, Nancy Duncan, J.K. Gibson-Graham, Ali Grant, Kathleen Kirby, Audrey Kobayashi, Doreen Massey, Linda McDowell, Wayne Myslik, Heidi Nast, Gillian Rose, Joanne Sharp, Matthew Sparke, Gill Valentine |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 49
Página 7
... analysis of nationalism as an imagined community. By deconstructing the narrative of bonding between individuals and the nation, Sharp shows that the rhetoric of this bonding reveals that it is implicitly differentiated by gender ...
... analysis of nationalism as an imagined community. By deconstructing the narrative of bonding between individuals and the nation, Sharp shows that the rhetoric of this bonding reveals that it is implicitly differentiated by gender ...
Página 19
... analysis. But the traditional variables used in neo-classical economic theory could not account for such differentials, since they were not based on a difference in education, length of employment, productivity or the profitability of ...
... analysis. But the traditional variables used in neo-classical economic theory could not account for such differentials, since they were not based on a difference in education, length of employment, productivity or the profitability of ...
Página 20
... . In this sort of analysis, then, gender is placed squarely in the category of culture. It is not nature that must be transcended to achieve liberation; rather, it is a cultural system that we ourselves have set LINDA MARTIN ALCOFF.
... . In this sort of analysis, then, gender is placed squarely in the category of culture. It is not nature that must be transcended to achieve liberation; rather, it is a cultural system that we ourselves have set LINDA MARTIN ALCOFF.
Página 21
... analysis, it would seem that, unlike history and power, sexual difference is something we must strive to overcome rather than reify as a standing feature of human life. This points us to one of the most important current debates among ...
... analysis, it would seem that, unlike history and power, sexual difference is something we must strive to overcome rather than reify as a standing feature of human life. This points us to one of the most important current debates among ...
Página 22
... analysis. Feminist theorists were motivated to uncover the workings of sexism and patriarchal assumptions wherever they were at work, and to problematize gender as a contingent rather than necessary system of practices that permeates ...
... analysis. Feminist theorists were motivated to uncover the workings of sexism and patriarchal assumptions wherever they were at work, and to problematize gender as a contingent rather than necessary system of practices that permeates ...
Contenido
13 | |
28 | |
RE MAPPING SUBJECTIVITY Cartographic vision and the limits of politics | 45 |
AS IF THE MIRRORS HAD BLED Masculine dwelling masculinist theory and feminist masquerade | 56 |
RECORPOREALIZING VISION | 75 |
GENDERING NATIONHOOD A feminist engagement with national identity | 97 |
MASCULINITY DUALISMS AND HIGH TECHNOLOGY | 109 |
RENEGOTIATING GENDER AND SEXUALITY IN PUBLIC AND PRIVATE SPACES | 127 |
RENEGOTIATING THE SOCIALSEXUAL IDENTITIES OF PLACES Gay communities as safe havens or sites of resistance? | 156 |
ON BEING NOT EVEN ANYWHERE NEAR THE PROJECT Ways of putting ourselves in the picture | 170 |
ENGENDERING RACE RESEARCH Unsettling the selfOther dichotomy | 197 |
DISPLACING THE FIELD IN FIELDWORK Masculinity metaphor and space | 212 |
REFLECTIONS ON POSTMODERN FEMINIST SOCIAL RESEARCH | 234 |
CONCLUSION | 245 |
References | 248 |
Index | 271 |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Bodyspace: Destabilizing Geographies of Gender and Sexuality Nancy Duncan Vista previa limitada - 1996 |
BodySpace: Destabilising Geographies of Gender and Sexuality Nancy Duncan Vista previa limitada - 1996 |
Bodyspace: Destabilizing Geographies of Gender and Sexuality Nancy Duncan Vista previa limitada - 1996 |
Términos y frases comunes
ableism academic analysis argues argument behaviour binary body boundaries camera obscura cartography challenge chapter Chinatown Chinese claim concept constituted construction Crary critical critique cultural defined deterritorialization disabled women discourse discussion distinction domestic dominant Doreen Massey dualism Dupont Circle epistemological example experience feminine feminism feminist geography feminist theory field fieldwork gender and sexuality gendered identities geographers Gillian Rose global Haraway heteropatriarchy heterosexist heterosexual historical homophobia imaginary individual interviews Irigaray 1985a issues Jameson Judith Butler knowledge labour lesbians and gay Linda Martin lives male mapping marginalized masculinist masculinity Massey material metaphors nature non-real space norms oppression particular performance political postmodern power relations practices private spaces produce prostitutes public space public sphere queer spaces question race racialized radical reason resistance society socio-spatial structure struggles suggests temps theorists transcendence University Valentine Vancouver violence violence against gay Western White woman