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Books > Social sciences > Sociology, social studies > Gender studies
Based on twenty-five years of fieldwork, Rural Women's Sexuality,
Reproductive Health, and Illiteracy: A Critical Perspective on
Development examines rural women's behaviors towards health in
several developing countries. These women are confronted with many
factors: gender inequalities, violence from partners, and lack of
economic independence. The book also gives insight into the general
weakness of the health systems in place and questions the progress
of numerous international conferences ICPD (International
Conference on Population and Development) and MDGs (Millennium
Development Goals) along with WHO (The World Health Organization)
Frame Work for Action, UNFPA (United Nations Population Fund) and
CEDAW (Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination Against
Women) all supporting women's empowerment as related to violence,
education, and reproductive health. Chapters provide numerous
concrete examples and vignettes describing constraints on women in
a variety of countries related to their intimate lives and their
struggle between traditional and modern medicine. Widely practiced
clandestine sex work is a challenge to HIV/AIDS programs. The book
examines the women who choose clandestine sex work and their
clients' sexual behavior and attitudes toward prostitution and HIV
prevention. It also explores the negotiations between promiscuous,
migratory men, and the ties of sexuality and fertility that women
use to tie them to a male partner. The book argues for effective
delivery of healthcare programs accompanied by multi-lateral
responses from the civil society, governments, donors and agencies.
Rural Women's Sexuality, Reproductive Health, and Illiteracy is a
useful resource scholars, as well as consultants and staff working
in development agencies and public health.
The controversial topic of sexual harassment in the United
States is explored in this unique collection of over 90 documents.
The political and social aspects of the concept of sexual
harassment are examined through such documents as legal cases that
defined and prohibited sexual harassment, government documents,
major studies, and newspaper accounts of major developments
concerning sexual harassment. Each document is accompanied by an
explanatory introduction to help high school and college students
understand how that particular document fits into larger trends,
while also making it more accessible to the reader.
The question of what sexual harassment is and how we have
developed an awareness of the concept in the late twentieth century
is explored in detail in six separate sections. The first section
reviews the definition of sexual harassment and why it is
considered illegal. The next three sections investigate sexual
harassment as it has arisen in three contexts: employment, the
military, and education. The fifth section examines the ways laws
have been expanding beyond the areas of employment, the military
and education. The final section provides the most current rulings
of the Supreme Court involving sexual harassment. These six
sections provide a comprehensive history that explores legal
prohibitions on sexual harassment, setting forth important
historical cases, while focusing on current areas of controversy,
such as same-sex sexual harassment and free speech issues.
This volume of essays provides a critical foray into the methods
used to construct narratives which foreground antiheroines, a trope
which has become increasingly popular within literary media, film,
and television. Antiheroine characters engage constructions of
motherhood, womanhood, femininity, and selfhood as mediated by the
structures that socially prescribe boundaries of gender, sex, and
sexuality. Within this collection, scholars of literary, cultural,
media, and gender studies address the complications of representing
agency, autonomy, and self-determination within narrative texts
complicated by age, class, race, sexuality, and a spectrum of
privilege that reflects the complexities of scripting women on and
off screen, within and beyond the page. This collection offers
perspectives on the alternate narratives engendered through the
motivations, actions, and agendas of the antiheroine, while
engaging with the discourses of how such narratives are employed
both as potentially feminist interventions and critiques of access,
hierarchy, and power.
Feminist Theory After Deleuze addresses the encounter between one
of the 20th century's most important philosophers, Gilles Deleuze,
and one of its most significant political and intellectual
movements, feminism. Feminist theory is a broad, contradictory, and
still evolving school of thought. This book introduces the key
movements within feminist theory, engaging with both Anglo-American
and French feminism, as well as important strains of feminist
thought that have originated in Australia and other parts of
Europe. Mapping both the feminist critique of Deleuze's work and
the ways in which it has brought vitality to feminist theory, this
book brings Deleuze into dialogue with significant thinkers such as
Simone de Beauvoir, Rosi Braidotti, Judith Butler, Elizabeth Grosz
and Luce Irigaray. It takes key terms in feminist theory such as,
'difference', 'gender', 'bodies', 'desire' and 'politics' and
approaches them from a Deleuzian perspective.
George R.R. Martin's acclaimed seven-book fantasy series A Song of
Ice and Fire is unique for its strong and multi-faceted female
protagonists, from teen queen Daenerys, scheming Queen Cersei,
child avenger Arya, knight Brienne, Red Witch Melisandre, and many
more. The Game of Thrones universe challenges, exploits, yet also
changes how we think of women and gender, not only in fantasy, but
in Western culture in general. Divided into three sections
addressing questions of adaptation from novel to television, female
characters, and politics and female audience engagement within the
GoT universe, the interdisciplinary and international lineup of
contributors analyze gender in relation to female characters and
topics such as genre, sex, violence, adaptation, as well as fan
reviews. The genre of fantasy was once considered a primarily male
territory with male heroes. Women of Ice and Fire shows how the GoT
universe challenges, exploits, and reimagines gender and why it
holds strong appeal to female readers, audiences, and online
participants.
Essays that overthrow stereotypes and demonstrate the genre's power
and mystique. Contributions by Georgia Christgau, Alexander S.
Dent, Leigh H. Edwards, Caroline Gnagy, Kate Heidemann, Nadine
Hubbs, Jocelyn Neal, Ase Ottosson, Travis Stimeling, Matthew D.
Sutton, and Chris Wilson Country music boasts a long tradition of
rich, contradictory gender dynamics, creating a world where Kitty
Wells could play the demure housewife and the honky-tonk angel
simultaneously, Dolly Parton could move from traditionalist ""girl
singer"" to outspoken trans rights advocate, and current radio
playlists can alternate between the reckless masculinity of
bro-country and the adolescent girlishness of Taylor Swift. In this
follow-up volume to A Boy Named Sue, some of the leading authors in
the field of country music studies reexamine the place of gender in
country music, considering the ways country artists and listeners
have negotiated gender and sexuality through their music and how
gender has shaped the way that music is made and heard. In addition
to shedding new light on such legends as Wells, Parton, Loretta
Lynn, and Charley Pride, it traces more recent shifts in gender
politics through the performances of such contemporary luminaries
as Swift, Gretchen Wilson, and Blake Shelton. The book also
explores the intersections of gender, race, class, and nationality
in a host of less expected contexts, including the prisons of
WWII-era Texas, where the members of the Goree All-Girl String Band
became the unlikeliest of radio stars; the studios and offices of
Plantation Records, where Jeannie C. Riley and Linda Martell
challenged the social hierarchies of a changing South in the 1960s;
and the burgeoning cities of present-day Brazil, where ""college
country"" has become one way of negotiating masculinity in an age
of economic and social instability.
Imbokodo: Women Who Shape Us is a groundbreaking series of books
which introduces you to the powerful stories of South African women
who have all made their mark and cleared a path for women and
girls. These books recognise, acknowledge and honour our heroines
and elders from the past and the present. South African women are
silent no more on the roles that we have played in advancing our
lives as artists, storytellers, writers, politicians and
educationists. The title 'Imbokodo' was been chosen as it is a Zulu
word that means "rock" and is often used in the saying 'Wathint'
Abafazi, Wathint' Imbokodo!', which means "You Strike a Women, You
Strike a Rock!" These books were made possible with the support of
Biblionef and funding from the National Arts Council. In 10 Curious
Inventors, Healers & Creators you will read about the women who
shape our world through education, science and maths. You will read
about women who became teachers, nurses, social workers, scientists
and community workers, overcame obstacles and through their work
fought for social change.
Women and Democracy in Cold War Japan offers a fresh perspective on
gender politics by focusing on the Japanese housewife of the 1950s
as a controversial representation of democracy, leisure, and
domesticity. Examining the shifting personae of the housewife,
especially in the appealing texts of women's magazines, reveals the
diverse possibilities of postwar democracy as they were embedded in
media directed toward Japanese women. Each chapter explores the
contours of a single controversy, including debate over the royal
wedding in 1959, the victory of Japan's first Miss Universe, and
the unruly desires of postwar women. Jan Bardsley also takes a
comparative look at the ways in which the Japanese housewife is
measured against equally stereotyped notions of the modern
housewife in the United States, asking how both function as
narratives of Japan-U.S. relations and gender/class containment
during the early Cold War.
Women's mobility is central to understanding cultural constructions
of gender. Regarding ancient cultures, including ancient Greece, a
re-evaluation of women's mobility within the household and beyond
it is currently taking place. This invites an informed analysis of
female mobility in Greek myth, under the premise that myth may open
a venue to social ideology and the imaginary. Female Mobility and
Gendered Space in Ancient Greek Myth offers the first comprehensive
analysis of this topic. It presents close readings of ancient
texts, engaging with feminist thought and the 'mobility turn'. A
variety of Olympian goddesses and mortal heroines are explored, and
the analysis of their myths follows specific chronological
considerations. Female mobility is presented in quite diverse ways
in myth, reflecting cultural flexibility in imagining mobile
goddesses and heroines. At the same time, the out-of-doors spaces
that mortal heroines inhabit seem to lack a public or civic
quality, with the heroines being contained behind 'glass walls'. In
this respect, myth seems to reproduce the cultural limitations of
ancient Greek social ideology on mobility, inviting us to reflect
not only on the limits of mythic imagination but also on the
timelessness of Greek myth.
In the Flesh deeply engages postmodern and new materialist feminist
thought in close readings of three significant poets-Propertius,
Tibullus, and Ovid-writing in the early years of Rome's Augustan
Principate. In their poems, they represent the flesh-and-blood body
in both its integrity and vulnerability, as an index of social
position along intersecting axes of sex, gender, status, and class.
Erika Zimmermann Damer underscores the fluid, dynamic, and
contingent nature of identities in Roman elegy, in response to a
period of rapid legal, political, and social change. Recognizing
this power of material flesh to shape elegiac poetry, she asserts,
grants figures at the margins of this poetic discourse-mistresses,
rivals, enslaved characters, overlooked members of households-their
own identities, even when they do not speak. She demonstrates how
the three poets create a prominent aesthetic of corporeal abjection
and imperfection, associating the body as much with blood, wounds,
and corporeal disintegration as with elegance, refinement, and
sensuality.
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