|
|
Books > Social sciences > Sociology, social studies > Gender studies
In the mid-nineteenth-century United States, as it became
increasingly difficult to distinguish between bodies understood as
black, white, or Indian; able-bodied or disabled; and male or
female, intense efforts emerged to define these identities as
biologically distinct and scientifically verifiable in a literally
marked body. Combining literary analysis, legal history, and visual
culture, Ellen Samuels traces the evolution of the "fantasy of
identification"--the powerful belief that embodied social
identities are fixed, verifiable, and visible through modern
science. From birthmarks and fingerprints to blood quantum and DNA,
she examines how this fantasy has circulated between cultural
representations, law, science, and policy to become one of the most
powerfully institutionalized ideologies of modern society.
Yet, as Samuels demonstrates, in every case, the fantasy
distorts its claimed scientific basis, substituting subjective
language for claimed objective fact.From its early emergence in
discourses about disability fakery and fugitive slaves in the
nineteenth century to its most recent manifestation in the question
of sex testing at the 2012 Olympic Games, Fantasies of
Identification explores the roots of modern understandings of
bodily identity.
What Is Driving Women to Drug Use is about pretreatment relapse
triggers among women addicted to street drugs, prescription drugs,
and alcohol. Women are affected by different pretreatment relapse
triggers, contributing to repeated relapse. Dr. Richard
Corker-Caulker provides insight for personal understanding into why
women relapse and what you can do to help. Dr. Corker-Caulker
describes women's pretreatment relapse triggers, as well as how to
assess the triggers, identify, analyze, and take appropriate
response to help through a qualitative therapy approach that he
developed. This guide is a very useful tool to help respond to any
person or love ones with addiction problems. Therapists,
psychologists, doctors, drug courts, colleges, clinics, policy
makers, and program managers working with addiction clients can
learn how to focus treatment on pretreatment relapse triggers to
prevent repeated relapse. Pretreatment relapse triggers using
qualitative therapy approach for assessment, analysis, and planning
intervention is a new direction in addiction treatment.
One message that comes along with ever-improving fertility
treatments and increasing acceptance of single motherhood, older
first-time mothers, and same-sex partnerships, is that almost any
woman can and should become a mother. The media and many studies
focus on infertile and involuntarily childless women who are
seeking treatment. They characterize this group as anxious and
willing to try anything, even elaborate and financially ruinous
high-tech interventions, to achieve a successful pregnancy.
But the majority of women who struggle with fertility avoid
treatment. The women whose interviews appear in "Not Trying" belong
to this majority. Their attitudes vary and may change as their life
circumstances evolve. Some support the prevailing cultural
narrative that women are meant to be mothers and refuse to see
themselves as childfree by choice. Most of these women, who come
from a wider range of social backgrounds than most researchers have
studied, experience deep ambivalence about motherhood and
non-motherhood, never actually choosing either path. They prefer to
let life unfold, an attitude that seems to reduce anxiety about not
conforming to social expectations.
Female protagonists are commonly overlooked in the history of
crime; especially in early modern Italy, where women's scope of
action is often portrayed as heavily restricted. This book
redresses the notion of Italian women's passivity, arguing that
women's crimes were far too common to be viewed as an anomaly.
Based on over two thousand criminal complaints and investigation
dossiers, Sanne Muurling charts the multifaceted impact of gender
on patterns of recorded crime in early modern Bologna. While
various socioeconomic and legal mechanisms withdrew women from the
criminal justice process, the casebooks also reveal that women - as
criminal offenders and savvy litigants - had an active hand in
keeping the wheels of the court spinning.
Divination, the use of special talents and techniques to gain
divine knowledge, was practiced in many different forms in ancient
Israel and throughout the ancient world. The Hebrew Bible reveals a
variety of traditions of women associated with divination. This
sensitive and incisive book by respected scholar Esther J. Hamori
examines the wide scope of women's divinatory activities as
portrayed in the Hebrew texts, offering readers a new appreciation
of the surprising breadth of women's "arts of knowledge" in
biblical times. Unlike earlier approaches to the subject that have
viewed prophecy separately from other forms of divination, Hamori's
study encompasses the full range of divinatory practices and the
personages who performed them, from the female prophets and the
medium of En-dor to the matriarch who interprets a birth omen and
the "wise women" of Tekoa and Abel and more. In doing so, the
author brings into clearer focus the complex, rich, and diverse
world of ancient Israelite divination.
Women have been represented in art, literature, music, and more for
decades, with the image of the woman changing through time and
across cultures. However, rarely has a multidisciplinary approach
been taken to examine this imagery and challenge and possibly
reinterpret old women-related myths and other taken-for-granted
aspects (e.g., grammatically inclusive gender). Moreover, this
approach can better place the ideologies as myth creators and
propagators, identify and deconstruct stereotypes and prejudices,
and compare them across cultures with the view to spot universal
vs. culturally specific approaches as far as women's studies and
interpretations are concerned. It is important to gather these
perspectives to translate and unveil new interpretations to old
ideas about women and the feminine that are universally accepted as
absolute, impossible to challenge, and invalidated truths. The
Handbook of Research on Translating Myth and Reality in Women
Imagery Across Disciplines is a comprehensive reference book that
provides an interdisciplinary and multidisciplinary perspective on
the perception and reception of women across time and space. It
tackles various perspectives: gender studies, linguistic studies,
literature and cultural studies, discourse analysis, philosophy,
anthropology, sociology, etc. Its main objective is to present new
approaches and propose new answers to old questions related to
gender inequalities, stereotypes, and prejudices about women and
their place in the world. Covering significant themes that include
the ethics of embodiment, myth of motherhood at the crossroad of
ideologies, translation of women's experiences and ideas across
cultures, and discourses on women's rehabilitation and
dignification across centuries, this book is critical for
linguists, professionals, researchers, academicians, and students
working in the fields of women's studies, gender studies, cultural
studies, and literature, as well as other related categories such
as political studies, education studies, philosophy, and the social
sciences.
Renowned subject experts Michele A. Paludi and J. Harold Ellens
lead readers through a detailed exploration of the feminist
methods, issues, and theoretical frameworks that have made women
central, not marginal, to religions around the world. At a
conference in 2013, Gloria Steinem noted that religion is the
"biggest problem" facing feminism today. In this insightful volume,
a team of researchers, psychologists, and religious leaders led by
editors Michele A. Paludi and J. Harold Ellens supply their
expertise and informed opinions to examine the problems, spur
understanding, and pose solutions to the conflicts between religion
and women's rights, thereby advocating a global interest in justice
and love for women. Examples of subjects addressed include the
pro-life/pro-choice debate, feminism in new age thought, and the
complex intersections of religion and feminism combined with
gender, race, and ethnicity. The contributed work in this unique
single-volume book enables a better understanding of how various
religions view women-both traditionally and in the modern
context-and how feminist thinking has changed the roles of women in
some world religions. Readers will come away with clear ideas about
how religious cultures can honor feminist values, such as
family-friendly workplace policies, reproductive justice, and pay
equity, and will be prepared to engage in conversation and
constructive debate regarding how faith and feminism are
interrelated today. Addresses feminism in several religions,
including Buddhism, Christianity, Confucianism, Islam, Judaism,
Sikhism, and Taoism Explores how theology speaks to women's
experiences in the family, in relationships, at work, in politics,
and in education, while also addressing atheist viewpoints and
experiences Addresses a subject that is highly relevant in
discussions focused on events in the Middle East and as the number
of women becoming leaders of or top officials in various faiths
continues to grow
Emphasizing the role of and portrayal of emotion, this study argues
for the inclusion of six late-eighteenth-century German-language
novels by and about women in a revised canon. Literature written by
women in German during the "Age of Goethe" was largely considered
unworthy Trivialliteratur. Using insights from Gender Studies yet
acknowledging the need for a literary canon, Great Books by German
Women offers a critical interpretation of six canon-worthy German
novels written by women in the period, which it calls the "Age of
Emotion." The novels are chosen because they depict women's
ordinary yet interesting lives and because each contains prose
particularly expressive of emotion. Sophie von La Roche's Die
Geschichte des Frauleins von Sternheim draws on the tradition of
the epistolary novel while finding new ways to depict empathetic
emotions. Friederike Unger's Julchen Grunthal brings to the
Frauenroman or women's novel the use of irony to portray a
heroine's emotions during her coming of age. Sophie Mereau's
Blutenalter der Empfindung imagines women's affinity for the
philosophical sublime, while Caroline Wolzogen depicts female
desire in her Agnes von Lilien: both add lyricism to their prose,
capturing sensual emotions. Karoline Fischer's Die Honigmonathe
explores the agony that extreme emotions cause - not only for women
but for men. And Caroline Pichler's Frauenwurde expands the focus
from a young heroine to multiple mature characters. This study
concludes that the influence of these six works was in no way
trivial, either in portraying women's lives and emotions or in the
history of German literature.
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.
Among numerous ancient Western tropes about gender and procreation,
"the seed and the soil" is arguably the oldest, most potent, and
most invisible in its apparent naturalness. The Gender Vendors
denaturalizes this proto-theory of procreation and deconstructs its
contemporary legacy. As metaphor for gender and procreation,
seed-and-soil constructs the father as the sole generating parent
and the mother as nurturing medium, like soil, for the man's
seed-child. In other words, men give life; women merely give birth.
The Gender Vendors examines seed-and-soil in the context of the
psychology of gender, honor and chastity codes, female genital
mutilation, the taboo on male femininity, femiphobia (the fear of
being feminine or feminized), sexual violence, institutionalized
abuse, the early modern witch hunts, the medicalization and
criminalization of gender nonconformity, and campaigns against
women's rights. The examination is structured around particular
watersheds in the history of seed-and-soil, for example, Genesis,
ancient Greece, early Christianity, the medieval Church, the early
modern European witch hunts, and the campaigns of the nineteenth
and twentieth centuries against women's suffrage and education. The
neglected story of seed-and-soil matters to everyone who cares
about gender equality and why it is taking so long to achieve.
Gender performativity, its variances depending on their historical,
social and cultural contexts, and the rituals, representations and
institutions involved in gender performances are some of the issues
the authors addressed in this collection. Gender under Construction
takes a non-essentialist view of gender and provides illustrative
examples of gender constructive processes by pursuing them in
various contexts and by means of diverse methodologies. In so
doing, the book demonstrates that it is unfeasible to consider
gender as a fixed biological trait. Instead, the authors propose to
look at gender performance as ongoing processes in which
femininities and masculinities enter multiple and dynamic
intersections with a myriad of categories, including those of
nationality, ethnicity, class, sexuality and age. Contributors are
Iqbal Akthar, Renata Cuk, Ewa Glapka, Deirdre Hynes, Borja Ibaseta,
Martin King, Ana Cristina Moreira Lima, Mervi Patosalmi, Marcia
Bastos de Sa, Andrea Costa da Silva, Vera Helena Ferraz de
Siqueira, Christi van der Westhuizen and Isabelle V. Zinn.
|
|