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Books > Social sciences > Sociology, social studies > Gender studies
"Raising the Dead" is a groundbreaking, interdisciplinary
exploration of death's relation to subjectivity in
twentieth-century American literature and culture. Sharon Patricia
Holland contends that black subjectivity in particular is connected
intimately to death. For Holland, travelling through "the space of
death" gives us, as cultural readers, a nuanced and appropriate
metaphor for understanding what is at stake when bodies,
discourses, and communities collide.
Holland argues that the presence of blacks, Native Americans,
women, queers, and other "minorities" in society is, like death,
"almost unspeakable." She gives voice to--or raises--the dead
through her examination of works such as the movie "Menace II
Society, " Toni Morrison's novel "Beloved, " Leslie Marmon Silko's
"Almanac of the Dead, " Randall Kenan's "A Visitation of Spirits, "
and the work of the all-white, male, feminist hip-hop band
Consolidated. In challenging established methods of literary
investigation by putting often-disparate voices in dialogue with
each other, Holland forges connections among African-American
literature and culture, queer and feminist theory.
"Raising the Dead" will be of interest to students and scholars of
American culture, African-American literature, literary theory,
gender studies, queer theory, and cultural studies.
Indian freedmen and their descendants have garnered much public
and scholarly attention, but women's roles have largely been absent
from that discussion. Now a scholar who gained an insider's
perspective into the Black Seminole community in Texas and Mexico
offers a rare and vivid picture of these women and their
contributions. In "Dreaming with the Ancestors," Shirley Boteler
Mock explores the role that Black Seminole women have played in
shaping and perpetuating a culture born of African roots and shaped
by southeastern Native American and Mexican influences.
Mock reveals a unique maroon culture, forged from an eclectic
mixture of religious beliefs and social practices. At its core is
an amalgam of African-derived traditions kept alive by women. The
author interweaves documentary research with extensive interviews
she conducted with leading Black Seminole women to uncover their
remarkable history. She tells how these women nourished their
families and held fast to their Afro-Seminole language -- even as
they fled slavery, endured relocation, and eventually sought new
lives in new lands. Of key importance were the "warrior women" --
keepers of dreams and visions that bring to life age-old African
customs.
Featuring more than thirty illustrations and maps, including
historic photographs never before published, "Dreaming with the
Ancestors" combines scholarly analysis with human interest to open
a new window on both African American and American Indian history
and culture.
Winner of the 2022 Research Publication Book Award from the
Association of Chinese Professors of Social Sciences in the United
States. Based on ethnographic research with victims of intimate
partner violence since 2014, this book brings to the forefront
women's experiences of, negotiations about, and contestations
against violence, and men's narratives about the reasons for their
violence. Using an innovative methodology - online chat groups, it
foregrounds the role of history, structural inequalities, and the
cultural system of power hierarchy in situating and constructing
intimate partner violence. Centering on men and women's narratives
about violence, this book connects intimate partner violence with
invisible structural violence - the historical, cultural,
political, economic, and legal context that gives rise to and
perpetuates violence against women. Through examining the ways in
which women's lives are constrained by various forms of violence,
hierarchy, and inequality, this book shows that violence against
women is a structural issue that is historically produced and
politically and culturally engaged.
Branded Women in U.S. Television examines how The Real Housewives
of New York City, Martha Stewart, and other female entrepreneurs
create branded televised versions of the iconic U.S. housewife.
Using their television presence to establish and promote their own
product lines, including jewelry, cookware, clothing, and skincare,
they become the primary physical representations of these brands.
While their businesses are serious and seriously lucrative,
especially reality television enables a certain representational
flexibility that allows participants to create campy and sometimes
tongue-in-cheek personas. Peter Bjelskou explores their innovative
branding strategies, specifically the complex relationships between
their entrepreneurial endeavors and their physical bodies, attires,
tastes, and personal histories. Generally these branded women speak
volumes about their contemporaneous political environments, and
this book illustrates how they, and many other women in U.S.
television history, are indicative of larger societal trends and
structures.
The Festschrift Darkhei Noam: The Jews of Arab Lands presented to
Norman (Noam) Stillman offers a coherent and thought-provoking
discussion by eminent scholars in the field of both the history and
culture of the Jews in the Islamic World from pre-modern to modern
times. Based on primary sources the book speaks to the resilience,
flexibility, and creativity of Jewish culture in Arab lands. The
volume clearly addresses the areas of research Norman Stillman
himself has considerably contributed to. Research foci of the book
are on the flexibility of Jewish law in real life, Jewish cultural
life particularly on material and musical culture, the role of
women in these different societies, antisemitism and Jewish
responses to hatred against the Jews, and antisemitism from ancient
martyrdom to modern political Zionism.
For much of the 20th century, books for children encouraged girls
to be weak, submissive, and fearful. This book discusses such
traits, both blatantly and subtly reinforced, in many of the most
popular works of the period. Quoting a wide variety of passages,
O'Keefe illustrates the typical behaviour of fictional girls - many
of whom were passive and immobile while others were actually
invalids. They all engaged in approved girlish activities: deferred
to elders, observed the priorities, and, in the end, accepted
conventional suitors. Even feisty tomboys, like Jo in Little Women,
eventually gave up on their dreams and their independence. The
discussion is interlaced with moments from the author's own
childhood that suggest how her developing self-interacted with
these stories. She and her contemporaries, trying to reconcile
their conservative reading with the changing world around them,
learned ambivalence rather than confidence. Good Girl Messages also
includes a discussion of books read by boys, who were depicted as
purposeful, daring, and dominating.
The percentage of women aged 15-49 in Egypt who have undergone the
procedure of female circumcision, or genital mutilation/cutting
(FGM/C) stands at 91%, according to the latest research carried out
by UNICEF. Female circumcision has become a global political
minefield with 'Western' interventions affecting Egyptian politics
and social development, not least in the area of democracy and
human rights. Maria Frederika Malmstrom employs an ethnographic
approach to this controversial issue, with the aim of understanding
how female gender identity is continually created and re-created in
Egypt through a number of daily practices, and the central role
which female circumcision plays in this process. Viewing the
concept of 'agency' as critical to the examination of social and
cultural trends in the region, Malmstrom explores the lived
experiences and social meanings of circumcision and femininity as
narrated by women from Cairo. It is through the examination of the
voices of these women that she offers an analysis of gender
identity in Egypt and its impact on women's sexuality.
"Sexed Texts" explores the complex role that language plays in the
construction of sexuality and gender, two concepts that are often
discussed separately, although in practice are closely intertwined.
The book draws on a range of theoretical perspectives and published
research including performativity theory, feminism, queer studies,
psychoanalytical theory, Marxism, social constructionism and
essentialism. Illustrative examples are taken from written, spoken,
internet, non-verbal, visual, media-scripted and naturally
occurring texts. Some of the questions addressed in the book
include: how do people construct their own and other's gendered or
sexual identities through the use of language? What is the
relationship between language and desire? In what ways do language
practices help to reflect and shape different gendered/sexed
discourses as 'normal', problematic or contested? Taking a broadly
deconstructionist perspective, the book progresses from examining
what are seen as preferable or acceptable ways to express gender
and sexuality, moving towards more 'tolerated' identities,
practices and desires, and finally arriving at marginalized and
tabooed forms. The book locates sexuality and gender as socially
constructed, and therefore examines language use in terms of
socio-historical factors, linking changing conceptualisations of
identity, discourse and desire to theories surrounding regulation,
globalisation, new technologies, marketisation and consumerism.
Rich and real, BMom is one woman's mosaic of love, life and loss,
and of being found among the pieces. No one piece is a whole, yet
all are precious, together a masterpiece, and each a gem. It's God
restoring the shattered pieces of my life and my soul. His
fingerprints are all over it. The reader will laugh and the reader
will cry, and in that, we will become friends. BMom begins with my
relinquishing my infant son into the hands of parents I couldn't
know. It moves through the intervening years until he found me, on
to our reunion, and beyond. Not only was I reunited with my son, I
was reunited with myself. Interspersed are various interludes that
speak of lessons learned, feelings finally understood and felt, and
poetry written as part of my journey. BMom is entertaining and
engaging, while occasionally making a point, to be taken or not, as
the reader chooses. BMom is, above all else, a good read.
In 1965, fed up with President Lyndon Johnson's refusal to make
serious diplomatic efforts to end the Vietnam War, a group of
female American peace activists decided to take matters into their
own hands by meeting with Vietnamese women to discuss how to end
U.S. intervention. While other attempts at women's international
cooperation and transnational feminism have led to cultural
imperialism or imposition of American ways on others, Jessica
M.Frazier reveals an instance when American women crossed
geopolitical boundaries to criticize American Cold War culture, not
promote it. The American women Frazier studies not only solicited
Vietnamese women's opinions and advice on how to end the war but
also viewed them as paragons of a new womanhood by which American
women could rework their ideas of gender, revolution, and social
justice during an era of reinvigorated feminist agitation. Unlike
the many histories of the Vietnam War that end with an explanation
of why the memory of the war still divides U.S. society, by
focusing on linkages across national boundaries, Frazier
illuminates a significant moment in history when women formed
effective transnational relationships on genuinely cooperative
terms.
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Our Witness
(Hardcover)
Brandan Robertson; Foreword by Lisbeth M Melendez Rivera; Afterword by Joseph Tolton
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R987
R840
Discovery Miles 8 400
Save R147 (15%)
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