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The Daddies is a love letter to masculinity, a kaleidoscope of its
pleasures and horrors. The question "Who's your Daddy?" started
showing up in mainstream cultural references during the 1990s.
Those words can be spoken as a question, or a challenge, as a
flirtation, a joke, or a threat. It's all about inflection,
intention, and who's asking. Apparently, we have so much shared
cultural meaning about "Daddy" the speakers and listeners can
simply intuit meaning and proceed to laugh at the joke, or
experience the shame, as appropriate. But who is Daddy in American
culture? The Daddies aims to find out more than who - but how the
process of knowing Daddy can prompt readers to know themselves and
their society. This allegory about patriarchy unfolds as a kinky
lesbian Daddy/girl love story. Daddy-ness is situated in all
people, after all, and we each share responsibility for creating a
fairer world. The Daddies can be used as a springboard for
discussion in courses in sociology, gender and women's studies,
cultural studies, sexuality studies and communication. As a work of
fiction, The Daddies can also be enjoyed by general audiences.
Yoga, the Body, and Embodied Social Change is the first collection
to gather together prominent scholars on yoga and the body. Using
an intersectional lens, the essays examine yoga in the United
States. as a complex cultural phenomenon that reveals racial,
economic, gendered, and sexual politics of the body. From
discussions of the stereotypical yoga body to analyses of pivotal
court cases, Yoga, the Body, and Embodied Social Change examines
the sociopolitical tensions of contemporary yoga. Because so many
yogic spaces reflect the oppressive nature of many other public
spheres, the essays in this collection also examine what needs to
change in order for yoga to truly live up to its liberatory
potential, from the blogosphere around Black women's health to the
creation of queer and trans yoga classes to the healing potential
of yoga for people living with chronic illness or trauma. While
many of these conversations are emerging in the broader public
sphere, few have made their way into academic scholarship. This
book changes all that. The essays in this anthology interrogate
yoga as it is portrayed in the media, yoga spaces, and yoga as it
is integrated in education, the law, and concepts of health to
examine who is included and who is excluded from yoga in the West.
The result is a thoughtful analysis of the possibilities and the
limitations of yoga for feminist social transformation.
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