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Practising Identities is a collection of papers about how
identities - gender, bodily, racial, ethnic and national - are
practised in the contemporary world. Identities are actively
constructed, chosen, created and performed by people in their daily
lives, and this book focuses on a variety of identity practices, in
a range of different settings, from the gym and the piercing
studio, to the further education college and the National Health
Service. Drawing on detailed empirical studies and recent social
and cultural theory about identity this book makes an important
intervention in current debates about identity, reflexivity, and
cultural difference.
Stressing the variety of ways in which consumption is structured
and organized through cultures and showing how these cultural
technologies construct the person, the senses and the self, this
text stands at the interface of the sociologies of culture and
consumption. The text includes chapters on youth consumption,
cultures of the housefold, pornography, and waste and rubbish. This
will be of interest to all those concerned with the study of
culture and consumption whether from sociological, cultural or
psychological perspectives.
First published in 1994 Stirring It debates the challenges which
confront feminism and Women's Studies in the 1990s. In the face of
current worldwide political and social upheavals, Stirring It poses
questions about women, their bodies, their identities, and
positions which need to be addressed by contemporary feminists. The
chapters therefore challenge the orthodoxies and theories which are
exploded by contemporary feminist practice. They raise new issues
for feminist debate. The volume is divided into four sections:
‘Feminist Politics in Action’ investigates the
inter-relationship between politics and action with reference to
issues such as the women's movement in Britain and women's position
in and in relation to Ireland; ‘Disrupting Sexual Identities’
provides critiques of heterosexuality, monogamy, and
conceptualization of the female body; ‘Imaging and Imagining’
explores the politics of women's cultural production and ‘Women's
Studies and Feminist Practice’ analyzes the often fraught
connections between theory and practice. This is a must read for
scholars and researchers of Women's Studies, Sociology, and Gender
Studies.
Whilst the politics of reproduction have been at the heart of
feminist struggles for over a century and a half, their analysis
has not yet come to occupy a central place in the interdisciplinary
study of citizenship. This volume takes up the challenge posed by
Bryan Turner, when he noted "the absence of any systematic thinking
about familial relations, reproduction and citizenship" (2008), and
offers the first major global collection of work exploring this
nexus of practices and political contestations. The book brings
together citizenship scholars from across Europe, the Americas, and
Australia to develop feminist and queer analyses of the
relationship between citizenship and reproduction, and to explore
the ways in which citizenship is reproduced. Extending the
foundational work of feminist political theorists and sociologists
who have interrogated the public/private dichotomy on which
traditional civic republican and liberal understandings of
citizenship rest, the contributors examine the biological, sexual,
and technological realities of natality, and the social realities
of the intimate intergenerational material and affective labour
that are generative of citizens, and that serve to reproduce
membership of, and belonging to, states, nations, societies, and
thus of "citizenship" itself. This book was published as a special
issue of Citizenship Studies.
Whilst the politics of reproduction have been at the heart of
feminist struggles for over a century and a half, their analysis
has not yet come to occupy a central place in the interdisciplinary
study of citizenship. This volume takes up the challenge posed by
Bryan Turner, when he noted "the absence of any systematic thinking
about familial relations, reproduction and citizenship" (2008), and
offers the first major global collection of work exploring this
nexus of practices and political contestations. The book brings
together citizenship scholars from across Europe, the Americas, and
Australia to develop feminist and queer analyses of the
relationship between citizenship and reproduction, and to explore
the ways in which citizenship is reproduced. Extending the
foundational work of feminist political theorists and sociologists
who have interrogated the public/private dichotomy on which
traditional civic republican and liberal understandings of
citizenship rest, the contributors examine the biological, sexual,
and technological realities of natality, and the social realities
of the intimate intergenerational material and affective labour
that are generative of citizens, and that serve to reproduce
membership of, and belonging to, states, nations, societies, and
thus of "citizenship" itself. This book was published as a special
issue of Citizenship Studies.
Stressing the variety of ways in which consumption is structured
and organized through cultures and showing how these cultural
technologies construct the person, the senses and the self, this
text stands at the interface of the sociologies of culture and
consumption. The text includes chapters on youth consumption,
cultures of the housefold, pornography, and waste and rubbish. This
will be of interest to all those concerned with the study of
culture and consumption whether from sociological, cultural or
psychological perspectives.
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