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Pursuing Intersectionality, Unsettling Dominant Imaginaries offers
a sustained, interdisciplinary exploration of intersectional ideas,
histories, and practices that no other text does. Deftly
synthesizing much of the existing literatures on intersectionality,
one of the most significant theoretical and political precepts of
our time, May invites us to confront a disconcerting problem:
though intersectionality is widely known, acclaimed, and applied,
it is often construed in ways that depoliticize, undercut, or even
violate its most basic premises. May cogently demonstrates how
intersectionality has been repeatedly resisted, misunderstood, and
misapplied: provocatively, she shows the degree to which
intersectionality is often undone or undermined by supporters and
critics alike. A clarion call to engage intersectionality's radical
ideas, histories, and justice orientations more meaningfully,
Pursuing Intersectionality answers the basic questions surrounding
intersectionality, attends to its historical roots in Black
feminist theory and politics, and offers insights and strategies
from across the disciplines for bracketing dominant logics and for
orienting toward intersectional dispositions and practices.
Vivian M. May explores the theoretical and political contributions
of Anna Julia Cooper, a renowned Black feminist scholar, educator,
and activist whose ideas deserve far more attention than they have
received. Drawing on Africana and feminist theory, May places
Cooper's theorizing in its historical contexts and offers new ways
to interpret the evolution of Cooper's visionary politics,
subversive methodology, and defiant philosophical outlook.
Rejecting notions that Cooper was an elitist duped by dominant
ideologies, May contends that Cooper's ambiguity, code-switching,
and irony should be understood as strategies of a radical
methodology of dissent. May shows how across six decades of work,
Cooper traced history's silences and delineated the workings of
power and inequality in an array of contexts, from science to
literature, economics to popular culture, religion to the law,
education to social work, and from the political to the personal.
May emphasizes that Cooper eschewed all forms of mastery and called
for critical consciousness and collective action on the part of
marginalized people at home and abroad. She concludes that in using
a border-crossing, intersectional approach, Cooper successfully
argues for theorizing from experience, develops inclusive methods
of liberation, and crafts a vision of a fundamentally egalitarian
social imaginary.
Pursuing Intersectionality, Unsettling Dominant Imaginaries offers
a sustained, interdisciplinary exploration of intersectional ideas,
histories, and practices that no other text does. Deftly
synthesizing much of the existing literatures on intersectionality,
one of the most significant theoretical and political precepts of
our time, May invites us to confront a disconcerting problem:
though intersectionality is widely known, acclaimed, and applied,
it is often construed in ways that depoliticize, undercut, or even
violate its most basic premises. May cogently demonstrates how
intersectionality has been repeatedly resisted, misunderstood, and
misapplied: provocatively, she shows the degree to which
intersectionality is often undone or undermined by supporters and
critics alike. A clarion call to engage intersectionality's radical
ideas, histories, and justice orientations more meaningfully,
Pursuing Intersectionality answers the basic questions surrounding
intersectionality, attends to its historical roots in Black
feminist theory and politics, and offers insights and strategies
from across the disciplines for bracketing dominant logics and for
orienting toward intersectional dispositions and practices.
Vivian M. May explores the theoretical and political contributions
of Anna Julia Cooper, a renowned Black feminist scholar, educator,
and activist whose ideas deserve far more attention than they have
received. Drawing on Africana and feminist theory, May places
Cooper's theorizing in its historical contexts and offers new ways
to interpret the evolution of Cooper's visionary politics,
subversive methodology, and defiant philosophical outlook.
Rejecting notions that Cooper was an elitist duped by dominant
ideologies, May contends that Cooper's ambiguity, code-switching,
and irony should be understood as strategies of a radical
methodology of dissent. May shows how across six decades of work,
Cooper traced history's silences and delineated the workings of
power and inequality in an array of contexts, from science to
literature, economics to popular culture, religion to the law,
education to social work, and from the political to the personal.
May emphasizes that Cooper eschewed all forms of mastery and called
for critical consciousness and collective action on the part of
marginalized people at home and abroad. She concludes that in using
a border-crossing, intersectional approach, Cooper successfully
argues for theorizing from experience, develops inclusive methods
of liberation, and crafts a vision of a fundamentally egalitarian
social imaginary.
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