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This book offers writings by established and emerging scholars working in a Black feminist tradition, widening the sociology canon to feature Black feminist sociologists both outside the US and the academy - exploring their sociological legacy of intellectual development to raise critical questions of thought and self-reflexivity.
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This book offers writings by established and emerging scholars working in a Black feminist tradition, widening the sociology canon to feature Black feminist sociologists both outside the US and the academy - exploring their sociological legacy of intellectual development to raise critical questions of thought and self-reflexivity.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 324
- Erscheinungstermin: 30. September 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 226mm x 152mm x 25mm
- Gewicht: 499g
- ISBN-13: 9781032057538
- ISBN-10: 103205753X
- Artikelnr.: 62113737
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 324
- Erscheinungstermin: 30. September 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 226mm x 152mm x 25mm
- Gewicht: 499g
- ISBN-13: 9781032057538
- ISBN-10: 103205753X
- Artikelnr.: 62113737
Zakiya Luna is Associate Professor of Sociology and Dean's Distinguished Professorial Scholar at Washington University in Saint Louis. Her research, teaching and community work are in the areas of social movements, human rights and health. Her research on the reproductive justice movement includes the book Reproductive Rights as Human Rights: Women of Color and the Fight for Reproductive Justice (NYU Press). Whitney N. Laster Pirtle is Assistant Professor of Sociology and McArthur Foundation Chair in International Justice and Human Rights at the University of California, Merced, where she directs the Sociology of Health and Equity (SHE) Lab. She is a critical race, Black feminist scholar currently studying disparities in COVID-19, racial formation in South Africa and racism on college campuses.
Introduction: Black Feminist Sociology is the Past, Present, and Future of
Sociology. Period.
Part 1: Revisiting Legacies of Black Feminist Sociology and How They Ground
Us
1. Black Feminist Sociology: An Interview with Patricia Hill Collins
2. The Black Feminist Roots of Scholar-Activism: Lessons from Ida B.
Wells-Barnett
3. The Radical Black Feminist Project: Reimagining a Critical Sociology
4. The Language Through Which Black Feminist Theory Speaks: A Conversation
with Jennifer C. Nash
Part 2: Black Feminist Sociological Communities and How They Speak to Us
5. Reflections on Re-Creating Biological Race and the Entrapment of Black
People
6. Centering Us: What Doing Black Feminist Sociology Really Looks Like
7. Nothing About Us, Without Us: Reinscribing Black Feminism in Sociology
8. #BlackGirlMagic and its Complexities
9. Learning, Teaching, Re-Membering, and Enacting Black Feminist Sociology
at a Black Women's College: A Love Letter to One Another
Part 3: Black Feminist Sociology Epistemologies and What They Reveal to Us
10. Black Feminist Sociology and The Politic of Space and Place at the
Intersection of Race, Class, Gender, and Sexuality
11. Global Health and BFS: Diasporic Research and Interventions Rooted in
Advocacy
12. Family Background and the Meanings of Economic Autonomy for Black
Lesbian Women
13. 'Kantsaywhere': Black African Women inside the Australian Racial
Crucible
14. Black Feminist Piety: A Framework for Engaging Islam in Black Feminist
Sociology
Part 4: Black Feminist Sociological Methodologies and What They Teach Us
15. Love, Loss and Loyalty: A Black Feminist Reading of Black Girlhood
16. Black Feminist Epistemological Methodology: Bridging Theory and Methods
to Research Health and Illness
17. Employing Community-based Participatory Research to Create Oppositional
Knowledge as a Black Feminist
18. Doing it for Ourselves: Research Justice and Black Feminist Sociology
19. For a Black Feminist Digital Sociology
Part 5: Imagining Black Feminist Sociological Futures and What They Create
for Us
20. Allyship in the Time of Aggrievement: The Case of Black Feminism and
the New Black Masculinities
21. Theorizing Embodied Carcerality: A Black Feminist Sociology of
Punishment
22. Too Intersectional: What Black Feminism and Disability Studies Can
Build Together
23. We Major: Historical Black Trans Feminism Fights Back
24. Exploring the Black Feminist Imagination
Sociology. Period.
Part 1: Revisiting Legacies of Black Feminist Sociology and How They Ground
Us
1. Black Feminist Sociology: An Interview with Patricia Hill Collins
2. The Black Feminist Roots of Scholar-Activism: Lessons from Ida B.
Wells-Barnett
3. The Radical Black Feminist Project: Reimagining a Critical Sociology
4. The Language Through Which Black Feminist Theory Speaks: A Conversation
with Jennifer C. Nash
Part 2: Black Feminist Sociological Communities and How They Speak to Us
5. Reflections on Re-Creating Biological Race and the Entrapment of Black
People
6. Centering Us: What Doing Black Feminist Sociology Really Looks Like
7. Nothing About Us, Without Us: Reinscribing Black Feminism in Sociology
8. #BlackGirlMagic and its Complexities
9. Learning, Teaching, Re-Membering, and Enacting Black Feminist Sociology
at a Black Women's College: A Love Letter to One Another
Part 3: Black Feminist Sociology Epistemologies and What They Reveal to Us
10. Black Feminist Sociology and The Politic of Space and Place at the
Intersection of Race, Class, Gender, and Sexuality
11. Global Health and BFS: Diasporic Research and Interventions Rooted in
Advocacy
12. Family Background and the Meanings of Economic Autonomy for Black
Lesbian Women
13. 'Kantsaywhere': Black African Women inside the Australian Racial
Crucible
14. Black Feminist Piety: A Framework for Engaging Islam in Black Feminist
Sociology
Part 4: Black Feminist Sociological Methodologies and What They Teach Us
15. Love, Loss and Loyalty: A Black Feminist Reading of Black Girlhood
16. Black Feminist Epistemological Methodology: Bridging Theory and Methods
to Research Health and Illness
17. Employing Community-based Participatory Research to Create Oppositional
Knowledge as a Black Feminist
18. Doing it for Ourselves: Research Justice and Black Feminist Sociology
19. For a Black Feminist Digital Sociology
Part 5: Imagining Black Feminist Sociological Futures and What They Create
for Us
20. Allyship in the Time of Aggrievement: The Case of Black Feminism and
the New Black Masculinities
21. Theorizing Embodied Carcerality: A Black Feminist Sociology of
Punishment
22. Too Intersectional: What Black Feminism and Disability Studies Can
Build Together
23. We Major: Historical Black Trans Feminism Fights Back
24. Exploring the Black Feminist Imagination
Introduction: Black Feminist Sociology is the Past, Present, and Future of
Sociology. Period.
Part 1: Revisiting Legacies of Black Feminist Sociology and How They Ground
Us
1. Black Feminist Sociology: An Interview with Patricia Hill Collins
2. The Black Feminist Roots of Scholar-Activism: Lessons from Ida B.
Wells-Barnett
3. The Radical Black Feminist Project: Reimagining a Critical Sociology
4. The Language Through Which Black Feminist Theory Speaks: A Conversation
with Jennifer C. Nash
Part 2: Black Feminist Sociological Communities and How They Speak to Us
5. Reflections on Re-Creating Biological Race and the Entrapment of Black
People
6. Centering Us: What Doing Black Feminist Sociology Really Looks Like
7. Nothing About Us, Without Us: Reinscribing Black Feminism in Sociology
8. #BlackGirlMagic and its Complexities
9. Learning, Teaching, Re-Membering, and Enacting Black Feminist Sociology
at a Black Women's College: A Love Letter to One Another
Part 3: Black Feminist Sociology Epistemologies and What They Reveal to Us
10. Black Feminist Sociology and The Politic of Space and Place at the
Intersection of Race, Class, Gender, and Sexuality
11. Global Health and BFS: Diasporic Research and Interventions Rooted in
Advocacy
12. Family Background and the Meanings of Economic Autonomy for Black
Lesbian Women
13. 'Kantsaywhere': Black African Women inside the Australian Racial
Crucible
14. Black Feminist Piety: A Framework for Engaging Islam in Black Feminist
Sociology
Part 4: Black Feminist Sociological Methodologies and What They Teach Us
15. Love, Loss and Loyalty: A Black Feminist Reading of Black Girlhood
16. Black Feminist Epistemological Methodology: Bridging Theory and Methods
to Research Health and Illness
17. Employing Community-based Participatory Research to Create Oppositional
Knowledge as a Black Feminist
18. Doing it for Ourselves: Research Justice and Black Feminist Sociology
19. For a Black Feminist Digital Sociology
Part 5: Imagining Black Feminist Sociological Futures and What They Create
for Us
20. Allyship in the Time of Aggrievement: The Case of Black Feminism and
the New Black Masculinities
21. Theorizing Embodied Carcerality: A Black Feminist Sociology of
Punishment
22. Too Intersectional: What Black Feminism and Disability Studies Can
Build Together
23. We Major: Historical Black Trans Feminism Fights Back
24. Exploring the Black Feminist Imagination
Sociology. Period.
Part 1: Revisiting Legacies of Black Feminist Sociology and How They Ground
Us
1. Black Feminist Sociology: An Interview with Patricia Hill Collins
2. The Black Feminist Roots of Scholar-Activism: Lessons from Ida B.
Wells-Barnett
3. The Radical Black Feminist Project: Reimagining a Critical Sociology
4. The Language Through Which Black Feminist Theory Speaks: A Conversation
with Jennifer C. Nash
Part 2: Black Feminist Sociological Communities and How They Speak to Us
5. Reflections on Re-Creating Biological Race and the Entrapment of Black
People
6. Centering Us: What Doing Black Feminist Sociology Really Looks Like
7. Nothing About Us, Without Us: Reinscribing Black Feminism in Sociology
8. #BlackGirlMagic and its Complexities
9. Learning, Teaching, Re-Membering, and Enacting Black Feminist Sociology
at a Black Women's College: A Love Letter to One Another
Part 3: Black Feminist Sociology Epistemologies and What They Reveal to Us
10. Black Feminist Sociology and The Politic of Space and Place at the
Intersection of Race, Class, Gender, and Sexuality
11. Global Health and BFS: Diasporic Research and Interventions Rooted in
Advocacy
12. Family Background and the Meanings of Economic Autonomy for Black
Lesbian Women
13. 'Kantsaywhere': Black African Women inside the Australian Racial
Crucible
14. Black Feminist Piety: A Framework for Engaging Islam in Black Feminist
Sociology
Part 4: Black Feminist Sociological Methodologies and What They Teach Us
15. Love, Loss and Loyalty: A Black Feminist Reading of Black Girlhood
16. Black Feminist Epistemological Methodology: Bridging Theory and Methods
to Research Health and Illness
17. Employing Community-based Participatory Research to Create Oppositional
Knowledge as a Black Feminist
18. Doing it for Ourselves: Research Justice and Black Feminist Sociology
19. For a Black Feminist Digital Sociology
Part 5: Imagining Black Feminist Sociological Futures and What They Create
for Us
20. Allyship in the Time of Aggrievement: The Case of Black Feminism and
the New Black Masculinities
21. Theorizing Embodied Carcerality: A Black Feminist Sociology of
Punishment
22. Too Intersectional: What Black Feminism and Disability Studies Can
Build Together
23. We Major: Historical Black Trans Feminism Fights Back
24. Exploring the Black Feminist Imagination