Christine Sylvester is Professor of Women and Development Studies at the Institute of Social Studies, The Hague, Netherlands. Her publications include Producing Women and Progress in Zimbabwe: Narratives of Identity and Work from the 1980s (2000), Feminist Theory and International Relations in a Postmodern Era (1994) and Zimbabwe: The Terrain of Contradictory Development (1991).
Part I. Introductions: Part II. Sightings: 1. Handmaids' tales of Washington power: the abject and the real Kennedy White House
2. Reginas in international relations: occlusions, cooperations, and Zimbabwean cooperatives
3. The white paper trailing
4. Picturing the Cold War
an eyegraft/art graft
5. Four international Dianas: Andy's tribute
Part III. Sitings: 6. The emperors theories and transformations
looking at the field through feminist lenses
7. Feminists and realists view autonomy and obligation in international relations
8. Some dangers in merging feminist and peace projects
9. Gendered development imaginaries: shall we dance Pygmalion?
10. Emphatic cooperation: a feminist method for IR
Part IV. Citings: 11. Feminist arts of international relations
12. Internations of feminism and international relations.