Intersectionality
Foundations and Frontiers
Herausgeber: Grzanka, Patrick R.
Intersectionality
Foundations and Frontiers
Herausgeber: Grzanka, Patrick R.
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Intersectionality: A Foundations and Frontiers Reader is an accessible, primary-source driven exploration of intersectionality in sociology, womenâ s and gender studies, and related fields.
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Intersectionality: A Foundations and Frontiers Reader is an accessible, primary-source driven exploration of intersectionality in sociology, womenâ s and gender studies, and related fields.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- 2 ed
- Seitenzahl: 446
- Erscheinungstermin: 25. Januar 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 24mm
- Gewicht: 638g
- ISBN-13: 9781138597167
- ISBN-10: 1138597163
- Artikelnr.: 54590167
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- 2 ed
- Seitenzahl: 446
- Erscheinungstermin: 25. Januar 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 24mm
- Gewicht: 638g
- ISBN-13: 9781138597167
- ISBN-10: 1138597163
- Artikelnr.: 54590167
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Patrick R. Grzanka is an assistant professor of psychology at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. His interdisciplinary research has been supported by funding from the National Science Foundation and the Society for the Psychological Study of Social Issues, and his work has appeared in a wide range of journals, including the Journal of Counseling Psychology, Sexuality Research and Social Policy, Symbolic Interaction, American Journal of Bioethics, and WSQ: Women's Studies Quarterly.
Acknowledgements
Preface
Introduction "Intersectional Objectivity: On Knowledge and Violence" (Patrick R. Grzanka)
I. Law Introduction: Systems of Oppression (Patrick R. Grzanka)
1. "Life is Complicated, and Other Observations" (Patricia Williams)
2. "Immigrant Acts" (Lisa Lowe)
3. "The Structural and Political Dimensions of Intersectional Oppression" ( Kimberlé Williams Crenshaw)
4. "White Women's Ambivalence Toward Affirmative Action" (Sumi Cho)
II. Epistemology
Introduction: Knowledge/Power/Standpoint (Patrick R. Grzanka)
5. "Racism and Women's Studies" (Barbara Smith)
6. "Situated Knowledges and the Persistence of Vision" (Donna Haraway)
7. "The Trouble with Postmodernism" (Patricia Hill Collins)
8. "Felt Intuition" (Phillip Brian Harper)
9. "Epistemic Violence" (Kristie Dotson)
III. Identities
Introduction: The (Intersectional) Self and Society (Patrick R. Grzanka)
10. "Black Women and Welfare" (Angela Y. Davis)
11. "The 'Home' Question" (Chandra Talpade Mohanty)
12. "Identity as a Weapon of Mass Destruction" (Shuddhabrata Sengupta)
13. "'It's Not Psychology': Gender, Intersectionality and Activist Science" (Stephanie Shields)
IV. Methods
Introduction: What Do We Do Now? (Patrick R. Grzanka)
14. "Reproductive Justice" (Loretta J. Ross)
15. "When Black + Woman + Lesbian ¿ Black Lesbian Woman" (Lisa Bowleg)
16. "Intersectional Psychology: (At Least) Three Questions" ( Elizabeth R. Cole)
17. "From Intersections to Assemblages" (Jasbir K. Puar)
V. Space, Place, Communities, Geographies
Introduction: The Cartographic Imagination (Patrick R. Grzanka)
18. "Feminist Architecture" (Gloria Anzaldúa)
19. "Beyond the Flames: Sexuality, Race, and the 1968 D.C. Riots" (Kwame Holmes)
20. "The Capital of Diversity: Gentrification and Multiculturalism in Washington, D.C." (Justin T. Maher)
21. "Sex and Tourism" (Nan Alamilla Boyd)
VI. Culture and the Politics of Representation
Introduction: Media as Sites/Sights of Justice (Patrick R. Grzanka)
22. "'Why Are You Laughing?'" (bell hooks)
23. "Ambivalent Drag" (Judith Butler)
24. "Consider Phillip Devine" (C. Riley Snorton)
25. "The Sixpack as 'High Art'" (Rosalind Gill)
VII. Violence and Resistance
Introduction: On Pragmatism (Patrick R. Grzanka)
26. "Anger as a Response to Racism" (Audre Lorde)
27. "Brothermothering" (Sinikka Elliott, Joslyn Brenton, and Rachel Powell)
28. "Academia and Activism" (Patricia Ticineto Clough and Michelle Fine)
29. "#SayHerName: Digital Intersectional Activism" (Melissa Brown, Rashawn Ray, Ed Summers, and Neil Fraistat)
VIII. Nations, Borders, and Migrations
Introduction: Transnational Interventions (Patrick R. Grzanka)
30. "Transnational Feminism and Intersectionality: A Dialogue" (Sylvanna M. Falcón and Jennifer C. Nash)
31. "'A Few Bad Apples': The Antisodomy Law and the Police State in India" (Jyoti Puri)
32. "Imagine Otherwise" (Kandice Chuh)
33. "Undocuqueer: Beyond the Shadows and the Closet" (Jesus Cisneros)
IX. Politics, Rights and Justice
Introduction: Political Diffractions (Patrick R. Grzanka)
34. "The New Homonormativity" (Lisa Duggan)
35. "Sameness and Difference in Women of Color Organizing" (Zakiya Luna)
36. "A Mother's Plea for Help" (Ruth Wilson Gilmore)
37. "Do Interest Groups Represent the Disadvantaged?" (Dara Z. Strolovitch)
X. Science, Technology, Medicine, and Bodies
Introduction: Science and Technology Studies as Tools for Social Justice (Patrick R. Grzanka)
38. "Science, Race and Sexuality" ( Siobhan B. Somerville)
39. "A Tale of Two Technologies" (Laura Carpenter and Monica Casper)
40. "My So-Called Choice: Embodied Knowledge, Feminist Politics, and the Political Economy of Contraceptive Technologies" ( Chikako Takeshita)
41. "Feminist, Queer, Crip" (Alison Kafer)
Epilogue ( Lisa Bowleg)
Preface
Introduction "Intersectional Objectivity: On Knowledge and Violence" (Patrick R. Grzanka)
I. Law Introduction: Systems of Oppression (Patrick R. Grzanka)
1. "Life is Complicated, and Other Observations" (Patricia Williams)
2. "Immigrant Acts" (Lisa Lowe)
3. "The Structural and Political Dimensions of Intersectional Oppression" ( Kimberlé Williams Crenshaw)
4. "White Women's Ambivalence Toward Affirmative Action" (Sumi Cho)
II. Epistemology
Introduction: Knowledge/Power/Standpoint (Patrick R. Grzanka)
5. "Racism and Women's Studies" (Barbara Smith)
6. "Situated Knowledges and the Persistence of Vision" (Donna Haraway)
7. "The Trouble with Postmodernism" (Patricia Hill Collins)
8. "Felt Intuition" (Phillip Brian Harper)
9. "Epistemic Violence" (Kristie Dotson)
III. Identities
Introduction: The (Intersectional) Self and Society (Patrick R. Grzanka)
10. "Black Women and Welfare" (Angela Y. Davis)
11. "The 'Home' Question" (Chandra Talpade Mohanty)
12. "Identity as a Weapon of Mass Destruction" (Shuddhabrata Sengupta)
13. "'It's Not Psychology': Gender, Intersectionality and Activist Science" (Stephanie Shields)
IV. Methods
Introduction: What Do We Do Now? (Patrick R. Grzanka)
14. "Reproductive Justice" (Loretta J. Ross)
15. "When Black + Woman + Lesbian ¿ Black Lesbian Woman" (Lisa Bowleg)
16. "Intersectional Psychology: (At Least) Three Questions" ( Elizabeth R. Cole)
17. "From Intersections to Assemblages" (Jasbir K. Puar)
V. Space, Place, Communities, Geographies
Introduction: The Cartographic Imagination (Patrick R. Grzanka)
18. "Feminist Architecture" (Gloria Anzaldúa)
19. "Beyond the Flames: Sexuality, Race, and the 1968 D.C. Riots" (Kwame Holmes)
20. "The Capital of Diversity: Gentrification and Multiculturalism in Washington, D.C." (Justin T. Maher)
21. "Sex and Tourism" (Nan Alamilla Boyd)
VI. Culture and the Politics of Representation
Introduction: Media as Sites/Sights of Justice (Patrick R. Grzanka)
22. "'Why Are You Laughing?'" (bell hooks)
23. "Ambivalent Drag" (Judith Butler)
24. "Consider Phillip Devine" (C. Riley Snorton)
25. "The Sixpack as 'High Art'" (Rosalind Gill)
VII. Violence and Resistance
Introduction: On Pragmatism (Patrick R. Grzanka)
26. "Anger as a Response to Racism" (Audre Lorde)
27. "Brothermothering" (Sinikka Elliott, Joslyn Brenton, and Rachel Powell)
28. "Academia and Activism" (Patricia Ticineto Clough and Michelle Fine)
29. "#SayHerName: Digital Intersectional Activism" (Melissa Brown, Rashawn Ray, Ed Summers, and Neil Fraistat)
VIII. Nations, Borders, and Migrations
Introduction: Transnational Interventions (Patrick R. Grzanka)
30. "Transnational Feminism and Intersectionality: A Dialogue" (Sylvanna M. Falcón and Jennifer C. Nash)
31. "'A Few Bad Apples': The Antisodomy Law and the Police State in India" (Jyoti Puri)
32. "Imagine Otherwise" (Kandice Chuh)
33. "Undocuqueer: Beyond the Shadows and the Closet" (Jesus Cisneros)
IX. Politics, Rights and Justice
Introduction: Political Diffractions (Patrick R. Grzanka)
34. "The New Homonormativity" (Lisa Duggan)
35. "Sameness and Difference in Women of Color Organizing" (Zakiya Luna)
36. "A Mother's Plea for Help" (Ruth Wilson Gilmore)
37. "Do Interest Groups Represent the Disadvantaged?" (Dara Z. Strolovitch)
X. Science, Technology, Medicine, and Bodies
Introduction: Science and Technology Studies as Tools for Social Justice (Patrick R. Grzanka)
38. "Science, Race and Sexuality" ( Siobhan B. Somerville)
39. "A Tale of Two Technologies" (Laura Carpenter and Monica Casper)
40. "My So-Called Choice: Embodied Knowledge, Feminist Politics, and the Political Economy of Contraceptive Technologies" ( Chikako Takeshita)
41. "Feminist, Queer, Crip" (Alison Kafer)
Epilogue ( Lisa Bowleg)
Acknowledgements
Preface
Introduction "Intersectional Objectivity: On Knowledge and Violence" (Patrick R. Grzanka)
I. Law Introduction: Systems of Oppression (Patrick R. Grzanka)
1. "Life is Complicated, and Other Observations" (Patricia Williams)
2. "Immigrant Acts" (Lisa Lowe)
3. "The Structural and Political Dimensions of Intersectional Oppression" ( Kimberlé Williams Crenshaw)
4. "White Women's Ambivalence Toward Affirmative Action" (Sumi Cho)
II. Epistemology
Introduction: Knowledge/Power/Standpoint (Patrick R. Grzanka)
5. "Racism and Women's Studies" (Barbara Smith)
6. "Situated Knowledges and the Persistence of Vision" (Donna Haraway)
7. "The Trouble with Postmodernism" (Patricia Hill Collins)
8. "Felt Intuition" (Phillip Brian Harper)
9. "Epistemic Violence" (Kristie Dotson)
III. Identities
Introduction: The (Intersectional) Self and Society (Patrick R. Grzanka)
10. "Black Women and Welfare" (Angela Y. Davis)
11. "The 'Home' Question" (Chandra Talpade Mohanty)
12. "Identity as a Weapon of Mass Destruction" (Shuddhabrata Sengupta)
13. "'It's Not Psychology': Gender, Intersectionality and Activist Science" (Stephanie Shields)
IV. Methods
Introduction: What Do We Do Now? (Patrick R. Grzanka)
14. "Reproductive Justice" (Loretta J. Ross)
15. "When Black + Woman + Lesbian ¿ Black Lesbian Woman" (Lisa Bowleg)
16. "Intersectional Psychology: (At Least) Three Questions" ( Elizabeth R. Cole)
17. "From Intersections to Assemblages" (Jasbir K. Puar)
V. Space, Place, Communities, Geographies
Introduction: The Cartographic Imagination (Patrick R. Grzanka)
18. "Feminist Architecture" (Gloria Anzaldúa)
19. "Beyond the Flames: Sexuality, Race, and the 1968 D.C. Riots" (Kwame Holmes)
20. "The Capital of Diversity: Gentrification and Multiculturalism in Washington, D.C." (Justin T. Maher)
21. "Sex and Tourism" (Nan Alamilla Boyd)
VI. Culture and the Politics of Representation
Introduction: Media as Sites/Sights of Justice (Patrick R. Grzanka)
22. "'Why Are You Laughing?'" (bell hooks)
23. "Ambivalent Drag" (Judith Butler)
24. "Consider Phillip Devine" (C. Riley Snorton)
25. "The Sixpack as 'High Art'" (Rosalind Gill)
VII. Violence and Resistance
Introduction: On Pragmatism (Patrick R. Grzanka)
26. "Anger as a Response to Racism" (Audre Lorde)
27. "Brothermothering" (Sinikka Elliott, Joslyn Brenton, and Rachel Powell)
28. "Academia and Activism" (Patricia Ticineto Clough and Michelle Fine)
29. "#SayHerName: Digital Intersectional Activism" (Melissa Brown, Rashawn Ray, Ed Summers, and Neil Fraistat)
VIII. Nations, Borders, and Migrations
Introduction: Transnational Interventions (Patrick R. Grzanka)
30. "Transnational Feminism and Intersectionality: A Dialogue" (Sylvanna M. Falcón and Jennifer C. Nash)
31. "'A Few Bad Apples': The Antisodomy Law and the Police State in India" (Jyoti Puri)
32. "Imagine Otherwise" (Kandice Chuh)
33. "Undocuqueer: Beyond the Shadows and the Closet" (Jesus Cisneros)
IX. Politics, Rights and Justice
Introduction: Political Diffractions (Patrick R. Grzanka)
34. "The New Homonormativity" (Lisa Duggan)
35. "Sameness and Difference in Women of Color Organizing" (Zakiya Luna)
36. "A Mother's Plea for Help" (Ruth Wilson Gilmore)
37. "Do Interest Groups Represent the Disadvantaged?" (Dara Z. Strolovitch)
X. Science, Technology, Medicine, and Bodies
Introduction: Science and Technology Studies as Tools for Social Justice (Patrick R. Grzanka)
38. "Science, Race and Sexuality" ( Siobhan B. Somerville)
39. "A Tale of Two Technologies" (Laura Carpenter and Monica Casper)
40. "My So-Called Choice: Embodied Knowledge, Feminist Politics, and the Political Economy of Contraceptive Technologies" ( Chikako Takeshita)
41. "Feminist, Queer, Crip" (Alison Kafer)
Epilogue ( Lisa Bowleg)
Preface
Introduction "Intersectional Objectivity: On Knowledge and Violence" (Patrick R. Grzanka)
I. Law Introduction: Systems of Oppression (Patrick R. Grzanka)
1. "Life is Complicated, and Other Observations" (Patricia Williams)
2. "Immigrant Acts" (Lisa Lowe)
3. "The Structural and Political Dimensions of Intersectional Oppression" ( Kimberlé Williams Crenshaw)
4. "White Women's Ambivalence Toward Affirmative Action" (Sumi Cho)
II. Epistemology
Introduction: Knowledge/Power/Standpoint (Patrick R. Grzanka)
5. "Racism and Women's Studies" (Barbara Smith)
6. "Situated Knowledges and the Persistence of Vision" (Donna Haraway)
7. "The Trouble with Postmodernism" (Patricia Hill Collins)
8. "Felt Intuition" (Phillip Brian Harper)
9. "Epistemic Violence" (Kristie Dotson)
III. Identities
Introduction: The (Intersectional) Self and Society (Patrick R. Grzanka)
10. "Black Women and Welfare" (Angela Y. Davis)
11. "The 'Home' Question" (Chandra Talpade Mohanty)
12. "Identity as a Weapon of Mass Destruction" (Shuddhabrata Sengupta)
13. "'It's Not Psychology': Gender, Intersectionality and Activist Science" (Stephanie Shields)
IV. Methods
Introduction: What Do We Do Now? (Patrick R. Grzanka)
14. "Reproductive Justice" (Loretta J. Ross)
15. "When Black + Woman + Lesbian ¿ Black Lesbian Woman" (Lisa Bowleg)
16. "Intersectional Psychology: (At Least) Three Questions" ( Elizabeth R. Cole)
17. "From Intersections to Assemblages" (Jasbir K. Puar)
V. Space, Place, Communities, Geographies
Introduction: The Cartographic Imagination (Patrick R. Grzanka)
18. "Feminist Architecture" (Gloria Anzaldúa)
19. "Beyond the Flames: Sexuality, Race, and the 1968 D.C. Riots" (Kwame Holmes)
20. "The Capital of Diversity: Gentrification and Multiculturalism in Washington, D.C." (Justin T. Maher)
21. "Sex and Tourism" (Nan Alamilla Boyd)
VI. Culture and the Politics of Representation
Introduction: Media as Sites/Sights of Justice (Patrick R. Grzanka)
22. "'Why Are You Laughing?'" (bell hooks)
23. "Ambivalent Drag" (Judith Butler)
24. "Consider Phillip Devine" (C. Riley Snorton)
25. "The Sixpack as 'High Art'" (Rosalind Gill)
VII. Violence and Resistance
Introduction: On Pragmatism (Patrick R. Grzanka)
26. "Anger as a Response to Racism" (Audre Lorde)
27. "Brothermothering" (Sinikka Elliott, Joslyn Brenton, and Rachel Powell)
28. "Academia and Activism" (Patricia Ticineto Clough and Michelle Fine)
29. "#SayHerName: Digital Intersectional Activism" (Melissa Brown, Rashawn Ray, Ed Summers, and Neil Fraistat)
VIII. Nations, Borders, and Migrations
Introduction: Transnational Interventions (Patrick R. Grzanka)
30. "Transnational Feminism and Intersectionality: A Dialogue" (Sylvanna M. Falcón and Jennifer C. Nash)
31. "'A Few Bad Apples': The Antisodomy Law and the Police State in India" (Jyoti Puri)
32. "Imagine Otherwise" (Kandice Chuh)
33. "Undocuqueer: Beyond the Shadows and the Closet" (Jesus Cisneros)
IX. Politics, Rights and Justice
Introduction: Political Diffractions (Patrick R. Grzanka)
34. "The New Homonormativity" (Lisa Duggan)
35. "Sameness and Difference in Women of Color Organizing" (Zakiya Luna)
36. "A Mother's Plea for Help" (Ruth Wilson Gilmore)
37. "Do Interest Groups Represent the Disadvantaged?" (Dara Z. Strolovitch)
X. Science, Technology, Medicine, and Bodies
Introduction: Science and Technology Studies as Tools for Social Justice (Patrick R. Grzanka)
38. "Science, Race and Sexuality" ( Siobhan B. Somerville)
39. "A Tale of Two Technologies" (Laura Carpenter and Monica Casper)
40. "My So-Called Choice: Embodied Knowledge, Feminist Politics, and the Political Economy of Contraceptive Technologies" ( Chikako Takeshita)
41. "Feminist, Queer, Crip" (Alison Kafer)
Epilogue ( Lisa Bowleg)