This book rethinks security theory from a feminist perspective - uniquely, it engages feminism, security, and strategic studies to provide a distinct feminist approach to Security Studies.
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'This book lucidly articulates a narrative feminist approach in critical security studies
and offers a constructive research strategy for studying contextual security
narratives.' -- Xymena Kuroswka, European Security
'.. an important theoretical contribution to debates over the politics and practices of security. Wibben offers the first full volume outlining the productive possibilities of integrating narratology and security studies and as such this book deserves to be taken seriously, read widely and cited often.'-- Laura J. Shepherd, International Feminist Journal of Politics
'Wibben's book is a renewed wakeup call for security studies scholars caught in the epistemological and methodological traps of the field.' -- Megan H. MacKenzie, Journal of Contemporary European Studies
'Given the sustained engagement with a narrative approach to IR, this book should be widely adopted in graduate International Relations, International Security and Gender studies courses, where stimulating research and innovative doctoral projects will likely be sparked by it.' - Maria Martin de Almagro, e-IR
and offers a constructive research strategy for studying contextual security
narratives.' -- Xymena Kuroswka, European Security
'.. an important theoretical contribution to debates over the politics and practices of security. Wibben offers the first full volume outlining the productive possibilities of integrating narratology and security studies and as such this book deserves to be taken seriously, read widely and cited often.'-- Laura J. Shepherd, International Feminist Journal of Politics
'Wibben's book is a renewed wakeup call for security studies scholars caught in the epistemological and methodological traps of the field.' -- Megan H. MacKenzie, Journal of Contemporary European Studies
'Given the sustained engagement with a narrative approach to IR, this book should be widely adopted in graduate International Relations, International Security and Gender studies courses, where stimulating research and innovative doctoral projects will likely be sparked by it.' - Maria Martin de Almagro, e-IR