Results for ' masculinity, sexuality, colonization, colonial troops'

982 found
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  1.  44
    Warrior Races and masculinity in the colonies. A historiographic essay.Vincent Joly - 2011 - Clio 33:139-156.
    La masculinité est un parent pauvre de l’historiographie impériale. L’image traditionnelle d’un colonisé sans virilité, féminisé, est cependant remise en cause, au moins en apparence, par l’invention de la notion de « races guerrières ». Dans les sociétés européennes qui font du soldat un idéal masculin, comment situer ce « guerrier » indigène? Ces quelques pages visent à faire le point sur cette question à partir de publications récentes.
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  2. Women, Gender and Sexualities in colonial Maghreb (1830-1962). [REVIEW]Christelle Taraud - 2011 - Clio 33:157-191.
    Dans cet article, Christelle Taraud revient sur trente ans d’histoire des femmes, du genre et des sexualités au Maghreb à l’époque coloniale (1830-1962). Mettant l’accent sur l’apport fondamental des gender, subaltern & colonial studies, l’article vise aussi à faire un bilan critique des avancées, et au contraire des absences et résistances dans un champ qui, au moins depuis les années 1970, est en voie de constitution. Au cœur de l’article, cinq grandes thématiques – colonisation, peuplement et femmes européennes ; (...)
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  3. Not an Indian Tradition: The Sexual Colonization of Native Peoples.Andrea Smith - 2003 - Hypatia 18 (2):70-85.
    This paper analyzes the connections between sexual violence and colonialism in the lives and histories of Native peoples in the United States. This paper argues that sexual violence does not simply just occur within the process of colonialism, but that colonialism is itself structured by the logic of sexual violence. Furthermore, this logic of sexual violence continues to structure U. S. policies toward Native peoples today. Consequently, anti-sexual violence and anti-colonial struggles cannot be separated.
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  4.  34
    Colluding Patriarchies: The Colonial Reform of Sexual Relations in IndiaWomen and Law in Colonial India: A Social HistoryColonial Masculinity: The "Manly Englishman" and the "Effeminate Bengali" in the Late Nineteenth CenturyRewriting History: The Life and Times of Pandita RamabaiSocial Reform, Sexuality, and the State.Ashwini Tambe, Janaki Nair, Mrinalini Sinha, Uma Chakravarti & Patricia Uberoi - 2000 - Feminist Studies 26 (3):586.
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  5.  14
    Colonial Dependence and Sexual Difference: Reading for Gender in the Writings of Simón Bolívar (1783–1830).Catherine Davies - 2005 - Feminist Review 79 (1):5-19.
    The article explores the textual construction of gender categories in the political discourse of Simón Bolívar by means of a close critical reading of his seminal writings made public between 1812 and 1820. The historical and political processes known as Latin American independence constitute a moment of radical transformation. It was during this period that the questions of political rights, nationality and citizenship were most open to debate throughout the continent. The article shows how the category woman is constructed ambiguously (...)
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  6.  17
    At the Beginning, There was the Mask.Françoise Vergès - 2023 - Substance 52 (1):54-59.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:At the Beginning, There was the MaskFrançoise Vergès (bio)There is a long history to be told about the links between the economy of extractivism and exhaustion, between colonialism, race, capitalism, imperialism, and breathing, which could be summarized as the "struggle against suffocation and for life." Colonialism (slavery and post-slavery), race, and capitalism are all about un-breathing, about the toxicity of social, cultural, sexual and "natural" environments, about silencing, erasing (...)
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  7.  40
    Gender and technology in Frantz Fanon: Confrontations of the clinical and political.William Michael Paris - 2019 - Philosophy Compass 14 (9):e12616.
    One of the most pertinent sites of investigation in Fanon studies is the question of how Fanon theorizes the imbrication of gender with that of race and colonialism. For many, his silence or disavowals, whether explicit or implicit, allow an uncritical masculinism to slip into his theories of subjectivity, subjugation, and revolution. This article contributes to these discussions by arguing that for Fanon, gender and race are colonial technologies rather than natural sites of experience. Bringing together Fanon's recently translated (...)
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  8.  12
    Re-embodying Syrinx in the ancient Peloponnese and French colonial Belle Époque: Investigating bodily change associated with sexual assault.Melanie Chilianis - 2021 - European Journal of Women's Studies 28 (2):145-158.
    This article investigates related contexts and connections that both hide and display the coercion and sexual violence manifest in Western cultural and aesthetic artefacts during ancient Greek and Roman eras and the French imperialist epoch. Exploring ‘Pan and Syrinx’ from Ovid’s ‘Book I’ of the Metamorphoses and Claude Debussy’s Syrinx for solo flute, I historicise the meanings of rape and sexual assault that informed Ovid’s epic and then revisit the genesis of Debussy’s Syrinx because of the uneasy elements surrounding its (...)
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  9.  16
    Violent Inheritance: Sexuality, Land, and Energy in Making the North American West.Nathan Stormer - 2023 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 56 (2):199-205.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:Violent Inheritance: Sexuality, Land, and Energy in Making the North American West by E. CramNathan StormerViolent Inheritance: Sexuality, Land, and Energy in Making the North American West. By E. Cram. Oakland: University of California Press, 2022. 292 pp. Cloth $85.00, paper $34.95. ISBN: 0520379470.E. Cram’s Violent Inheritance is an exceptional work that presents a distinctive synthesis of queer, decolonial, and mixed-method scholarship. The goal of the book, Cram (...)
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  10.  29
    Ideologies of Masculinity and Femininity in the Projection of the ‘National Language’: Gendered Discourse of Hindi–Urdu Dichotomization and Standardization.Atul Kumar Singh & Prabha Shankar Dwivedi - 2023 - Journal of Human Values 29 (3):274-284.
    This article takes the linguistic space of North India during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries and tries to see how a nationalistic linguistic ideology that was shaping up at that time, creating Hindi and Urdu linguistic communities, used gender as a tool to portray and assert a masculinist vision of language and nation. It involved not just censoring certain representations of women and their cultural spaces, but also using the issue of ‘vulgar’ representations as a premise to marginalize certain languages (...)
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  11.  27
    Pensamento pós-colonial, gênero e poder em María Lugones: multiplicidade ontológica e multiculturalismo.Guilherme Paiva de Carvalho - 2022 - Trans/Form/Ação 45 (spe):311-338.
    Resumo: O artigo objetiva refletir sobre as concepções de gênero, poder, multiplicidade e multiculturalismo, em María Lugones, analisando o modo como sua teoria se associa ao pensamento pós-colonial. Para tanto, aborda a perspectiva do pensamento pós-colonial e a noção de colonialidade do poder, considerando o sistema moderno/colonial de gênero. As teorias pós-coloniais criticam o paradigma epistemológico do Ocidente e a hierarquização baseada na distinção entre humanos e não humanos, colonizador e colonizado. Em sua análise do sistema moderno/ (...), María Lugones introduz a ideia de gênero na reflexão acerca das relações de poder. A teoria de Oyèronké Oyӗwùmí é uma referência para María Lugones, que desenvolve uma concepção de intersecção de raça, classe, gênero e sexualidade, propondo um feminismo decolonial baseado na identificação de formas de resistência e coalizão para emancipação.: The article reflects on María Lugones’s concepts of gender, power, multiplicity, and multiculturalism, analyzing the way her theory is associated with postcolonial thought. In order to do so, it aproaches the perspective of postcolonial thought, and the notion of coloniality of power, considering the colonial/modern gender system. The postcolonial theories criticize the Western epistemological paradigm, and hierarchy based on the distinction between human and non-human, colonizer and colonized. When analyzing the colonial/modern system, María Lugones’s perspective introduces the concept of gender in the analyses of the power relationships. Oyèronké Oyӗwùmí’s theory of gender is a reference to María Lugones. In the analysis of the coloniality of power, Lugones develops the idea of the intersection of race, class, gender, and sexuality, proposing decolonial feminism based on the identification of forms of resistance, and coalition in social movements for emancipation. (shrink)
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  12.  67
    Comparative Philosophy and Decolonial Struggle: The Epistemic Injustice of Colonization and Liberation of Human Reason.Grant J. Silva - 2019 - Southern Journal of Philosophy 57 (S1):107-134.
    This essay explores the extent to which comparative philosophy can assist decolonial struggle. In order to accomplish this task, I offer not only a description of philosophy's colonization but also an account of how this discipline remains subject to the coloniality of knowledge. In short, insofar as race, gender, class, and sexuality are considered irrelevant or accidental to the production of philosophical knowledge, professional philosophy replicates, if not continues, what Rajeev Bhargava terms the epistemic injustice of colonialism. One response to (...)
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  13.  71
    « I have the honor of submitting a complaint against my wife ».Conjugal litigation and colonial administration in the Belgian Congo (1930-1960). [REVIEW]Amandine Lauro - 2011 - Clio 33:65-84.
    Au sortir de la Première Guerre mondiale, le Congo belge est gagné par une rhétorique de « crise du mariage » dont la multiplication des litiges conjugaux semble un symptôme. Ces litiges envahissent non seulement les tribunaux mais aussi les bureaux de poste de l’administration coloniale via des courriers de colonisés qui réclament le règlement de leurs contentieux matrimoniaux. Cet article propose des pistes d’analyse de cette production écrite qui révèle un certain désarroi masculin face au brouillage des repères matrimoniaux (...)
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  14.  19
    Korean “Comfort Women”: The Intersection of Colonial Power, Gender, and Class.Pyong Gap Min - 2003 - Gender and Society 17 (6):938-957.
    During the Asian and Pacific War, the Japanese government mobilized approximately 200,000 Asian women to military brothels to sexually serve Japanese soldiers. The majority of these victims were unmarried young women from Korea, Japan’s colony at that time. In the early 1990s, Korean feminist leaders helped more than 200 Korean survivors of Japanese military sexual slavery to come forward to tell the truth, which has further accelerated the redress movement for the women. One major issue in the redress movement and (...)
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  15.  63
    Christianity and Colonial Discourse in Joanna Baillie's The Bride.Christine Colón - 2002 - Renascence 54 (3):163-176.
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  16.  25
    De/colonizing, Colonial, and Indigenous Education, Studies, and Theories.Stephanie L. Daza & Eve Tuck - 2014 - Educational Studies: A Jrnl of the American Educ. Studies Assoc 50 (4):307-312.
  17. Masculinities, Sexualities and Love.[author unknown] - 2019
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  18.  35
    Anxious Masculinity: Sexual Jealousy in Early Modern England.Mark Breitenberg - 1993 - Feminist Studies 19 (2):377.
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  19.  61
    Deep Translation and Subversive Formalism.David A. Colón - 2012 - Journal of Philosophy: A Cross-Disciplinary Inquiry 7 (17):11-27.
    Salomón de la Selva (1893-1959) was a Nicaraguan writer/activist who authored many books of verse in Spanish, but only one in English: TropicalTown, And Other Poems (1918). Published in New York by John Lane–and regarded by Silvio Sirias as the first book of English verse published in the U.S.by a Latin American–Tropical Town exhibits a curious dynamic of avantgarde impulse: radically subversive in invoking counter-politics resisting U.S. colonial transnationalism, yet tending toward inherited, traditional aesthetic forms of poetry meant to (...)
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  20. Nancy J. Chodorow, Femininities, Masculinities, Sexualities: Freud and Beyond.E. Jordan - forthcoming - Radical Philosophy.
  21.  15
    Biological predictors of masculine sexual behavior in prenatally stressed and nonstressed rats.Donovan E. Fleming, Edward W. Kinghorn, R. Ward Rhees, Richard H. Anderson & Edward Smythe - 1992 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 30 (6):513-514.
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  22.  9
    Aliraza Javaid, Masculinities, Sexualities and Love. Abingdon & New York: Routledge, 2019. Pp. 189.Andrea Colombo - forthcoming - Foucault Studies:89-91.
  23. Toward a Decolonial Feminism.Marìa Lugones - 2010 - Hypatia 25 (4):742-759.
    In “Heterosexualism and the Colonial/Modern Gender System” (Lugones 2007), I proposed to read the relation between the colonizer and the colonized in terms of gender, race, and sexuality. By this I did not mean to add a gendered reading and a racial reading to the already understood colonial relations. Rather I proposed a rereading of modern capitalist colonial modernity itself. This is because the colonial imposition of gender cuts across questions of ecology, economics, government, relations with (...)
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  24.  18
    A Frightful Leap into Darkness: Auto-Destructive Art and Extinction.Jack Halberstam - 2018 - Journal of French and Francophone Philosophy 26 (2):6-14.
    In a new book titled Wild Things: Queer Theory After Nature, I develop a new critical vocabulary to access different, transdisciplinary ways of thinking about race, sexuality, alternative political imaginaries and queer futurity and extinction. Wildness in no way signals the untamed frontier, or the absence of modernity, the barbarian, the animalistic or the opposite of civilization. Rather, in a post-colonial and even de-colonizing vein, it has emerged in the last few years as a marker of a desire to (...)
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  25.  36
    Experimental Studies of Two Important Factors Underlying Masculine Sexual Behavior: the Nervous System and the Internal Secretion of the Testis.C. P. Stone - 1923 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 6 (2):85.
  26.  64
    The african animal other: Decolonizing nature.Louise du Toit - 2019 - Angelaki 24 (2):130-142.
    The main claim in this article is that the traditionally Western and currently dominant understandings of the figures of “Nature” and “Animal” underlie and structure different forms of oppression and should be critically confronted. The racial-sexual subjugation of the colonized African draws symbolically on the older Western symbolic subjugations of Animal and Woman. In the Great Chain of Being of Western metaphysics it is Woman’s sexual body that links humans to the domain of the animal, and Man’s intellect that distinguishes (...)
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  27.  5
    Book Review: Masculinities, Sexualities and Love by Aliraza Javaid. [REVIEW]Kenneth R. Hanson - 2020 - Gender and Society 34 (5):873-875.
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  28.  36
    The Making of Men: Masculinities, Sexuality and Schooling. By Máirtín Mac An Ghaill. Pp. 209. (Open University Press, Buckingham, 1994.) £37.50, hardback; £12.99, paperback. [REVIEW]Richard Collier - 1997 - Journal of Biosocial Science 29 (2):251-256.
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  29.  30
    Puerto Rico: Feminism and Feminist Studies.Alice E. Colón Warren - 2003 - Gender and Society 17 (5):664-690.
    In this article, the author presents some of the counterpoints between historical developments and feminist studies in Puerto Rico since the 1970s, elaborating on the most recurrent topics. She includes a brief historical overview of Puerto Rico and the trends in women's status, feminism, and feminist studies in the Island. Next, she provides a brief summary of general theoretical and methodological issues. Then she discusses research on specific topics, including the intersections of gender, nation, race, class, and sexuality; women's employment (...)
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  30.  34
    Race, classe, genre et sexualité : entre puissance d'agir et ambivalence coloniale.Anne McClintock - 2006 - Multitudes 3 (3):109-121.
    Without wholly rejecting the perspective proposed by Bhabha , the author refuses the idea that the identification of such structural rifts could be enough to account for the political agency of the subaltern. She thus calls for focused historical analyses of actual political situations, capable of understanding the concrete articulation between the deeply inter-related dynamics of gender, sexuality, race and class. She shows that colonization was not, from the point of view of the colonial powers, an external affair, nor (...)
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  31.  35
    Preface.Judith Kegan Gardiner & Priti Ramamurthy - 2015 - Feminist Studies 41 (3):503-508.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:preface This issue of Feminist Studies explores the ways institutions—legal, governmental, medical, educational, and household—participate in the gendering of bodies and are themselves gendered. At any given historical moment, dominant and resistant meanings of “women,” “gender,” and “sexuality” are socially and politically constituted in institutions through cultural struggles. The authors in this issue discuss how birth control, assisted reproduction, transsexual transition, hegemonic masculinity, abortion, and domestic violence are each (...)
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  32.  28
    Preface.Priti Ramamurthy, Kathryn Moeller, Alexis Pauline Gumbs & Lisa Rofel - 2019 - Feminist Studies 45 (2):281-289.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:preface The essays in this special issue on Indigenous Feminisms in Settler Contexts engage feminist politics from multiple Indigenous geographies, histories, and standpoints. What emerges is a panoramic view of Indigenous feminist scholarship’s conceptual, linguistic, and artistic activism at this moment in time. We learn of praxis aimed at reclaiming Indigenous languages and ecological perspectives and the varied modes of resistance, survivance, and persistence. We also unpack the complex (...)
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  33.  49
    A Very “Gay” Straight?: Hybrid Masculinities, Sexual Aesthetics, and the Changing Relationship between Masculinity and Homophobia.Tristan Bridges - 2014 - Gender and Society 28 (1):58-82.
    This article addresses a paradoxical stance taken by young straight men in three groups who identify aspects of themselves as “gay” to construct heterosexual masculine identities. By subjectively recognizing aspects of their identities as “gay,” these men discursively distance themselves from stereotypes of masculinity and privilege and/or frame themselves as politically progressive. Yet, both of these practices obscure the ways they benefit from and participate in gender and sexual inequality. I develop a theory of “sexual aesthetics” to account for their (...)
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  34.  12
    Women: The Victims of their People. A Girardian Reading of Alexis Wright’s Plains of Promise.Mylène Charon - 2018 - Philosophical Journal of Conflict and Violence 2 (1).
    How do René Girard’s theories apply to a context of double colonization? Through a new interpretation of Alexis Wright’s novel Plains of Promise, this paper aims to show the crosscultural relevance of mimetic theory. The study will highlight the way in which the scapegoat mechanism is represented in the Australian colonial context. It also offers a Girardian analysis of the predicament of female characters of Aboriginal descent who are victims of sexual violence.
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  35.  33
    Mythic Landscapes and Ecologies of Suffering in Sophocles’ Philoctetes.Ella Haselswerdt - 2023 - Classical Antiquity 42 (1):87-120.
    On some accounts, Sophocles’ Philoctetes is most notable for what it lacks: alone among the extant Attic tragedies, there are no women in the dramatis personae; alone among the extant plays of Sophocles, no characters die; and the chorus plays a relatively diminished role, adhering most closely to Aristotle’s injunction in the Poetics that a chorus should take on the role of an actor. But when viewed through the lens of ecocritical feminism and vibrant materialism, notably the work of Donna (...)
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  36.  45
    Existentialism and Gender.Marilyn Stendera - 2023 - In Felicity Joseph, Jack Reynolds & Ashley Woodward (eds.), The Bloomsbury Handbook of Existentialism. New York: Bloomsbury. pp. 192-200.
    The canonical texts of the existentialist tradition were written and published before it became common to differentiate between sex and gender. Nonetheless, it has long been recognized that the work of thinkers associated with existentialism – especially, of course, Simone de Beauvoir – provides us with a useful framework for thinking through the complex terrain of gender identity, and indeed for interrogating and problematizing the sex/gender distinction itself.1 The relevance of existentialism to these issues more broadly, even beyond Beauvoir’s more (...)
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  37.  63
    Sexuality, Masculinity, and Confession.Larry May & James Bohman - 1997 - Hypatia 12 (1):138 - 154.
    The practice of confessing one's sexual sins has historically provided boys and men with mixed messages. Engaging in coercive sex is publicly condemned; yet it is treated as not significantly different from other transgressions that can be easily forgiven. We compare Catholic confessional practices to those of psychoanalytically oriented male writers on masculinity. We argue that the latter is no more justifiable than the former, and propose a progressive confessional mode for discussing male sexuality.
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  38.  74
    Keeping the Faith: Thai Buddhism at the Crossroads (review).Terry C. Muck - 2003 - Buddhist-Christian Studies 23 (1):181-183.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Buddhist-Christian Studies 23 (2003) 181-183 [Access article in PDF] Keeping the Faith: Thai Buddhism at the Crossroads. By Sanitsuda Ekachai. Edited by Nick Wilgus. Bangkok: Post Books, 2001. 192 pp. Sanitsuda Ekachai, editorial columnist and features section editor of the Bangkok Post, writes this book in the Menckanian tradition of muckraking journalism. A collection of columns from the past decade, the book has an angry goal—the reform of a (...)
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  39.  50
    Decolonization Projects.Cornelius Ewuoso - 2023 - Voices in Bioethics 9.
    Photo ID 279661800 © Sidewaypics|Dreamstime.com ABSTRACT Decolonization is complex, vast, and the subject of an ongoing academic debate. While the many efforts to decolonize or dismantle the vestiges of colonialism that remain are laudable, they can also reinforce what they seek to end. For decolonization to be impactful, it must be done with epistemic and cultural humility, requiring decolonial scholars, project leaders, and well-meaning people to be more sensitive to those impacted by colonization and not regularly included in the discourse. (...)
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  40.  18
    Particles of Light.Stephen Turner - 2022 - Film and Philosophy 26:103-122.
    This article addresses recent science fiction films about the colonization of outer worlds, or space-steading, in the context of the longer colonial history of the frontier. Paying particular attention to Interstellar (Christopher Nolan, 2014), Serenity (Joss Whedon, 2005) and The Wild Blue Yonder (Werner Herzog, 2005), I argue that colonizing outer space is not only a race to the new frontier, but that this takes place because technologies that picture space have quickened the pulse. Through its imagining of the (...)
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  41.  47
    Decolonial Reproductive Justice: Analyzing Reproductive Oppression in India.Sanjula Rajat & Margaret A. McLaren - 2023 - Feminist Formations 35 (2):78-105.
    The reproductive justice framework shifted understandings and analyses of reproductive oppression beyond individual ‘choice’ by incorporating analyses of structural injustice, racism, and social and economic concerns. In this article, we build on understandings of the reproductive justice framework by integrating a postcolonial lens and bring the powerful conceptual tools of postcolonial feminist theory to bear on issues of reproductive oppression in India. We articulate the elements of such a postcolonial lens—the transnational operation of race, Orientalism, the subjective experience of colonialism (...)
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  42.  91
    Between Orientalism and Fundamentalism: The Politics of Muslim Women's Feminist Engagement.Jasmin Zine - 2006 - Muslim World Journal of Human Rights 3 (1).
    Discourses of race, gender and religion have scripted the terms of engagement in the war on terror. As a result, Muslim feminists and activists must engage with the dual oppressions of Islamophobia that relies on re-vitalized Orientalist tropes and representations of backward, oppressed and politically immature Muslim women as well as religious extremism and puritan discourses that authorize equally limiting narratives of Islamic womanhood and compromise their human rights and liberty. The purpose of this discussion is to examine the way (...)
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  43.  61
    Decolonial Movidas: María Lugones's Notion of Decolonial Aesthesis through Cosmologies.Denise Meda Calderon - 2023 - The Pluralist 18 (1):22-31.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Decolonial Movidas: María Lugones’s Notion of Decolonial Aesthesis through CosmologiesDenise Meda CalderonIntroductionMaría Lugones advances a decolonial feminist methodology that allows one to see both dehumanizing social reductions of colonized peoples and the resistant relations operating within non-dominant socialities. By exploring this double “seeing,” I articulate the relationship between resistant socialities and Lugones’s notion of decolonial aesthesis. In her only published text on decolonial aesthesis, Lugones states: “Thinking about aesthesis, (...)
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  44.  20
    A colonização é aqui e agora: elementos de presentificação do racismo.Fabiano Veliq & Paula Magalhães - 2022 - Trans/Form/Ação 45 (spe):111-128.
    Resumo: O racismo, enquanto problema estrutural e estruturante de nossa sociedade, afeta-nos cotidianamente, de formas muito profundas e nem sempre visíveis. A modernidade é frequentemente associada a suas conquistas de independência político-econômica, no território europeu, mas dificilmente é associada a seus atos nefastos, que são condições sine qua non para seu surgimento. São eles o engendramento do capitalismo, da colonização e, portanto, do racismo. O presente artigo tem por objetivo analisar os modos a partir dos quais o racismo se faz (...)
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  45.  24
    Erin O'Connor. Raw Material: Producing Pathology in Victorian Culture. xi + 273 pp., illus., bibl., index.Durham, N.C./London: Duke University Press, 2000. $54.95 ; $18.95. [REVIEW]David Knight - 2002 - Isis 93 (1):137-138.
    Readers expecting a history of nineteenth‐century pathology are in for a surprise. They will find instead a self‐conscious example of cultural studies, critical of some assumptions made in this field and of some feminist writing, but containing some alarming sentences like “My goal has been to give shape to the accidental palimpsests of an inveterately verbal, and increasingly visual, culture; to assemble a particular series of hermeneutic loose ends into a coherent account of how an extraordinarily bizarre system of signification (...)
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  46.  16
    Policing toxic masculinities and dealing with sexual violence on Zimbabwean University campuses.Simbarashe Gukurume & Munatsi Shoko - 2023 - HTS Theological Studies 79 (3):8.
    University campuses are framed as sexualised spaces marked by high sexual risk-taking behaviour and toxic masculinities that often fuel abusive relationships and sexual violence. More often, the most vulnerable groups, to this violence include sexual minorities, girls and students with disabilities. Drawing on qualitative ethnographic research and semi-structured interviews with students and staff from two universities in Zimbabwe, this article examines how toxic campus ‘cultures’ and campus sexual economies can be transformed and made more inclusive and safer for all students. (...)
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  47.  35
    Woza! Sweetheart! On braiding epistemologies on Bree Street.Mpho Matsipa - 2017 - Thesis Eleven 141 (1):31-48.
    African hair braiding on Bree Street offers a glimpse into how immigration, black female sexuality and shifts in urban retail economies provide important economic and cultural resources to urban residents and users. As both ontology and epistemology, black hair braiding practices recalibrate local economies, spaces, and aesthetic codes, and thus co-constitute emergent urban identities and a way of knowing the city. The intimate, networked, and fractal nature of black hair braiding spaces disrupts the rigid colonial spatial orders of the (...)
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  48.  13
    After the Wedding Night: Sexual Abstinence and Masculinities over the Life Course.Sarah Diefendorf - 2015 - Gender and Society 29 (5):647-669.
    This study seeks to understand the ways in which men who pledge sexual abstinence until marriage negotiate and assert masculine identities before and after marriage. Using longitudinal qualitative data, this work traces the ways in which men who pledge abstinence until marriage manage a tension between both “sacred” and “beastly” discourses surrounding sexuality. The situational and interactional gendered practices of these men highlight their attempts to resolve the incongruity between practices of sexual purity and hegemonic definitions of masculinity. I argue (...)
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  49.  13
    Emotional and Sexual Adaptation to Colon Cancer: Perceptual Congruence of Dyadic Coping Among Couples.Alexandra Stulz, Nicolas Favez & Cécile Flahault - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13:802603.
    ContextColon cancer is the 3rd most common cancer in the world. The diagnosis leads the patient and his relatives into a process of mourning for their health and previous life. The literature highlights the impact of the disease on couples. Cancer can either alter or strengthen the relationship. The disease will directly or indirectly affect both partners. Such impact starts with the diagnosis and lasts long after treatments. No study has analyzed both emotional and sexual interactions between partners throughout the (...)
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    The Colonial Question before Colonization: Philosophical and Economic Reflections on the July Monarchy.Jean-Baptiste Noé - 2021 - Russian Journal of Philosophical Sciences 63 (9):53-69.
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