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2.2 Feminist / Gender Theory / PracticeAdkins, Lisa. 2002. Sexuality and economy: Historicisation vs deconstruction. Australian Feminist Studies 17.3: 31-41. Anderson, Amanda. 1998. Debatable performances: Restaging contentious feminisms. Social Text, no. 54: 1-24. Biddick, Kathleen. 1993. Genders, bodies, borders: Technologies of the visible. Speculum 68.2: 389-418. Boyarin, Daniel. 1993. Paul and the genealogy of gender. Representations, no. 41: 1-33. Brennan, Samantha. 1999. Recent work in feminist ethics. Cacoullos, Ann. R. 2001. American feminist theory. American Studies International 39.1: 72- 117. Caprioli, Mary, and Mark A. Boyer. 2001. Gender, violence, and international crisis. Journal of Conflict Resolution 45.4: 503-18. Carver, Terrell. 1996. “Public man” and the critique of masculinities. Political Theory 24.4: 673-86. Charlesworth, Hilary. 2000. Martha Nussbaum’s feminist internationalism. Ethics, no. 111: 64-78. Davies, Bronwyn, et al. 2001. Becoming schoolgirls: The ambivalent project of subjectification. Gender & Education 13.2: 167-82. Dellinger, Kirsten, and Christine L. Williams. 1997. Makeup at work: Negotiating appearance rules in the workplace. Gender and Society 11.2: 151-77. Delphy, Christine. 1995. The invention of French feminism: An essential move. Yale French Studies, no. 87: 190-221. Diprose, Rosalyn. 2000. What is a (feminist) philosophy? Hypatia 15.2: 115-32. Dolgopal, Ustinia. 1995. Women’s voices, women’s pain. Human Rights Quarterly 17.1: 127-54. 12 Durham, Carolyn A. 1995. At the crossroads of gender and culture: Where feminism and sexism Intersect. Modern Language Journal 79.2: 153-65. Felski, Rita. 1996. Gazing at gender: Recent work in feminist media studies. American Literary History 8.2: 388-97. †Fenton, Natalie. 2000. The problematics of postmodernism for feminist media studies. Media, Culture & Society 22.6: 723-41. Flynn, Elizabeth A. 1995. Feminism and scientism. College Composition and Communication 46.3: 353-68. Fraser, Mariam. 2001. Visceral futures: bodies of feminist criticism. Social Epistemology 15.2: 91-111. Haslanger, Sally. 1999. What knowledge is and what it ought to be: Feminist values and normative epistemology. Philosophical Perspectives 13: 459-80. Hirschmann, Nancy J. 1996. Toward a feminist theory of freedom. Hoffman, John. 2001. Defining feminism. Politics 21.3: 193-99. Homans, Margaret. 1994. “Women of color”: Writers and feminist theory. New Literary History 25.1: 73-94. Hood-Williams, John, and Wendy Cealey. 1998. Trouble with gender. Sociological Review 46.1: 73-94. Ingraham, Chrys. 1994. The heterosexual imaginary: Feminist sociology and theories of gender. Sociological Theory 12.2: 203-19. Jaggar, Alison M. 2000. Ethics naturalized: feminism’s contribution to moral philosophy. Metaphilosophy 31.5: 452-68. Kowalewski, David, et al. 1995. Sexism, racism, and establishmentism. Journal of Black Studies 26.2: 201-15. Kozlova, N. N. 2002. Gender and the advent of modernity. Russian Social Science Review 43.4: 13-29. Lather, Patti. 2001. Postbook: Working the ruins of feminist ethnography. Signs: Journal of Women in Culture 27.1: 199-27. Lawson, Tony. 1999. Feminism, realism, and universalism. Feminist Economics 5.2: 25-59. Lurie, Susan, et al. 2001. Restoring feminist politics to poststructuralist critique. Feminist Studies 27.3: 679-707. Martin, Roberta C. 1998. “Beautious wonders of a different kind”: Aphra Behn’s destabilization of sexual categories. College English 61.2: 192-210. McNay, Lois. 1999. Gender and narrative identity. Journal of Political Ideologies 4.3: 315- 36. Mulinari, Diana, and Kerstin Sandell. 1999. Exploring the notion of experience in feminist thought. Acta Sociologica 42: 287-97. Nelson, Lise. 1999. Bodies (and spaces) do matter: The limits of performativity. Gender, Place & Culture 6.4: 331-53. 13 Nozaki, Yoshiko. 2000. Feminist theory and the media representation of a woman-of-color superintendent: Is the world ready for cyborgs? Urban Education 35.5: 616-29. Okin, Susan Moller. 1994. Gender inequality and cultural differences. Political Theory 22.1: 5-24. ----------. 1998. Feminism and multiculturalism: Some tensions. Pilardi, Jo-Ann. 1993. The changing critical fortunes of the second sex. History and Theory 32.1: 51-73. Pinnik, Cassandra L. 1994. Feminist epistemology: Implications for philosophy of science. Philosophy of Science 61.4: 646-57. Poovey, Mary. 1992. Feminism and postmodernism—another view. Boundary 2 19.2, Feminism and postmodernism: 34-52. Pryse, Marjorie. 2002. Trans/feminist methodology: Bridges to interdisciplinary thinking. NWSA Journal 12.2: 105-18. Roberts, Mary Louise. 1998. Gender, consumption, and commodity culture. American Historical Review 103.3: 817-44. Rooney, Ellen. 1996. What can the matter be? American Literary History 8.4: 745-58. Schein, Louisa. 1997. Gender and internal orientalism in
China. Shih, Shu-Mei. 1996. Gender, race, and semicolonialism: Lie Na’ou’s urban Shanghai landscape. Journal of Asian Studies 55.4: 934-56. Staeheli Lynn A. 2002. Feminists talking across worlds. Gender, Place and Culture 9.2: 167- 72. †Stukes, Pierrette Rouleau. 2001. The symptomatic repetition of identity: Gender and the traumatic gestalt. Psychoanalytic Studies 3.3/4: 393-409. Thorburn, Diana. 2000. Feminism meets international relations. SAIS Review 20.2: 1-10. Weigman, Robyn. 2002. Academic feminism against itself. NWSA Journal 14.2: 18-37. Wylie, Alison. 1992. The interplay of evidential constraints and political interests: Recent archaeological research on gender. American Antiquity 57.1: 15-35. Zerilli, Linda M. 1998. Doing without knowing: Feminism’s politics of the ordinary. Political Theory 26.4: 435-58. Zhurzhenko, Tat’iana. 2002. Social reproduction as a problem in feminist theory. Russian Studies in History 40.3: 70-90. See also 1: Butler, McLaughlin; 3.2: McBride; 3.6: Gupta; Sedinger; 3.9: Abu-Lughod; Uchida; 3.10: Green; Pitt; 3.12: Miller; 3.13: Smith; Ware; 3.14: Mansbridge; 4.1: Mullen; 4.3 Judith Butler; 4.6: Dean
Bardsley, Jan. 1997. Japanese feminism, nationalism and the royal wedding of summer ’93. Journal of Popular Culture 31.2: 189-205. ----------. 1999. Spaces for feminist action: National centers for women in Japan and South Korea. NWSA Journal 11.1: 136-49. Dasgupta, Romit. 2000. Performing masculinities? The “salaryman” at work and play. Japanese Studies 20.2: 189-200. Goldstein-Gidoni, Ofra. 1999. Kimono and the construction of gendered and cultural identities. Ethnology 38.4: 351-70. Hayakawa, Noriyo. 1995. Feminism and nationalism in Japan, 1868-1945. Journal of Women’s History 7.4: 108-19. Lie, John. 1996. Class, gender and ethnicity. Current Sociology 44.1: 35-46. Park, You-me. 2000. Comforting the nation: “Comfort women,” the politics of apology and the working of gender. Interventions: International Journal of Postcolonial Studies 2.2: 199-211. Pennington, Eileen. 2000. When escape is a trap: The gendered construction of identity in Japan. SAIS Review 20.2: 197-205. Puja, Kim. 2001. Global civil society remakes history: “The Women’s International War Crimes Tribunal 2000.” Positions: East Asia Cultures Critiques 9.3: 611-20. Smith, Robert J. 1987. Gender inequality in contemporary Japan. Journal of Japanese Studies 13.1: 1-25. Takakuwa, Yoko. 1996. Performing marginality: The place of the player and of woman in early modern Japanese culture. New Literary History 27.2: 213-25. Tonomura, Hitomi. 1994. Black hair and red trousers: Gendering the flesh in medieval Japan. American Historical Review 99.1: 129-54. Yoda, Tomiko. 2000. The rise and fall of maternal society: Gender, labor, and capital in contemporary Japan. South Atlantic Quarterly 99.4: 865-902. See also 3.6.1: Hogan;
3.10.1: Abbitt |
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