Ese: o and the Sexualities Project: A Critical and Feminist Methodology for Collaborative Online Work (original) (raw)
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The Wiley Blackwell Encyclopedia of Gender and Sexuality Studies
2016
The academic field of gender and sexuality studies is an interdisciplinary field of scholarly inquiry that explores and interrogates the operations of gender and sexual diversity across all realms of life. Gender and sexuality studies do not stop at what most people experience as their "natural" identities, but rather proceed by questioning precisely what appears to be natural, given, and self-evident about ourselves-in the world at large, within the various collective structures and institutions that constitute societies (family, school, neighborhood, city, state, nation, and so on), in our private and personal lives, and in our sense of identity and embodiment. Described as such, the reach of gender and sexuality studies appears limitless. Since gender and sexual diversity, in intersection with other categories of difference (e.g., race, class, ethnicity, able-bodiedness), pervade almost every aspect of life; there is no academic discipline that has nothing to say about gender and sexuality, even if some realms of study (the humanities, the social sciences) have traditionally played a more dominant role in the development of this interdisciplinary field. At the same time, gender and sexuality studies, even if they play out differently over time and cross-culturally, know no regional boundaries. This means that the field of gender and sexuality studies today is truly global in its outlook. This has not always been the case: as in so many other respects, the so-called West (Western Europe, the United States, Canada, and Australia) has dominated, and to some extent still does, dominate the realms of knowledge and modes of knowing that are generated within academia, including university-based gender and sexuality studies. The goal we set for the Encyclopedia of Gender and Sexuality Studies was to reflect the wide range of topics, debates, and approaches to this exciting interdisciplinary, and increasingly, global field, while yet being forced to work with the unequal power relations that have historically marked the relations between "the West" and "the rest." While the 719 entries included in this encyclopedia may not be able to cover the entire field of gender and sexuality studies as it continues to develop in virtually all parts of the world, we hope we have captured both its complexity and its international scope. One way in which we have sought to achieve the latter is by highlighting the contributions of scholars in gender and sexuality studies in different parts of the world. With 621 lead authors and 16 advisory and associate editors from 28 different countries, the encyclopedia reaches beyond national boundaries to comprehend theoretical questions, critical debates, and key terms that are relevant to a variety of scholars in the field across the globe-albeit often in different ways and to different effects. Jointly, the five volumes make clear how differences among and between genders and diverse sexualities are socially constructed and embedded in structures of power and of discourses that reproduce inequalities and provide the basis for distinct forms of local resistance, social movements, and political activism. The volumes, taken as a whole, further testify to the fact that the field of gender and sexuality studies has a long history that predates many twentieth-century social movements, feminist
2008
This course will offer an introduction to theory and empirical research in the sociology of gender and sexuality. It will assist students in preparing for the Gender and Sexuality prelim exam, although the course will be useful for anyone with interests in these areas. We will review some of the classic pieces in the subfield as well as attend to what's new, emerging, and exciting. We will focus on the theoretical perspectives and analytical tools that offer sociologists the most assistance in developing empirical research.
Gender and Sexuality, 2020 version
Perspectives: An Open Invitation to Cultural Anthropology, 2nd Ed., 2020
Anthropologists are fond of pointing out that much of what we take for granted as "natural" in our lives is actually cultural-it is not grounded in the natural world or in biology but invented by humans. 2 Because culture is invented, it takes different forms in different places and changes over time in those places. Living in the twenty-first century, we have witnessed how rapidly and dramatically culture can change, from ways of communicating to the emergence of same-sex marriage. Similarly, many of us live in culturally diverse settings and experience how varied human cultural inventions can be.
Introduction to Women, Gender, Sexuality Studies
2017
This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Women, Gender, Sexuality Studies at ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst. It has beenaccepted for inclusion in Women, Gender, Sexuality Studies Educational Material by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst.For more information, please contactscholarworks@library.umass.edu.
Proceedings from the Summer School for Sexualities, Cultures and Politics 2014
2015
The following texts have been written by a range of talented young scholars, artists and activists. We consider the first issue of the SSSCP Proceedings a great contribution to a wider body of research conducted within the field of cultural studies overall, but also to queer theory/politics/practice, gender studies, media and studies of the body. What differentiates this collection from others is a delicate balance between personal journeys and academic adventures that authors have taken upon. The first edition is also of invaluable importance and an immensely relevant input to a regional political and cultural struggle to embrace otherness. We would even go as far as to claim that the present collection represents a fresh and daring contribution to the inert regional academic production and a useful, empowering tool for various sorts of activist and artistic endeavors. Stanimir Panayotov and Ana Koncul (Eds.), Proceedings from the Summer School for Sexualities, Cultures and Politics 2014, Belgrade: IPAK.Center, 2015. Stanimir Panayotov and Ana Koncul Note from the Editors Steph Schem Rogerson Queer Archives Claire Finch Mutating France’s Queer Territories Antonina Anna Ferrante In Drag We Trust: Normative Drives and Homonationalism in RuPaul’s Drag Race Thomas Muzart Pornography Must Be Defended: Rethinking Pornography with Lionel Soukaz Marius Henderson Tentative Heretical Notes on Queer “Necro” Practices and Sensibilities Jennifer Vilchez Hard to Swallow: Porn Star James Deen’s Arousing Work and Young Women’s Fandom france rose [ the space in between ]: The Power of Contemporary Art to Reimagine Gender Mónica Guerreiro Intense, Animal, Imperceptible: Vera Mantero’s a mysterious Thing, said e. e. cummings* as a Queer Dance Solo Anna Wates Grieving as Political Action: Contesting Austerity Politics through Narratives of Loss in the Disabilities Rights Movements Melisa Slipac When a Woman Loves a Woman: Lesbian Love and Homosexual Desire in Ajla Terzić’s Novel Mogla je biti prosta priča (Could Have Been a Simple Story)