Menu Expand
Gendering Border Studies

Gendering Border Studies

Jane Aaron | Henrice Altink | Chris Weedon

(2010)

Additional Information

Book Details

Abstract

The study of borders has recently undergone significant transitions, reflecting changes in the functions of boundaries themselves, as the world political map has experienced transformations. Gender (defined as the knowledge about perceived distinctions between the sexes) is an important signifier of borders as constructed and contested lines of differences. In the interplay with other categories of difference like class, race, ethnicity, and religion, it plays a major role in giving meaning to different forms of borders. It is not surprising, then, that an increasing number of studies in the last years have aimed for a gendering of border studies. This book explores this new interdisciplinary field and develops it further. The main questions it asks are: How do we define 'borders', 'frontiers' and 'boundaries' in different disciplinary approaches of gendered border studies? What were and are the main fields of gendered border studies in different fields? What might be important questions for future research? And how useful is an inter- or transdisciplinary approach for gendered border studies? Sixteen established scholars from various disciplines contribute chapters in which they set out how the issue of gender and borders has been approached in their discipline and describe what they expect from future research.

Table of Contents

Section Title Page Action Price
Cover Front Cover
Series Editors ii
Title Page iii
Copyright Page iv
Contents v
Notes on Contributors vii
Introduction 1
I: Migration and Gender 17
1. Outside the Border of the Modern: Mexican Migration and the Racialized and Gendered Dynamics of US National Belonging 19
2. Accented Margins: Gendering the Borders of Diaspora 36
3. Brazilian Women Crossing Borders 63
4. Teacher Supply and the Wales–England Border, 1922–1950: a Gendered Perspective 83
II. Gendering Narratives of Border Crossing 103
5. Reading Gender in Border-crossing Narratives 105
6. Taking Sides: Power-play on the Welsh Border in Early Twentieth-century Women’s Writing 127
7. ‘Those Blue Remembered Hills’: Gender in Twentieth-century Welsh Border Writing by Men 142
III. Gender and the Drawing of Internal Borders 163
8. Crossing Intimate Borders: Gender, Settler Colonialism and the Home 165
9. Scottishness and Gender History in a Cross-border/International Context: Reinventing the Border? 192
10. Sexual/Cultural Hybridity in the ‘New’ South Africa: Emergent Sites of Transnational Queer Politics 208
11. The Construction and Negotiation of Racialized Borders in Cardiff Docklands 222
IV. Teaching Gendered Borders 241
12. Locating the ‘Border’ in Gender: Creating Coherence in Border Pedagogy 243
Index 272
Back Cover Back Cover