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Abstract
What does it mean to decolonize transnational feminist theory in the context of globalization? As a project concerned with multiple power structures, feminist theory must address the historical legacies of colonialism, postcolonialism, and more recently, decoloniality. This book offers essays organized around a coherent set of research questions about how to conceptualize an inclusive feminist politics. This has been, and continues to be, a central project in feminist theory, particularly in light of neoliberal globalization.
International and interdisciplinary in scope, this book introduces the key issues in, and addresses the most significant challenges for, contemporary transnational feminist politics. In the context of rapid globalization, it explores the theoretical frameworks for thinking through significant concepts in feminist theory and activism: rights, citizenship and immigration, feminist solidarity, decolonizing methodologies and practices, and freedom. From diverse socio-political locations and multiple and interdisciplinary perspectives authors propose new ways of thinking about feminist knowledges, methodologies, and practices. Ideal for students and scholars in Gender and Globalization, Transnational Feminism and Feminist Theory more broadly, the volume contributes to the ongoing project of advocating a decolonizing feminist approach to pressing social issues.
Decolonizing Feminism offers original, nuanced, and visionary feminist analysis that crosses epistemological, and disciplinary borders, and provides conceptual tools to decolonize hegemonic feminisms and fracture the transnational as a normativizing gesture.
Chandra Talpade Mohanty, Distinguished Professor of Women's and Gender Studies, Syracuse University
This innovative book takes on the urgent task of reflecting politically on the meaning of decolonizing feminism in neoliberal times. Questioning the limits of the hegemonic feminist mode of thinking by exposing the power relations that underlie it and assuming the perspective of those marginalized, it aims at opening up and subverting feminist philosophy in order to incorporate debates about the production of knowledge, human rights, citizenship and immigration, and the quest for justice and freedom. These provocative analyses renew and potentialize feminism as they offer new tools and concepts to interpret our present in its multiplicity.
Margareth Rago, Universidade Estadual de Campinas, São Paulo, Brazil
Margaret A. McLaren teaches at Rollins College where she holds the George D. and Harriet W. Cornell Chair of Philosophy. She is the author of Feminism, Foucault, and Embodied Subjectivity (2002).
Table of Contents
Section Title | Page | Action | Price |
---|---|---|---|
Decolonizing Feminism | Cover | ||
Contents | v | ||
Preface: Toward a Decolonial Feminism for the 99 Percent | vii | ||
Introduction: Decolonizing Feminism | 1 | ||
Part 1: Decolonizing Epistemologies, Methods, and Knowledges | 19 | ||
1 Decolonizing Feminist Philosophy | 21 | ||
2 Knowing without Borders and the Work of Epistemic Gathering | 37 | ||
Part 2: Rethinking Rights | 55 | ||
3 Indigenous/Campesina Embodied Knowledge, Human Rights Awards, and Lessons for Transnational Feminist Solidarity | 57 | ||
4 Decolonizing Rights: Transnational Feminism and “Women’s Rights as Human Rights” | 83 | ||
Part 3: Citizenship and Immigration: The Space Between | 117 | ||
5 Constitutional Patriotism and Political Membership: A Feminist Decolonization of Habermas and Benhabib | 119 | ||
6 “Home-Making” and “World-Traveling”: Decolonizing the Space-Between in Transnational Feminist Thought | 151 | ||
7 The Special Plight of Women Refugees | 177 | ||
Part 4: Decolonizing Dialogue, Solidarity, and Freedom | 201 | ||
8 The Dynamics of Transnational Feminist Dialogue | 203 | ||
9 Building Transnational Feminist Solidarity Networks | 231 | ||
10 Decolonizing Feminist Freedom: Indigenous Relationalities | 257 | ||
Index | 289 | ||
About the Contributors | 301 |