Buch, Englisch, 162 Seiten, Format (B × H): 174 mm x 246 mm, Gewicht: 476 g
At the Sharp End
Buch, Englisch, 162 Seiten, Format (B × H): 174 mm x 246 mm, Gewicht: 476 g
ISBN: 978-0-415-81906-0
Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
Building on a trans-disciplinary, feminist project that foregrounds the bodies of those at the ‘sharp end’ of various forms of international activity, such as immigration, development and warfare, the chapters included in this book cover a variety of sites, concerns, and hopes. These range from the fraught geopolitics of marriage and birth in Ladakh, India, to the fate of detained migrant children in the U.S., and from the human rights abuses of women and children in Uzbekistan to the body politics of aid workers in Afghanistan. The collective aim is to expose the force relations that operate through and upon those bodies, such that particular subjectivities are enhanced, constrained, and put to work, and particular corporealities are violated, exploited, and often abandoned. Oriented around issues of security, population, territory, and nationalism, these chapters expose the proliferating bodies of geopolitics, not simply as the bearers of socially demarcated borders and boundaries, but as vulnerable corporealities, seeking to negotiate and transform the geopolitics they both animate and inhabit.
This book was originally published as a special issue of Gender, Place and Culture: A Journal of Feminist Geography.
Zielgruppe
Academic and Postgraduate
Autoren/Hrsg.
Fachgebiete
Weitere Infos & Material
1. Introduction: Feminist Engagements with Geopolitics 2. She Says Herself, "I have no future": love, fate and territory in Leh District, India 3. The Geopolitics of Vulnerability: children’s legal subjectivity, immigrant family detention and US immigration law and enforcement policy 4. Security and gendered national identity in Uzbekistan 5. Armored peacocks and proxy bodies: gender geopolitics in aid/development spaces of Afghanistan 6. Scouting for Girls? Gender and the Social Movement in Britain 7. Where asylum-seekers wait: feminist counter-topographies of sites between states 8. Transnational ways of seeing: sexual and national belonging in Hedwig and the Angry Inch