Scattered Hegemonies: Postmodernity and Transnational Feminist PracticesInderpal Grewal, Caren Kaplan U of Minnesota Press, 1994 - 261 pages Extrait de la couverture : " 'Those of us who take intellectual production as a site for politics badly need the kind of profound and sophisticated thinking that went into this collection... The pleasures of this text are rare multiple : it reminds us that critique can be an act of creation and alliance ; it opens up needful conversations ; it establishes the difference between understanding what it means to refer to the global without mistaking it for all that there is.' - Wahneema Lubiano, Princeton University." |
Table des matières
The Female Body and Transnational Reproduction or Rape | 63 |
Four | 76 |
An Analysis in Three Acts | 90 |
A Paradigmatic Figure of Chicana | 110 |
Seven | 137 |
Eight | 153 |
Nine | 173 |
Meatless Days | 231 |
Contributors | 255 |
Expressions et termes fréquents
agendas Alarcón Anzaldúa argues become betrayal binary Bombay cinema boundaries Chen Hongmou Chicanas China Chinese women complex construction contemporary context critical critique cultural Cypriot deconstruct diasporic dominant essay ethnography Evtuxia example female body feminism feminist practices feminist theory fiction film Fulian funü Gayatri Spivak gender global Gloria Anzaldúa groups Guadalupe Haraway hegemonic Ibid identity Indian Janaki La Malinche language Lauretis literary lives male Malinche Malintzin margins Mexican Midnight's Children Minh-ha modernist modernity mother movement multiple narrative narrator nationalist discourse non-Western novel nuxing oppression Paralogismos patriarchal politics of location postcolonial postmodern poststructuralist problematic production Qiu Jin question race rape reading relations relationship representation represented Rich's Rigoberta Menchú role Routledge sexual social space speak specific story struggle Studies subaltern subject positions suggests Suleri's Teresa de Lauretis Third World tion transnational feminist University Press Western feminists woman women of color writing Xiao Hong