Transnational Feminism is a provocative examination of the ways in which we understand and create knowledge about the world. The book examines the rise of transnational feminism in the United States and challenges us to think of "the global" and "the transnational" as ways of viewing the world that have emerged from specific political, economic, and historical circumstances in the United States. Transnational Feminism asks what it means to locate feminist research and theory within a transnational frame in the specific location and historical location that we live in and how we can unsettle such national views of the world. The book addresses a range of issues including the impact of the U.S. "war on terror" on knowledge about the world and human rights, cultural forms of knowledge such as film and fiction, feminist knowledge practices, and institutional practices within the U.S. academy.
Click here to link to the background readings for this event (must have U-M access.)
https://ctools.umich.edu/portal/site/6d5715e2-dddf-45d5-a98b-0a2f4b604804/page/727f1cf8-555b-44c6-bbcc-5dd0a02f9f9b
Speaker: |
Leela Fernandes, Women's Studies & Political Science. Discussants: Maria Cotera, George Steinmetz , Elizabeth Wingrove
|
---|