Fabian Couples, Feminist Issues
In: Routledge Library Editions: Women and Politics
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In: Routledge Library Editions: Women and Politics
This study aims to examine unreported issues on feminist in Thailand's southern unrest, and to explore their newsworthiness. In-depth interviews and focus group discussions of groups of academic experts, NGOs staffs, stringers and local news reporters, victims of the ongoing unrest, and youths in the area were conducted over a period of five months, starting from October 2010 to February 2011. This is to provide the data on what characteristics of information and stories relating to feminist that the key informants consider worth reporting during the crisis. The findings reveal that twelve unreported topics on feminists include (1) continuous aids and compensation for female victims, (2) ways to cope with the crisis, (3) government policy and solutions affecting females, (4) transformation of women's roles, (5) female participation in resolving problems and peace-building, (6) women's attitudes towards the southern unrest and possible ways out, (7) women's rights and roles in Islam, (8) women rights and gender equality, (9) women and education, (10) women and motherhood, (11) women's quality life and sexual violence, and (12) other issues relating Muslim women and their way of life, working women, women and social roles, women as career leaders, women as wives behind husbands' success, women as successful mothers, female reproductive issues, and women and the mass media. In addition, what should be dressed in the media include issues on (1) women working for social benefits, (2) women's participation in making a better society, (3) women applying religious knowledge to daily life, (4) women as roles model, (5) women behind family's success, and (6) educated women.
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In: Feminist studies: FS, Band 43, Heft 3, S. 624-636
ISSN: 2153-3873
Gita Mehta is one of the most significant writers in Indian Writing in English whose writing mainly deals with Indian culture, tradition and political condition of India. Women are confined in the name of religion, customs, society and tradition. Most of Gita Mehta's female protagonists want to break such social taboos and establish an identity in the society. A River Sutra is her second novel which was published in 1993. Mehta has touched up the sense of male dominance, racial discrimination and one's continuous search for identity in this novel. This paper will show how the novel A River Sutra can be read from a feministic perspective. The key argument of the paper deals with women's hardship, suffering and self-identity in the patriarchal society.
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Storm in Chandigarh is a work by Nayantara Sahgal, an Indian English writer with elite political lineage. She is the second daughter of Vijayalakshmi Pandit, the sister of the first Prime Minister of India Pt. Jawahar Lal Nehru. Nayantara Sahgal was born in an aristocratic family in New Delhi with a strong political clout. Being part of a family at the centre of Indian polity, Nayantara Sahgal has the first hand experience of witnessing some of the most talked about political events of her times. From the literary point of view too, her maternal uncle Pandit Jawahar Lal Nehru, who himself was a great English writer, and Krishna Hutheesingh (younger sister of Vijayalakshmi Pandit) who was a great exponent amongst English writers from India, establish the genetic linkage to Nayantara Sahgal's emergence as a prodigy in English novelists from India. Nayantara Sahgal was married twice – first to Gautam Sahgal, who was a British official in pre-independence India, and was totally absorbed in British culture. After that she started to live with Mangat Rai, while both of them were married to other persons. It was a kind of outrageous act in those times and traditionally against the societal norms. Thus, Nayantara Sahgal to some extent was ahead of her times – at least in breaking the established norms of her times as far as man and woman relationship was concerned.
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In: Postmedieval: a journal of medieval cultural studies, Band 10, Heft 3, S. 326-343
ISSN: 2040-5979
From the very first description of the two kingdoms on an island in Lochhead's play, a striking difference between them is perceived: England is described in terms of the order established and prosperity granted by its intelligent monarch, Elizabeth, whereas the Scottish insecure and problematic position is epitomized through the personal characteristics of its ruler – a beautiful lady, a foreigner, most commonly perceived as the last Queen of an independent Scotland, making an effort to rule the divided country. Inclined towards Catholicism, politically inexperienced and unskilled, Mary fails to recognize the fact well known to her powerful Protestant cousin, Elizabeth – a proper queen has to rule the kingdom with her head, and not with her heart. Written for the performance of the Communicado Theatre Company in 1987, as a tribute to the fourth hundred anniversary of Mary, Queen of Scots' death, Lochhead's play establishes the connection between the burning political issues in XVI and XX century Scotland. By relying on the critical insights of Finlayson, Greenblatt, Gonzales, Butler and Lochhead herself, the paper examines the nationalist and feminist issues in the play, as well as their relevance for the understanding of the Scottish identity. Key words: nationalism, feminism, stereotype, Reformation, Protestantism, Catholicism
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Frontmatter -- Contents -- Preface -- Introduction -- PART I. THE RIGHT TO REPRODUCE: LIMITS AND CAVEATS -- 1. Genetics and Reproductive Risk: Can Having Children Be Immoral? -- 2. Loving Future People -- 3. What Can Progress in Reproductive Technology Mean for Women? -- 4. Are Pregnant Women Fetal Containers? -- PART II: ABORTION AND THE RIGHT NOT TO REPRODUCE -- 5. Is Abortion Murder? (with Michael Tooley) -- 6. Abortion, Potentiality, and Conferred Claims: A Response to Langerak -- 7. Abortion and the Argument from Convenience -- 8. Abortion, Forced Labor, and War -- 9. Abortion and the Husband's Rights: A Reply to Teo -- PART III: NEW WORLDS: COLLABORATIVE REPRODUCTION -- 10. The Morality of New Reproductive Technologies -- 11. Surrogate Mothering: Exploitation or Empowerment? -- 12. Another Look at Contract Pregnancy -- 13. Children of Choice: Whose Children? At What Cost? -- Selected Bibliography -- Index
In: New directions in philosophy and cognitive science
This is the first interdisciplinary collection of essays to address how recent neuroscience affects traditional feminist issues. A distinguished group of philosophers, psychologists, sociomedical scientists, and feminist scholars explore such questions as: Do women and men have significantly different brains? Do women empathize, while men systematize? Is there a distinctive þfeminine' ethics? Is the self constituted by brain activities independent of society? Should addressing issues about sexuality and intersex conditions lead to changes in methodology? What do recent technological advances in the brain sciences teach us about such questions? Taken together, these essays challenge and expand upon some of the more sensational findings of neuroscience, and suggest new strategies and topics for research.
Women on the margins : honouring multiple and intersecting cultural identities Sandra Collins -- Mom's the word : attachment theory's role in defining the "good mother" Lynda R. Ross -- Male violence against women and girls : what feminist counsellors need to know to begin their work with women Chalene Y. Senn -- Hitting like a girl : an integrated and contextualized approach to confronting the feminst dilemma of women's use of violence Susan Le Blanc -- A word is worth a thousand pictures : counselling with Metis and First Nations women Cathy Richardson -- Aboriginal women and post-traumatic stress disorder : implications of culture on therapy and counselling practices Kathy M. Bent -- Considerations in counselling children and adult survivors of childhood traumas : community, context, and intersubjective resiliencies Marie Lovrod -- No 'body' to blame? : socio-cultural influences on girls and women Gina Wong-Wylie and Shelly Russell-Mayhew -- Is being a lesbian a queer thing to do? Bonita Decaire and Deborah Foster -- Counselling women : ethics for diversity and social justice Jean Pettifor and Judi Malone -- Femnist counsellors repond to abuse in lesbian relationships : confronting heteronormalcy Janice L. Ristock -- Feminist crisis counselling Karen M. Nielsen and Ann Marie Dewhurst -- Telling stories to make sense of job loss Arlene M.C. Young -- Engaging women who are mandated to participate in counselling Ann Marie Dewhurst and Karen M. Nielsen
In: Feminist constructions
In: Signs: journal of women in culture and society, Band 32, Heft 3, S. 818-820
ISSN: 1545-6943
In: Routledge Library Editions: Feminist Theory
A systematic and original study of feminist issues, The Sceptical Feminist fights a battle on two fronts: against the view that little or nothing is wrong with women's position, and at the same time against much current feminist dogma. It is written by a philosopher who, in the tradition of John Stuart Mill's classic The Subjection of Women, avoids the psychological and sociological speculation characteristic of much recent feminism and concentrates on the analysis of arguments. By these means she constructs a powerful and often unexpected case for radical change in the position of women, as w
In: Journal of women's history, Band 32, Heft 2, S. 137-148
ISSN: 1527-2036