The imperative of struggle: feminist and gender geographies in the United States
In: Gender, place and culture: a journal of feminist geography, Band 26, Heft 7-9, S. 1314-1321
ISSN: 1360-0524
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In: Gender, place and culture: a journal of feminist geography, Band 26, Heft 7-9, S. 1314-1321
ISSN: 1360-0524
Exploring what it means to enact feminist geography, this book joins cases of collaborative research with social justice activist movements. From Black feminist organizing in the American South to feminist geography collectives in Latin America, the book showcases activist-engaged scholarship from the global north and south.
Introduction -- I. Relational ontology, death, and the maternal -- Part One. The maternal ≠ {Mother + Child}: Relational ontology and the mattering of Black lives (Planetary pasts) -- Part two: The maternal ≠ {Mother + Child}: Relational ontology and the mattering of Black lives (Planetary futures) -- The BlackSpace Manifesto: 'Living' Black liberatory futures -- Remaindered Commons: Notes towards post-socialist futures in China vis-à-vis the Black Outdoors -- The necromancy of derivative violence: Finance capitalism, planetary pandemics, and speculative wagers on death in the Anthropocene -- II. How I Got Over: On Black Tomorrows -- "Symbols AND systems!" The Take 'Em Down, NOLA's decolonial approach to memory work" -- Rewriting the world: Climate fiction, Black future-space making, and the speculative project of justice -- Critical engagement into GIS methods while wrestling with slavery's archive -- III. Sovereignty in the Capitalocene as the crucible of difference in the post-Anthropocene -- Algorithmic finance and the anthropogenic environmental crisis in "accelerando": Science of finance capital as catalyst of climate change -- The Tourismocene: Barcelona, overtourism, and the spatial futures of the polis -- Environmental futures and urbanity entangled in nuclear legacies in the Baltic Sea coastal towns of Paldiski and Sillamäe -- Transmotion in the folkhem: Automobility, epistemicide, and the post-Anthropocene -- IV Speculative futures as a lens for "staying human in the cataclysm." -- But that's just mad! Reading the utopian impulse in Dark princess and Black empire -- Troubling the anthropos in the post-Anthropocene: Liu Cixin's Three-Body trilogy -- Smart and cruel. Cities in the thrall of artificial intelligence in the fiction of William Gibson and Cory Doctorow.
In: Gender, place and culture: a journal of feminist geography, Band 19, Heft 2, S. 263-274
ISSN: 1360-0524
This edited book offers a detailed examination of the interstices of ruralities and sexualities over a number of different countries, focusing a geographical lens on the relationships between sexualities and the spaces and tropes of rural life. Collectively, the contributors reveal how sexual identities, imaginaries and experiences are understood and practiced in relation to intimacies, institutions, mobilities, communities, and economic and social modes of production and consumption