Canada's Waste Flows -- Southern Canada's Waste Management Problem -- Looking for Redemption in All the Wrong Places: Hiding Our Waste and the Cult of Recycling -- Canadian Settler Colonial Waste -- Arctic Wasteland -- Wasting Animals -- A Good Soup -- Wasting (in) the Anthropocene -- The Indeterminate Material Politics of Waste.
Verfügbarkeit an Ihrem Standort wird überprüft
Dieses Buch ist auch in Ihrer Bibliothek verfügbar:
chapter 1 Mapping the Discourses of Heterosexual Interpersonal Violence -- chapter 2 Theoretical Challenges to the Study of Heterosexual Interpersonal Violence -- chapter 3 Learning the Difference that Gender Makes -- chapter 4 Heteronormativity and Sexual Coercion: Adolescents Practicing Gender -- chapter 5 Investing in Masculinity: Men Who Use Interpersonal Violence -- chapter 6 Investing in Difference: Violent Women and Masculinity in Disguise? -- chapter 7 Engendering Violence?.
Verfügbarkeit an Ihrem Standort wird überprüft
Dieses Buch ist auch in Ihrer Bibliothek verfügbar:
Feminist analyses have made important contributions to the sociocultural experiences of pregnancy, birth and breastfeeding. This article draws upon recent theorizing within science studies to focus on the mattering of these processes. Specifically, the article expands upon Mauss's notion of the 'gift', which Diprose develops through the idea of 'corporeal generosity'. I am interested in corporeal generosity insofar as it circumvents descriptions of relationships in terms of a closed economy in which resources are exchanged without excess or remainder. Corporeal generosity refers to the often missed but nevertheless inescapable debt that a body owes to other bodies. At the same time, this embodied 'gifting' is both unpredictable and intrusive – there is as much possibility of threatening the integrity of bodies as there is of opening new possibilities.
This paper concerns a theoretical struggle to situate childless women within contemporary feminist debates about gender, the body and sexuality. Although psychoanalytic theory offers a compelling approach to the body, a Freudian account of childless women has largely escaped investigation. This paper will provide such an analysis, arguing that competing interpretations of psychoanalytic theory reveal a salient tension in the interpretation of gender identification. On the one hand, some theorists focus on a social development model of gender identification. This model emphasizes the sexual aim of reproduction as a salient feature of 'normal' gender identity development. In this paper, I argue this approach may pathologize childless women insofar as they 'fail' to socially develop in ways that conform to the imperative to sexually reproduce. On the other hand, a number of theorists argue against the foreclosure on gender identity that the social development model implies. An alternate interpretation of psychoanalytic theory calls attention to Freud's theory of 'psychic bisexuality' or 'polymorphous perversity'. This notion invites a much more complex and ambivalent notion of gender identity as it emphasizes the temporal, fragile and incomplete process of gender identification. I aim to argue that this latter interpretation offers a space for childless women as it attempts to lay bare the hegemonic relationship between femininity and sexual reproduction. I draw upon the work of a number of feminist theorists who variously take up these central themes in Freudian psychoanalytic theory to further contest the reification of the association between femininity and maternity.
The aim of this article is to explore the development of theories on transsexualism with a view to advancing a typology of theories of transsexualism. This typology exposes a general shift from concerns with `authenticity' (the transsexual as a `real' woman or man) to issues of `performativity' (the transsexual as hyperbolic enactment of gender). I will argue it is through a displacement of psychology with sociology as the major lens through which transsexualism is theorized that such a shift from authenticity to performativity is effected. The final typology considers the notion of transgression (rendering the modern two-gender system obsolete). The article argues that whilst transgression may be possible, it is not guaranteed by all forms of transsexualism.