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In recent years, attacks on the rise of 'gender ideology' and 'genderism' as a political force, on gender studies as an academic field, and on feminist, queer and trans individuals seen to be their embodied representatives, have grown in scope and intensity. This edited volume understands such attacks as a global force in need of urgent analytical and political attention. Drawing on contributions from and about a varied range of geographical locations including Argentina, Chile, China, Germany, the Persian Gulf, Hungary, India, Pakistan, Peru, South Africa, Spain, Turkey, Uganda, the UK and the US, this book explores how anti-gender mobilisations work as a transnational formation shaped by the legacies of colonialism, racial capitalism, and resurgent nationalisms and how these can be resisted. By transnationalising our inquiries into the epistemic, affective and political nature of the anti-gender phenomenon, this volume troubles the 'origin stories' we tell about where anti-genderpolitics come from, and helps to better locate the various sources, actors, and networks behind these attacks, contesting the notion that anti-gender politics derive solely from right-wing nationalist or conservative religious actors, to show how they also derive from more centrist, liberal, leftist and even presumably feminist positions. The book thus invites us to sharpen and rethink the conceptual vocabularies and strategies we use to understand and resist anti-gender attacks, opening up space for envisioning new political imaginaries and transnational feminist solidarities.
Chapter 1 is available open access under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License via link.springer.com.
Covers a wide range of fields, including reproductive health and rights, VAWG, and sexual and higher education Makes a strong argument for adopting a transnational feminist perspective to understanding anti-gender Includes contributions from over 14 different countries across the Americas, Europe, Asia, Africa, and the Middle East
Auteur
Aiko Holvikivi is Assistant Professor of Gender, Peace and Security at the LSE Department of Gender Studies, UK. Her research is interested in transnational movements of knowledges and of people, and how these are produced by and productive of gendered and racialised (in)security. Her book monograph Fixing Gender: The Paradoxical Politics of Training Peacekeepers (forthcoming, Oxford University Press) examines what work the term gender comes to do in the context of international peacekeeping. Her published work appears in journals including Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society, European Journal of Politics and Gender, and International Peacekeeping.
Billy Holzberg is Assistant Professor (lecturer) in Social Justice at the Centre for Public Policy Research at King's College London, UK. His research focuses on the affective and sexual politics of intensified nationalisms and border regimes in Europe and has been published in journals like Body and Society, Ethnic and Racial Studies, Feminist Media Studies and Sociology. His first monograph Affective Bordering: The Emotional Politics of Race, Migration and Deservingness published with Manchester University Press conceptualises national border making as an affective practice cementing racialised and gendered hierarchies.
Tomás Ojeda is an ESRC Postdoctoral Fellow at the University of Brighton's Centre for Transforming Sexuality and Gender (2022-2023), and Visiting Fellow at the LSE Department of Gender Studies, UK. His research interests lie in the intersection of queer theory, psychosocial studies, anti-gender politics and LGBTI+ mental health, with a special focus on depathologising practices, activist and academic responses to current attacks on gender affirming care. He is an editor of Engenderings, the LSE Gender blog.
Texte du rabat
In recent years, attacks on the rise of gender ideology and genderism as a political force, on gender studies as an academic field, and on feminist, queer and trans individuals seen to be their embodied representatives, have grown in scope and intensity. This edited volume understands such attacks as a global force in need of urgent analytical and political attention. Drawing on contributions from and about a varied range of geographical locations including Argentina, Chile, China, Germany, the Persian Gulf, Hungary, India, Pakistan, Peru, South Africa, Spain, Turkey, Uganda, the UK and the US, this book explores how anti-gender mobilisations work as a transnational formation shaped by the legacies of colonialism, racial capitalism, and resurgent nationalisms and how these can be resisted. By transnationalising our inquiries into the epistemic, affective and political nature of the anti-gender phenomenon, this volume troubles the origin stories we tell about where anti-genderpolitics come from, and helps to better locate the various sources, actors, and networks behind these attacks, contesting the notion that anti-gender politics derive solely from right-wing nationalist or conservative religious actors, to show how they also derive from more centrist, liberal, leftist and even presumably feminist positions. The book thus invites us to sharpen and rethink the conceptual vocabularies and strategies we use to understand and resist anti-gender attacks, opening up space for envisioning new political imaginaries and transnational feminist solidarities. Chapter 1 is available open access under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License via link.springer.com.
Contenu
1: Introduction: Thinking anti-gender politics transnationally.- 2: Brazil: A catastrophic hotspot of anti-gender politics Present realities, hovering specters, transnational connections.- 3:'Pro-Family' campaigning against comprehensive sexuality education in Eastern and Southern Africa.- 4: Thinking from Hanau to Christchurch and El Paso: Anti-gender ideology and the sexual politics of transnational right-wing terrorism.- 5: The battle to be 'normal': Anti-gender politics in Japan.- 6: Relational politics of anti-gender and anti-feminist ideology in India: Notes on fascism, feminist solidarity and liberatory politics.- 7: Child protection, sexuality and LGBT+ rights Anti-gender politics in populist illiberal Hungary.- 8: The emergence and trajectory of the anti-gender movement in Turkey .- 9: The 'gender ideology' rhetoric and the de-secularization process: A reflection situated in Latin America.- 10: The Forbidden 'F'? Do women still hold up half the sky in today's China?- 11: Anti-gender campaigns and abortion: Feminist strategies against reactionary biopolitics in Chile.- 12: Strategies of Attack: How anti-gender politics devalues and depletes academic knowledge production.- 13: Gendered contestations in Spain: A call for conceptual diversity and embodied knowledges.- 14: Gender studies and anti-gender politics in the Gulf region.- 15: Roundtable with scholars and activist affected by anti-gender politics.
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