Living Gender after Communism. için kapak resmi
Living Gender after Communism.
Başlık:
Living Gender after Communism.
Yazar:
Johnson, Janet Elise.
ISBN:
9780253112293
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Fiziksel Tanımlama:
1 online resource (282 pages)
İçerik:
Cover -- Contents -- foreword by karen dawisha -- acknowledgments -- Living Gender -- I. NEGOTIATING GENDER -- 1. Housewife Fantasies, Family Realities in the New Russia -- 2. Contesting Violence, Contesting Gender: Crisis Centers Encountering LocalGovernments in Barnaul, Russia -- II. DENYING GENDER -- 3. The Abortion Debate in Poland: Opinion Polls, Ideological Politics, Citizenship,and the Erasure of Gender as a Category of Analysis -- 4. The Gendered Body as Raw Material for Women Artists of Central Eastern Europeafter Communism -- III. TRADITIONALIZING GENDER -- 5. Birthday Girls, Russian Dolls, and Others: Internet Bride as the Emerging GlobalIdentity of Post-Soviet Women -- 6. Does the Gender of MPs Matter in Postcommunist Politics? The Case of theRussian Duma, 1995-2001 -- IV. NEGOTIATING GENDER WITHIN NATIONALISMS -- 7. Romanian Women's Discourses of Sexual Violence: Othered Ethnicities,Gendering Spaces -- 8. Challenging the Discourse of Bosnian War Rapes -- 9. Deficient Belarus? Insidious Gender Binaries and Hyper-feminized Nationality -- Fifteen Years of the East-West Women's Dialogue -- works cited -- list of contributors -- index.
Özet:
How has the collapse of communism across Europe and Eurasia changed gender? In addition to acknowledging the huge costs that fell heavily on women, Living Gender after Communism suggests that moving away from communism in Europe and Eurasia has provided an opportunity for gender to multiply, from varieties of neo-traditionalism to feminisms, from overt negotiation of femininity to denials of gender. This development,in turn, has enabled some women in the region to construct their own gendered identities for their own political, economic, or social purposes. Beginning with an understanding of gender as both a society-wide institution that regulates people's lives and a cultural "toolkit" which individuals and groups may use to subvert or "transvalue" the sex/gender system, the contributors to this volume provide detailed case studies from Belarus, Bosnia, the Czech Republic, Poland, Romania, Russia, and Ukraine. This collaboration between young scholars -- most from postcommunist states -- and experts in the fields of gender studies and postcommunism combines intimate knowledge of the area with sophisticated gender analysis to examine just how much gender realities have shifted in the region.Contributors are Anna Brzozowska, Karen Dawisha, Nanette Funk, Ewa Grigar, Azra Hromadzic, Janet Elise Johnson, Anne-Marie Kramer, Tania Rands Lyon, Jean C. Robinson, Iulia Shevchenko, Svitlana Taraban, and Shannon Woodcock.
Notlar:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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