(Excerpted from The Men's Bibliography: A comprehensive
bibliography of writing on men, masculinities, gender, and sexualities,
compiled by Michael Flood. 19th edition, 2008. Home URL: http://mensbiblio.xyonline.net/)
Note: If you're new to gender theory, five good places to start are Wearing's Gender, Hughes' Contemporary Australian Feminism, Grieves' and Burns' Australian Women: New Feminist Perspectives, Lucy Smith's Equality: Understanding Feminism, and Richardson's and Robinson's Thinking Feminist. Beasley's What is Feminism, Anyway? is a university-level introduction. Also see references under "Women's Studies" below.
Alsop, Rachel, Annette Fitzsimmons, and Kathleen Lennon. (2002). Theorizing Gender. Cambridge: Polity Press.
Beasley, Chris. (1999). What is Feminism, Anyway? Understanding Contemporary Feminist Thought. Sydney: Allen & Unwin.
Beasley, Chris. (2005). Gender & Sexuality: Critical theories, critical thinkers. London: Sage.
Bell, Diane, and Renate Klein. (eds). (1996). Radically Speaking: Feminism Reclaimed. Melbourne: Spinifex.
Bem, Sandra Lipsitz. (1994). Lenses of Gender: Transforming the Debate on Sexual Inequality. Yale University Press.
Bilton, T., K. Bonnett, P. Jones, T. Lawson, D. Skinner, M. Stanworth, and A. Webster (2002). Gender Relations. Chapter 6 in Introductory Sociology. 4th edition. Basingstoke and New York: Palgrave Macmillan (pp. 128-156).
Bradley, Harriet. (1997). Gender: Rethinking Patriarchy. Chapter 4 in Fractured Identities: Changing Patterns of Inequality. Polity Press.
Bryson, Valerie. (1992). Feminist Political Theory: An Introduction. Hampshire: Macmillan.
Bryson, Valerie. (2003). Feminist Debates: Issues of Theory and Political Practice.
(2nd edition) New York University Press.
Introduction.
Early Feminist Thought.
Liberalism and Beyond: Mainstream Feminism in the Mid-Nineteenth Century.
The Contribution of Marx and Engels.
Mainstream Feminism: The Vote and After, 1880-1939.
Socialist Feminism in Britain and the United States.
Marxist Feminism in Germany.
Marxist Feminism in Russia.
Feminism After the Second World War.
Liberalism and Beyond: Feminism and Equal Rights from the 1960s.
Radical Feminism and the Concept of Patriarchy.
Patriarchy and Private Life: The Family, Reproduction and Sexuality.
Patriarchy: The Public Sphere.
Marxist and Socialist Feminism from the 1960s.
Black and Post-modern Feminism.
Feminist Theory in the Twenty-First Century.
Bulbeck, Chilla. (2000). Issues for Australian Feminism: the end of “the universal woman”? In Paul Boreham, Geoffrey Stokes and Richard Hall. (eds.) The Politics of Australian Society: Political Issues for the New Century. Addison, Wesley, Longman: Frenchs Forest, Sydney, pp. 80-91, revised and reprinted in 2003.
Caine, Barbara, and Rosemary Pringle. (eds). (1995). Transitions: New Australian Feminisms. New York: St Martin’s Press.
Caine, Barbara. (ed.). (1998). Australian Feminism: A Companion. Melbourne: Oxford University Press.
Connell, R.W. (2002). Gender. Cambridge: Polity Press.
Coote, Anna, and Beatrix Campbell. (1982). Sweet Freedom: The Struggle for Women’s Liberation. London: Blackwell.
Cosslett, Tess, Alison Easton, and Penny Summerfield. (eds). (1996). Women, Power and Resistance: An Introduction to Women’s Studies. Buckingham: Open University Press.
Cranny-Francis, Anne, and Wendy Waring. (2001). Gender Studies: Terms and Debates.
Macmillan.
Contents;
Introduction: Basic Terms - Ways of Talking: Discourse - Ways of Seeing: Stereotypes
- Ways of Thinking: Theorising Gender - Ways of Being: Embodying Gender.
Davis, Kathy, Mary Evans, and Judith Lorber. (eds.). (2006). Handbook of Gender and Women’s Studies. Sage.
DeFrancisco, Victoria Pruin, and Catherine Helen Palczewski. (eds.). (2007).
Communicating Gender Diversity: A Critical Approach. Sage.
Part I: Foundations.
1. Developing a Critical Gender/Sex Lens.
2. Alternative Approaches to Understanding Gender/Sex.
3. Gendered/Sexed Voices.
4. Gendered/Sexed Bodies.
5. Gendered/Sexed Language.
Part II: Institutions.
6. Introduction to Gender in Social Institutions.
7. Family.
8. Education.
9. Work.
10. Religion.
11. Media.
12. One Last Look Through a Critical Gendered Lens
Disch, Estelle (ed.). (2003). Reconstructing Gender: A Multicultural Anthology.
3rd
ed., McGraw-Hill.
Eisenstein, Hester. (1984). Contemporary Feminist Thought. London & Sydney: Unwin.
Eistenstein, Hester. (1995). Inside Agitators: Australian Femocrats and the State. Allen & Unwin.
Else-Mitchell, Rosalind, and Naomi Flutter. (eds). (1998). Talking Up: Young Women’s Take on Feminism. Melbourne: Spinifex.
Evans, Judith. (1995). Feminist Theory Today: An Introduction to Second-Wave Feminism. London: Sage.
Evans, Mary. (1997). Introducing Contemporary Feminist Thought. Cambridge:
Polity Press..
Introduction.
1. Enter Women.
2. Public and Private: Women and the State.
3. Engendering Knowledge.
4. Representation.
5. The Body.
6. Feminism and the Academy.
7. Worlds of Difference?
Evans, Mary. (ed.). (1994). The Woman Question. (2nd edition), Sage.
Farganis, Sondra. (1994). Situating Feminism: From Thought to Action. Sage.
Farrer, Vanessa. (1993). Gender and Patriarchy. Chapter 15 in Smith, Rodney. (ed.). Politics in Australia. (2nd edition) Sydney: Allen & Unwin .
Fenstermaker, S., and C. West. (eds.). (2002). Doing Gender, Doing Difference:
Inequality, Power, and Institutional Change. New York: Routledge.
Introduction / Sarah Fenstermaker and Candace West.
SECTION I THEORETICAL FORMULATION, CRITICISM, AND RESPONSE.
Doing Gender / Candace West and Don H. Zimmerman.
Gender Inequality: New Conceptual Terrain / Sarah Fenstermaker, Candace West,
and Don H. Zimmerman.
Power, Inequality, and the Accomplishment of Gender: An Ethnomethodological
View / Candace West and Sarah Fenstermaker.
Doing Difference / Candace West and Sarah Fenstermaker.
Symposium on West and Fenstermaker’s Doing Difference / Patricia Hill
Collins, Lionel A. Maldonado, Dana Y. Takagi, Barrie Thorne, Lynn Weber, and
Howard Winant.
Reply-(Re)Doing Difference / Candace West and Sarah Fenstermaker.
SECTION II EMPIRICAL APPLICATIONS.
Work and Gender (from The Gender Factory) / Sarah Fenstermaker.
Accounting for Cosmetic Surgery: The Accomplishment of Gender / Diana Dull and
Candace West.
Accountability and Affirmative Action: The Accomplishment of Gender, Race, and
Class in a University of California Board of Regents Meeting / Candace West
and Sarah Fenstermaker.
“Doing Gender’’ Differently: Institutional Change in Second-Parent
Adoptions / Susan Dalton and Sarah Fenstermaker.
SECTION III THEORETICAL ELABORATIONS.
Performance and Accomplishment Reconciling Feminist Conceptions of Gender /
Molly Moloney and Sarah Fenstermaker.
Doing Difference’’ Revisited Problems, Prospects, and the Dialogue
in Feminist Theory / Sarah Fenstermaker and Candace West.
Conclusion Central Problematics: An Agenda for Feminist Sociology / Sarah Fenstermaker
and Candace West.
Ferree, M.M., J. Lorber, and B.B. Hess. (eds.). (1999). Revisioning Gender.
Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.
I. Reconceptualizing Gender.
1. The Social Construction and Institutionalization of Gender and Race: An Integrative
Framework / Evelyn Nakano Glenn.
2. Rewriting Class, Race, and Gender: Problems in Feminist Rethinking / Joan
Acker.
3. Some Reflections on Gender and Politics / Joan Wallach Scott.
II. The Macrosocial Organization of Gender.
4. Feminist Thinking About the Welfare State / Anne Borchorst.
5. Gender and the Global Economy / Valentine M. Moghadam.
6. Gender, Work, Who Cares?! Production, Reproduction, Deindustrialization,
and Business as Usual / Lisa D. Brush.
III. Gender, Discourse, and Culture.
7. “Woman” as Symbol and Women as Agents: Gendered Religious Discourses
and Practices / Susan Starr Sered.
8. Sex, Text, and Context: (In) Between Feminism and Cultural Studies / Suzanna
Danuta Walters.
IV. Gender in Social Institutions.
9. Moving Beyond Gender: Intersectionality and Scientific Knowledge / Patricia
Hill Collins.
10. Gender and Sexuality in Organizations / Patricia Yancey Martin and David
L. Collinson.
11. Gender, Family Structure, and Social Structure: Racial Ethnic Families in
the United States / Anne R. Roschelle.
12. Just Do.What? Sport, Bodies, Gender / Shari L. Dworkin and Michael Messner.
V. Gendering the Person.
13. Gender, Power Dynamics, and Social Interaction / Peter Glicke and Susan
T. Fiske.
14. Now You Can Choose! Issues in Parenting and Procreation / Barbara Katz Rothman.
15. Embattled Terrain: Gender and Sexuality / Judith Lorber.
16. Making Gendered People: Bodies, Identities, Sexualities / R.W. Connell.
Freedman, Jane. (2002). Feminism. Buckingham: Open University Press.
Frye, Marilyn. (1983). The Politics of Reality: Essays in Feminist Theory. New York: The Crossing Press.
Frye, Marilyn. (1992). Willful Virgin: Essays in Feminism, 1976-1992. Freedom, CA: The Crossing Press.
Glover, David and Cora Kaplan. (2000). Genders. London & New York: Routledge.
Gould, Carol. (ed.). (1997). Gender. Atlantic Highlands: Humanities Press.
Grant, Judith. (1993). Fundamental Feminism: Contesting the Core Concepts of Feminist Theory. New York & London: Routledge .
Grieves, Norma, and Ailsa Burns. (eds). (1986). Australian Women: New Feminist Perspectives. Melbourne: Oxford University Press.
Grieves, Norma, and Ailsa Burns. (eds). (1994). Australian Women: Contemporary Feminist Thought. Melbourne: Oxford University Press.
Griffin, G., and R. Braidotti. (eds.). (2002). Thinking Differently: A Reader in European Women’s Studies. Zed Books.
Griffin-Cohen, Marjorie, and Janine Brodie. (eds.). (2007). Remapping Gender in the New Global Order. London: Routledge.
Gunew, Sneja. (ed.). (1990). Feminist Knowledge: Critique and construct. London & New York: Routledge.
Gunew, Sneja. (ed.). (1991). A Reader in Feminist Knowledge. London: Routledge.
Herrmann, Anne C., and Abigail J. Stewart. (eds). (1994). Theorizing Feminism:
Parallel Trends in the Humanities and Social Sciences. Boulder, CA: Westview
Press.
Reading Feminist Theories Collaborating across Disciplines.
Part One: Inventing Gender.
Defining Feminism and Feminist Theory.
1: What Is Feminism?.
2: The Combahee River Collective Statement.
3: From a Long Line of Verididas Chicanas and Feminism.
4: Anti-Anti-Identity Politics.
Mutual Influence: Humanities and Social Science.
5: Gender and the Meaning of Difference.
6: Romance in the Age of Electronics.
Part Two: Sex, Sexuality, and Gender.
From Sex to Sexuality.
7: The Medical Construction of Gender.
8: The Politics of Androgyny in Japan.
9: Notes toward a Feminist Peace Politics.
Construction Gender.
10: Making It Perfectly Queer.
Sex Equality: On Difference and Dominance.
Conceptualizing Difference.
12: Deconstructing Equality? Versus-Difference.
Part Three: Gender, Race, and Class.
Race and Gender.
13: On Being the Object of Property.
14: Gender, Race, Raza.
15: Feminism and Difference.
Postcolonialism.
16: Violence in the Other Country.
17: From High Heels to Swathed Bodies.
Work, Class, and Gender.
18: Hegemonic Relations and Gender Resistance.
Part Four: Questioning Feminisms.
Women, Citizenship, and Activism.
19: Fetal Images.
20: Dissident Citizenship.
Feminism/Postfeminism.
21: Automating Gender.
22: African and Western Feminisms.
Hinds, Hilary, Ann Phoenix, and Jackie Stacey. (eds). (1992). Working Out: New Directions for Women’s Studies. London: Falmer.
Holmes, Mary. (2007). What is Gender? Sociological Approaches. Sage.
Introduction to the sociology of gender
How different are women and men?
Is gender something that we do?
How can gender best be explained?
Is gender about bodies?
What are the politics of gender?
How is gender intertwined with class?
How is gender intertwined with ‘race’?
Conclusion: So what is gender?
Holmes; Mary. (2008). Gender and Everyday Life. Taylor & Francis.
Introduction: Gender and Everyday Life.
1. Sexed Bodies?
2. Learning and doing gender in everyday life.
3. Gendered relationships in everyday life.
4. Resisting gender in everyday life.
5. The future of gender.
Conclusion: Gender, everyday life and degendering.
hooks, bell. (1984). Feminist Theory: From Margin to Center. Boston, MA: South End Press.
Howard, J.A., and J. Hollander. (1997). Gendered Situations, Gendered Selves.
Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.
1 Gender vs. Sex.
1.1 Sex.
1.2 Gender.
1.3 Gender Discordance.
2 Biological Differences.
3 Social and Psychological Differences.
3.1 Work and Occupations.
3.2 Education.
4 Sexism.
4.1 Violence.
5 Theories of Gender Differences.
5.1 Gender Socialization.
5.2 Sociobiology.
5.3 Structural Functionalism.
5.4 Conflict Theory.
Hughes, Christina. (2002). Key Concepts in Feminist Theory and Research. Sage.
Introduction.
Not Talking about the Same Thing: Introducing Conceptual Literacy.
Concepts.
Meanings, Games and Contests.
Equality.
Difference.
Choice.
Care.
Time.
Experience.
Developing Conceptual Literacy.
Hughes, K. (1998). Everygirl’s Guide to Feminism. South Melbourne: Addison.
Hughes, Kate Pritchard. (ed.). (1996). Contemporary Australian Feminism. Melbourne: Longman Chesire (2nd edition).
Humm, Maggie. (1995). The Dictionary of Feminist Theory. New York: Prentice Hall/Harvester Wheatsheaf (2nd edition).
Humm, Maggie. (ed.). (1992). Feminisms: A Reader. Hertfordshire: Harvester Wheatsheaf.
Humm, Maggie. (ed.). (1992). Modern Feminisms: Political, Literary, Cultural. New York: Columbia University Press.
Jackson, Steve. (ed.). (1993). Women’s Studies: Essential Readings. Washington Square. New York: New York University Press.
Jackson, Stevi, and Jackie Jones. (eds). (1998). Contemporary Feminist Theories. New York University Press.
Jackson, Stevi, and Sue Scott. (eds). (2001). Gender: A Sociological Reader. Routledge.
Jaggar, Alison M. (ed.). (1994). Living With Contradictions: Controversies in Feminist Social Ethics. Boulder, CA: Westview Press .
Kaplan, Gisela. (1996). The Meagre Harvest: The Australian Women’s Movement, 1950s–1990s. Sydney: Allen & Unwin.
Kemp, Sandra, and Judith Squires. (eds). (1997). Feminisms. Oxford & New York: Oxford University Press.
Kimmel Michael S. (2000). The Gendered Society. Oxford University Press.
Kimmel, Michael, and Amy Aronson. (eds.). (2003). The Gendered Society Reader. Oxford.
Kramarae, Cheris, and Dale Spender. (eds). (1992). The Knowledge Explosion: Generations of Feminist Scholarship. New York & London: Athene Series.
Kramarae, Cheris, and Dale Spender. (eds). (2001). Routledge International Encyclopedia of Women. Routledge, 4 Vols.
Kramarae, Cheris, and Paula A. Treichler. (eds). (1985). A Feminist Dictionary. London: Pandora Press.
Landry, Donna, and Gerald MacLean. (1993). Materialist Feminisms. Massachusetts & Oxford: Blackwell.
Letherby, Gayle. (2003). Feminist Research in Theory and Practice. Open University Press.
Lloyd, Moya. (2005). Beyond Identity Politics: Feminism, power and politics. Sage.
Lorber, Judith (2005). Breaking the Bowls: Degendering and Feminist Change. Norton.
Lorber, Judith, and Susan A. Farrell. (eds). (1990). The Social Construction of Gender. Newbury Park, CA: Sage.
Lorber, Judith. (1994). Paradoxes of Gender. New Haven & London: Yale University Press
Lorber, Judith. (2001). Gender Inequality: Feminist Theories and Politics. Roxbury Pub Co.
Lorber, Judith. (2001). Gender Inequality: Feminist Theories and Politics. Roxbury Pub Co.
Lovell, Terry. (1990). British Feminist Thought: A Reader.
Mac an Ghaill, Mairtin, and Chris Haywood. (2006). Gender, Culture and Society:
Contemporary Femininities and Masculinities.
Introduction: Gender Relations in Context.
Approaching Gender: Feminism, Men’s Studies and the Cultural Turn.
Fragmenting Family Life: Maternal Femininities and Paternal Masculinities.
In and Out of Labour: Beyond the Cult of Domesticity and Breadwinners.
Interplaying Gender and Age in Late Modernity.
Sporting Genders: Media Masculinities and Femininities.
Shifting Gender Connections: Sexuality, Late Modernity and Lifestyle Sex.
Representing Engendered Bodies: Producing the Cultural Categories ‘Men’
and ‘Women’.
Men and Women of the World: Emerging Representations of Global Gender Relations.
Gender on the Move: The Search for a New Sex/Gender Order in Late Modernity.
Conclusion.
Macionis, John C., and Ken Plummer (2002) The Gender Order and Sexuality. Chapter 12 in Sociology: A global introduction. 2nd ed., Prentice Hall (pp. 286-319).
Mather Saul, Jennifer. (2003). Feminism: Issues & Arguments. Oxford Press.
McCann, Carole R., and Seung-Kyung Kim. (eds). (2002). Feminist Theory Reader: Local and Global Perspectives. Routledge.
Minas, Anne. (ed.). (1993). Gender Basics: Feminist Perspectives on Women and Men. Belmont, CA: Wadsworth.
Moi, Toril. (1987). French Feminist Thought: Politics, Patriarchy, and Sex Difference. Malden, MA: Blackwell.
Newman, David M. (2004). The Architecture of Inequality: Sex and gender. Chapter 12 in Sociology: Exploring the architecture of everyday life. 5th edition. Thousand Oaks, CA: Pine Forge Press.
Nicholson, Linda. (ed.). (1997). The Second Wave: A Reader in Feminist Theory. New York. Routledge.
Oakley, Ann, and Juliet Mitchell. (eds). (1997). Who’s Afraid of Feminism? Seeing Through the Backlash. New York: The New Press (especially Oakley’s “A brief history of gender”)
Oakley, Ann. (2002). Gender on Planet Earth. New York: New Press.
Parker, Victoria. What’s the Big Idea? Women’s’ Rights. London: Hodder Children’s Books
Poole, M. (2003). Gender. In Sociology: Australian connections, eds. R. Jureidini and M. Poole. 3rd edition. Sydney: Allen & Unwin.
Porter, Elizabeth. (2002). Feminist Analysis. In Government, Politics, Power and Policy in Australia. (7th edition). Eds John Summers, Dennis Woodward, and Andrew Parkin. Frenchs Forest, NSW: Longman.
Ramazanoglu, Caroline. (1989). Feminism and the Contradictions of Oppression. London & New York: Routledge.
Ramet, Sabrina Petra. (ed.). (1996). Gender Reversals and Gender Cultures:
Anthropological and Historical Perspectives. London & New York: Routledge.
1. Gender Reversals and Gender Cultures (An Introduction) Sabrina Petra Ramet
2. Traversing Gender: Cultural Context and Gender Practices, Anne Bolin 3. Sumer:
Gender, Gender Roles, Gender Role Reversals, Judith Ochshorn 4. Cross Dressing
and Cross Purposes: Gender Possibilities in the Acts of Thecla, J.L. Welch 5.
Martyrs, Ascetics and Gnostics: Gender Crossing in Early Christianity, Karen
Jo Torjensen 6. Cross Dressing, Gender Errors and Sexual Taboos in Renaissance
Literature, Winfred Schleiner 7. Elena alias Eleno: Genders, Sexualities, and
`Race’ in the Mirror of Natural History in Sixteenth Century Spain, Israel
Burshatin 8. Becoming Male: Salvation through Gender Modification in Hinduism
and Buddhism, Cynthia Ann Humes 9. Gender, Power and Spectacle in Late Imperial
Chinese Theatre, Sophie Volpp 10. Eroticism, Sexuality and Gender Reversal in
Hungarian Culture, Laszlo Kurti 11. Sacred Genders in Siberia: Shamans, Bear
Festivals and Androgyny, Marjorie Mandelstam Balzer 12. There is More than Just
Women and Men: Gender Variance in North American Indian Cultures, Sabine Lang
13. The Procreative and Ritual Constitution of Female, Male, and Other: Androgynous
Beings in the Cultural Imagination of The Bimin-Kuskusmin of Papua New Guinea,
Fitz John Porter Poole.
Reed, Kate. (2006). New Directions in Social Theory: Race, Gender and the Canon.
Sage.
PART ONE: CLASSICAL SOCIOLOGY.
The Classical Tradition.
Race, Gender and Hidden Classics.
PART TWO: MODERN SOCIOLOGY.
Theories of the Golden Age.
Race, Gender and Sociological Outsiders.
PART THREE: CONTEMPORARY SOCIOLOGY.
Postmodernism and Social Theory.
Beyond Sociological Exclusion.
Richardson, Diane, and Victoria Robinson. (2008). Introducing Gender and Women’s
Studies. Third Edition. Palgrave Macmillan.
PART 1: THEORY AND POLITICS.
Conceptualising Gender--D.Richardson.
Feminist Theory--S.Hines.
Men and Masculinities--V.Robinson.
Feminist Politics--A.Halcli.
PART 2: BODIES/IDENTITIES.
Racing the Feminist Agenda: Exploring the Intersections between Race, Ethnicity
and Gender--K.Reed.
Sexuality--Y.Taylor.
Gendered Bodies: Gendered Lives--K.Woodward.
PART 3: INSTITUTIONS.
Families, Domesticity and Intimacy--S.Jackson.
Girls and Schooling: Contemporary Issues in Gender Equality and Educational
Achievement--J.Ringrose & D.Epstein.
Gender and Work--Z.Irving.
PART 4: CULTURES AND CONTEXTS.
Cyberspace/technologies: Of Cyborgs and Feminism--S.Gillis.
Media and Popular Culture--R.Holliday.
PART 5: DOING FEMINIST RESEARCH.
Feminist Methodology Matters--L.Stanley & S.Wise.
Postscript--V.Robinson & D.Richardson.
Richardson, Diane, and Victoria Robinson. (eds). (1993). Thinking Feminist: Key Concepts in Women’s Studies. New York: Guilford Press.
Richardson, Diane, and Victoria Robinson. (eds). (1997). Introducing Women’s
Studies: Feminist Theory and Practice. (2nd edition) Macmillan.
Introducing Women’s Studies / V.Robinson.
Turning the Tide in Women’s Studies / K.K.Bhavnani.
Feminist Theory / J.Stacey.
Sexuality, Power and Feminism / D.Richardson.
Women, Violence and Male Power / M.Maynard & J.Winn.
The Picture is Political: Representation of Women in Contemporary Popular Culture
/ M.Marshment.
Women, Writing and Language / G.Frith.
Women, Marriage and Family Relationships / S.Jackson.
Motherhood and Women’s Lives / P.Nicolson.
Women and Reproduction / J.Hanmer.
Women and Health / J.Hockey.
Women at Work / A.Witz.
Women, History and Protest / J.Hannam.
Women and Education / C.Skelton.
Feminist Research Methodology / L.Stanley.
Feminism and Social Policy / F.Williams.
Women’s Studies, Science and Technology / L.Birke & M.Henry.
Roseneil, Sahsa. (1995). The Coming of Age of Feminist Sociology: Some Issues of Practice and Theory for the Next Twenty Years. British Journal of Sociology, 46(2), June.
Rowland, Robyn. (1988). Woman Herself: A Transdisciplinary Perspective on Women’s Identity. Melbourne: Oxford University Press.
Saunders, Kay, and Raymond Evans. (eds). (1992). Gender Relations in Australia: Domination and Negotiation. Sydney: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich.
Segal, Lynne. (1987). Is the Future Female? Troubled Thoughts on Contemporary Feminism. UK: Virago.
Segal, Lynne. (1999). Why Feminism? Gender, Psychology, Politics. Polity Press.
Smith, Lucy. (1990). Equality: Understanding Feminism. William Collins Sons & Co.
Spade, Joan Z., and Catherine G. Valentine. (ed.) (2007). The Kaleidoscope
of Gender: Prisms, Patterns, and Possibilities. Second Edition. Pine Forge Press.
PART 1: PRISMS.
CHAPTER ONE: THE PRISM OF GENDER.
1. Gender as a Social Structure / Barbara J. Risman.
2. What it Means to be Gendered Me / Betsy Lucal.
3. Beyond Pink and Blue / Sharon E. Preves.
4. The Trouble with Testosterone / Robert Sapolsky.
5. Multiple Genders among North American Indians / Serena Nanda.
CHAPTER TWO: THE INTERACTION OF GENDER WITH OTHER SOCIALLY CONSTRUCTED PRISMS.
6. Inequality on the Shopping Floor / Christine L. Williams.
7. Toward a New Vision: Race, Class, and Gender as Categories of Analysis and
Connection / Patricia Hill Collins.
8. Asian American Women and Racialized Femininities: ‘Doing’ Gender
across Cultural Worlds / Karen D. Pyke and Denise L. Johnson.
9. ‘Not all Differences are Created Equal:’ Multiple Jeopardy in
a Gendered Organization / Jane Ward.
CHAPTER THREE: GENDER AND THE PRISM OF CULTURE.
10. ‘It’s Only a Penis’: Rape, Feminism, and Difference /
Christine Helliwell.
11. Female Circumcision: Muslim Identities and ZerTolerance Policies in Rural
West Java / Lynda Newland.
12. Revisiting ‘Woman-Woman Marriage’ / Wairimu Ngaruiya Njambi
and William E. O’Brien.
13. Reinventing Honorable Masculinity: Discourses from a Working-Class Indian
Community / Annie George.
14. Gender and Power / Maria Alexandra Lepowsky.
PART 2: PATTERNS.
CHAPTER FOUR: LEARNING AND DOING GENDER.
15. Playing in the Gender Transgression Zone: Race, Class, and Hegemonic Masculinity
in Middle Childhood / C. Shawn McGuffey and B. Lindsay Rich.
16. ‘No Way My Boys are Going to be Like That!’ Parents’ Responses
to children’s Gender Nonconformity / Emily W. Kane.
17. The Pervasiveness and Persistence of the Feminine Beauty Ideal in Children’s
Fairy Tales / Lori Baker-Sperry and Liz Grauerholz.
18. Between a ‘Soft’ and a ‘Hard’ Place: Gender, Ethnicity,
and Culture in the School and at Home / Prudence L. Carter.
19. My Life as a Man / Elizabeth Gilbert.
20. Slut! Growing Up Female with a Bad Reputation / Leora Tannenbaum.
CHAPTER FIVE: BUYING AND SELLING GENDER.
21. The Pink Dragon is Female: Halloween Costumes and Gender Markers / Adie
Nelson.
22. The Anthropometry of Barbie: Unsettling Ideals of the Feminine Body in Popular
Culture / Jacqueline Urla and Alan C. Swedlund.
23. Firming the Floppy Penis: Age, Class, and Gender Relations in the Lives
of Old Men / Toni Calasanti and Neal King.
24. Consuming Orientalism: Images of Asian/American Women in Multicultural Advertising
/ Minjeong Kim and Angie Y. Chung.
25. Is He Boyfriend Material? Representation of Males in Teenage Girls’
Magazines / Kirsten B. Firminger.
CHAPTER SIX: TRACING GENDER’S MARK ON BODIES, SEXUALITIES, AND EMOTIONS.
26. Size 6: The Western Woman’s Harem / Fatema Mernissi.
27. Bear Bodies, Bear Masculinity: Recuperation, Resistance, or Retreat? / Peter
Hennen.
28. Doing Gender, Doing Class: The Performance of Sexuality in Exotic Dance
Clubs / Mary Nell Trautner.
29. ‘If It’s Not On, It’s Not On’ - Or Is It? / Nicola
Gavey, Kathryn McPhillips, and Marion Doherty.
30. Gender and Emotion Management in the Stages of Edgework / Jennifer Lois.
CHAPTER SEVEN: GENDER AT WORK.
31. Inequality Regimes: Gender, Class, and Race in Organizations / Joan Acker.
32. Selling Women Short on Wall Street: The Myth of Meritocracy / Louise Marie
Roth.
33. Emerging Theories of Care Work / Paula England.
34. Hard Drives and Glass Ceilings: Gender Stratification in High Tech Production
/ Steven C. McKay.
35. Mommies and Daddies on the Fast Track in Other Wealthy Nations / Gwen Moore.
36. Moral Dilemmas, Moral Strategies, and the Transformation of Gender: Lessons
from two Generations of Work and Family Change / Kathleen Gerson.
CHAPTER 8: GENDER IN INTIMATE RELATIONSHIPS.
37. Thinking about Gender and Power in Marriage / Veronica Jaris Tichenor.
38. Black Intimacies: Love, Sex, and Relationships - The Pursuit of Intimacy
/ Shirley A. Hill.
39. Complexity of Father Involvement in Low-Income Mexican American Families
/ Scott Coltrane, Ross D. Parke, and Michele Adams.
40. Opting intMotherhood: Lesbians Blurring the Boundaries and Transforming
the Meaning of Parenthood and Kinship / Gillian A. Dunne.
41. Class-Based Masculinities: The Interdependence of Gender, Class, and Interpersonal
Power / Karen D. Pyke.
CHAPTER 9: ENFORCING GENDER.
42. Sexual Assault on Campus: A Multilevel, Integrative Approach to party Rape
/ Elizabeth A. Armstrong, Laura Hamilton, and Brian Sweeney.
43. It Hurts to be a Girl: Growing Up Poor, White, and Female / Julia Hall.
44. Gendering Violence: Masculinity and Power in Men’s Accounts of Domestic
Violence / Kristin L. Anderson and Debra Umberson.
45. Sexual Harassment and Masculinity: The Power and Meaning of ‘Girl
Watching’ / Beth A. Quinn.
PART 3: POSSIBILITIES.
CHAPTER TEN: NOTHING IS FOREVER.
47. Identity Politics in the Women’s Movement / Barbara Ryan.
48. Native American Feminism, Sovereignty, and Social Change / Andrea Smith.
49. Change Among the Gatekeepers: Men, Masculinities, and Gender Equality in
the Global Arena / R. W. Connell.
50. Unraveling the Gender Knot / Allan Johnson.
Stanley, Liz. (1996). (ed.). Knowing Feminisms. Sage.
Introduction: On Academic Borders, Territories, Tribes and Knowledges.
Whose Women’s Studies? Whose Philosophy? Whose Borderland? / Anne Seller.
Feminist Pedagogy to the Letter: A Musing on Contradictions / Gina Mercer.
Negotiating the Frontier: Women and Resistance in the Contemporary Academy /
Mary Evans.
In Law and Outlaw? The Tale of a Journey / Angela Montgomery.
Nursing the Academy / Jean Orr.
Bordering on Change / Chris Corrin.
Still Seeking Transformation: Feminist Challenges to Psychology / Sue Wilkinson.
Feminist Theology: Myth, Mystery or Monster? / Elaine Graham.
What Are Feminist Academics For? / Sue Wise.
Dancing between Hemispheres: Negotiating Routes for the Dancer-Academic / Carol
Brown.
A Fantasy of Belonging? / Johanna Alberti.
Identity and Representation: Experiences of Teaching a Neo-Colonial Discipline
/ Uma Kothari.
Borderline Crosstalk / Ailbhe Smyth.
Writing the Borders: Episodic and Theoretic Thoughts on Not//Belonging / Liz
Stanley.
What’s a Nice Girl Like You Doing in a Place Like This? The Ambivalences
of Professional Feminism / Kathy Davis.
Knowing Feminisms and Passing Women: A Conclusion.
Summers, Anne. (2003). The End of Equality: Work, babies and women’s choices in 21st century Australia. Milson’s Point, NSW: Random House Australia.
Tong, Rosemarie. (1998). Feminist Thought: A More Comprehensive Introduction.
2nd edition. Boulder, Colorado: Westview Press.
Introduction: The Diversity of Feminist Thinking.
One: Liberal Feminism.
Two: Radical Feminism: Libertarian and Cultural Perspectives.
Three: Marxist and Socialist Feminism.
Four: Psychoanalytic and Gender Feminism.
Five: Existentialist Feminism.
Six: Postmodern Feminism.
Seven: Multicultural and Global Feminism.
Eight: Ecofeminism.
Conclusion: Margins and Centers
Tuttle, Lisa. (1986). Encyclopedia of Feminism. London: Arrow Books.
Valenti, Jessica. (2007). Full Frontal Feminism: A Young Woman’s Guide to Why Feminism Matters. Seal Press.
Vannoy, Dana (ed.). (2000). Gender Mosaics: Social Perspectives. Roxbury.
Introduction: Gender and Power.
Unit I. Intersections Among Systems of Inequality.
1. Multiracial Feminism, Judith Lorber (with excerpts by Maxine Baca-Zinn, Bonnie
Thorton Dill, and Patricia Hill Collins).
2. Feminist Consciousness and Black Women, Pauline Terrelonge.
3. The Intersections of Race and Gender in White Supremacist Thought, Abby L.
Ferber.
4. Gender and Power in Native North America, Angela Gonzales and Judy Kert.
Unit II. Learning to do Gender.
5. Gender and Identity, Judith A. Howard and Ramira Alamilla.
6. Children’s Experience of Gender: Habitus and Field, Steven Carlton-Ford
and Paula Houston.
7. Constructing Identities in Gay and Lesbian Communities, Elizabeth Kaminski
and Verta Taylor.
8. Gender and Education in the United States, Joan Z. Spade.
9. When Bodies Are Weapons: Masculinity and Violence in Sport, Michael A. Messner.
10. Language and Patriarchy, William O’Barr.
11. The Impact of the Media on Gender Images, Cynthia M. Lont.
Unit III. Social Structure: Gender in the Family and Intimate Relationships.
12. Gender and Demographic Reality, Frances K. Goldscheider and Michelle L.
Rogers.
13. Twentieth-Century Changes in Economic Work and Family, Sandra E. Godwin
and Barbara J. Risman.
14. Men, Women, and Housework, Scott Coltrane and Michele Adams.
15. Differences in His Marriage and Her Marriage, Terri L. Orbuch and Susan
G. Timmer.
16. The Challenge of Integrating Work and Family Life, Jennifer Campbell Worley
and Dana Vannoy.
17. The Legacy of Patriarchy in Today’s Russia, Lisa A. Cubbins.
18. Equity in Heterosexual and Homosexual Relationships, Pepper Schwartz and
Amy E. Singer.
19. Gender and Friendship, Stacey J. Oliker.
20. Violence Against Women by Intimate Partners, Demie Kurz.
21. Divorce Trends and Effects for Women and Men, Beth Anne Shelton and Rebecca
E. Deen.
Unit IV. Social Structure: Gender in the Economy and the Workplace.
22. Sex Segregation in the U.S. Labor Force, Christine E. Bose and Rachel Bridges
Whaley.
23. Work-Family Conflict: Effects for Job Segregation and Career Perceptions,
David J. Maume, Jr..
24. Women, Men, and Engineering, Mary Frank Fox.
25. How Sex Gets Into Your Paycheck and How to Get It Out: The Gender Gap in
Pay and Comparable Worth, Ronnie J. Steinberg.
26. The Gendered Nature of Emotional Labor in the Workplace, Marcia L. Bellas.
27. Asian American Women: Immigration, Labor-Force Participation, and Activism,
Linda Trinh Vo.
28. Rethinking Official Measures of Poverty: Considerations of Race, Ethnicity,
and Gender, Angela Gardner Roux.
29. Retirement: Golden Years for Whom?, Toni Calasanti.
Unit V. Social Structure: Gender in Law and Politics.
30. Constitutional Law and Public Policy: Gender Equity, Donna M. Nagy and Aviva
Rose Rich.
31. Women’s Participation in Electoral Politics: Myths and Realities,
Alesha Doan and Jan E. Leighley.
32. Gender, Sexuality, and the Military, Chris Bourg and Mady Wechsler Segal.
33. Gender Politics in Men’s Movements, Stephen Whitaker.
34. Gender, Power, and Sexual Harassment, Georganne Runblad.
35. Gender Violence: Rape and Sexual Assault, Kathryn M. Feltey.
36. The Criminal Processing System: Girls and Women as Victims and Offenders,
Joanne Belknap.
Unit VI. Social Structure: Gender in Religion.
37. Women’s Status in the Christian Church, Paula Nesbitt, Jeanette Baust,
and Emma Bailey.
38. Gender and Hebrew Biblical Studies, S. Tamar Kamionkowski and Mychal Rosenbaum.
39. Ecofeminism and Healing Ourselves, Healing the Earth, Rosemary Radford Reuther.
40. Gender and Judaism, Dawn Robinson Rose.
Unit VII. Social Structure: Gender in Health.
41. Men and Women: Health and Illness, Mary K. Zimmerman and Lisa Cox Hall.
42. Gender Hierarchies in Health Professions, Judith Lorber.
43. Choices and Contexts: The Social Construction of Reproduction, Beth Rushing.
Unit VIII. Thinking About the Potential for Change.
44. The Participation of Women and Men in the U.S. Labor Force: Trends and Future
Prospects, Suzanne Bianchi and Jane Lawler Dye.
45. Older Men as Invisible Men in Contemporary Society, Edward H. Thompson,
Jr..
46. Cuando Fuiste Mujer: Remaking "Woman" in Latino Cultures, Consuelo
Lopez-Springfield.
47. The International Women’s Movement at Century’s End, Myra Marx
Ferree and Mangala Subramaniam.
Conclusions: Collapsing the Walls of Patriarchy and Masculine Hegemony.
Walby, Sylvia. (1990). Theorizing Patriarchy. Oxford & Cambridge: Blackwell.
Wallace, Ruth A. (ed.). (1989). Feminism and Sociological Theory. Newbury Park, CA: Sage.
Walters, Margaret. (2005). Feminism: A Very Short Introduction. Oxford University
Press.
1. Introduction: The rights and wrongs of women.
2. Pioneers.
3. Voting Rights.
4. The Personal is the Political: Liberation in the Twentieth Century.
5. In a New Century.
6. Women Across the World.
Wearing, Betsy. (1996). Gender: The Pain and Pleasure of Difference. Melbourne: Longman.
Wharton, Amy S. (2004). The Sociology of Gender: An introduction to theory and research. Malden, MA: Blackwell.
Whelehan, Imelda. (1995). Modern Feminist Thought. New York: New York University Press.
Wood, Gary W. (2005). Sex, Lies & Stereotypes: Challenging Views of Women, Men and Relationships. London: New Holland Publishers.
Zinn, Maxine Baca, Pierrette Hondagneu-Sotelo and Michael A. Messner. (eds).
(2005). Gender Through the Prism of Difference: Readings on Sex and Gender.
3rd edition. Oxford University Press.
Introduction: Sex and Gender Through the Prism of Difference.
I. Perspectives on Sex, Gender, and Difference.
1. Anne Fausto-Sterling / The Five Sexes, Revisited.
2. Maxine Baca Zinn & Bonnie Thornton Dill / Theorizing Difference from
Multiracial Feminism.
3. Deniz Kandiyoti / Bargaining with Patriarchy.
4. R W. Connell / Masculinities and Globalization.
5. Barbara Ehrenreich and Arlie Russell Hochschild / Global Woman.
6. Chandra Talpade Mohanty / Antiglobalization Pedagogies and Feminism.
II. Bodies.
Control and Resistance.
7. Jane Sprague Zones / Beauty Myths and Realities and Their Impact on Women’s
Health.
8. Nomy Lamm / It’s a Big Fat Revolution.
9. Tamara Beauboeuf-Lafontant / Strong and Large Black Women? Exploring Relationships
Between Deviant Womanhood and Weight.
10. Jen’nan Ghazal Read and John P. Bartkowski / To Veil or Not to Veil?
A Case Study of Identity Negotiation Among Muslim Women in Austin, Texas.
11. Don Sabo / Doing Time, Doing Masculinity: Sports in Prison.
12. Betsy Lucal / What it Means to be Gendered Me: Life on the Boundaries of
a Dichotomous Gender System.
Violence.
13. Cecilia Menjívar and Olivia Salcido / Immigrant Women and Domestic
Violence: Common Experiences in Different Countries.
14. Afroza Anwary / Acid Violence and Medical Care Bangladesh: Women’s
Activism as Carework.
15. Patricia Albanese / Nationalism, War, and Archaization of Gender Relations
in the Balkans.
16. Michael Kimmel / Gender, Class, and Terrorism.
III. Sexualities.
Sexual Relations, Intimacy, Power.
17. Karin A. Martin / “I couldn’t ever picture myself having sex.”:
Gender Differences in Sex and Sexual Subjectivity.
18. Matthew C. Guttman / Male Discretion and Sexual Indiscretion in Working
Class Mexico City.
19. Kevin Bales / Because She Looks Like a Child.
20. Julie O’Connell Davidson / The Sex Tourist, The Expatriate, His Ex-Wife,
and her “Other”: The Politics of Loss, Difference, and Desire.
Sexuality and Identity.
21. Dennis Altman / The Globalization of Sexual Identities.
22. Michael A. Messner / Becoming 100% Straight.
23. Yen Le Espiritu / “Americans Have a Different Attitude”: Family,
Sexuality, and Gender in Filipina American Lives.
IV. Identities.
24. Audre Lorde / Age, Race, Class, and Sex: Women Redefining Difference.
25. Elliott Femynye Bat Tzedek / The Rights and Wrongs of Identity Politics
and Sexual Identities.
26. Almas Sayeed / Chappals and Gym Shorts: An Indian Muslim Woman in the Land
of Oz.
27. Karen D. Pyke and Denise L. Johnson / Asian American Women and Racialized
Femininities: “Doing” Gender Across Cultural Worlds.
28. Peggy McIntosh / White Privilege: Unpacking the Invisible Knapsack.
V. Families.
Motherhood, Fatherhood.
29. Patricia Hill Collins / The Meaning of Motherhood in Black Culture and Black
Mother-Daughter Relationships.
30. Lisa J. Udell / Revision and Resistance: The Politics of Native Women’s
Motherwork.
31. Pierrette Hondagneu-Sotelo and Ernestine Avila / “I’m Here but
I’m There”: The Meanings of Latina Transnational Motherhood.
32. Marcia C. Inhorn / “The Worms are Weak”: Male Infertility and
Patriarchal Paradoxes in Egypt.
Work and Families.
33. Pei-Chia Lan / Maid or Madam? Filipina Migrant Workers and the Continuity
of Domestic Labor.
34. M. Patricia Fernández Kelly / Delicate Transactions: Gender, Home,
and Employment Among Hispanic Women.
35. Elizabeth Higginbotham and Lynn Weber / Moving Up with Kin and Community:
Upward Social Mobility for Black and White Women.
36. Kathryn Edin / What Do Low-Income Single Mothers Say About Marriage?.
VI. Constructing Gender in the Workplace.
37. Peter Levin / Gendering the Market: Temporality, Work, and Gender on a National
Futures Exchange.
38. Patti A. Giuffre and Christine L. Williams / Boundary Lines: Labeling Sexual
Harassment in Restaurants.
39. Karen J. Hossfield / “Their Logic Against Them”: Contradictions
in Sex, Race, and Class in Silicon Valley.
40. Pierrette Hondagneu-Sotelo / Go Away. But Stay Close Enough.
VII. Education and Schools.
41. Ann Arnett Ferguson / Naughty by Nature.
42. Julie Bettie / How Working-Class Chicas Get Working-Class Lives.
43. Nancy Lopez / Homegrown: How the Family Does Gender.
44. Yoshiko Nozaki / Feminism, Nationalism, and the Japanese Textbook Controversy
Over “Comfort Women”.
VIII. Popular Culture.
45. Barry Glassner / Black Men: How to Perpetuate Prejudice Without Really Trying.
46. Catherine A. Lutz and Jane L. Collins / The Color of Sex: Postwar Photographic
Histories of Race and Gender in National Geographic Magazine.
47. Susan Jane Gilman / Klaus Barbie, and Other Dolls I’d Like to See.
48. Mimi Schippers / Sexuality and Gender Maneuvering.
49. Laurie Kendall / “Oh No! I’m a Nerd!” Hegemonic Masculinity
on an Online Forum.
IX. Change and Politics.
50. King-To Yeung and Mindy Stombler / Gay and Greek: The Identity Paradox of
Gay Fraternities.
51. Mary Pardo / Mexican American Women, Grassroots Community Activists: “Mothers
of East Los Angeles”.
52. Radhika Gajjala and Annapurna Mamidipudi / Cyberfeminism, Technology, and
International “Development”.
53. Kevin Powell / Confessions of a Recovering Misogynist.
Excerpted from The Men's Bibliography: A comprehensive bibliography of writing on men, masculinities, gender, and sexualities, compiled by Michael Flood.
19th edition, 2008, Canberra, Australia. ISBN 0 646 18088 6
E-mail: mflood[at]vichealth.vic.gov.au
Home URL: http://mensbiblio.xyonline.net/
Note: The following lists some
further feminist works, but is by no means exhaustive. Works which explore the
intersections of gender with race and ethnicity, class and sexuality are listed
in the relevant sections of the bibliography. For references focused on feminist
activism, gender ‘mainstreaming’, and so on, see the section under
“Men, Feminism, and Gender Equality”. Also see further sections
below.
Abbott, Pamela, and Claire Wallace. (1996). An Introduction to Sociology: Feminist Perspectives. (2nd edition) London & New York: Routledge.
Acker, Elizabeth. (1999). Different Voices: Gender and politics in Australia. South Yarra, VIC: Macmillan.
Ackerly, Brooke A. (2000). A Feminist Theory of Social Criticism. Cambridge University Press.
Ahmed, Sara, Jane Kilby, Celia Lury, Maureen McNeil, and Beverley Skeggs. (eds.). (2000). Transformations: Thinking through feminism. London & New York: Routledge.
Alcoff, Linda M. (2006). Understanding Feminist Philosophy. Routledge.
Alexander, M. Jacqui, Lisa Albrecht, Sharon Day, and Mab Segrest. (eds.). (2003). Sing, Whisper, Shout, Pray!: Feminist Visions for a Just World. Fort Bragg, CA: Edgewater Books.Ali, Suki. (2000). Global Feminist Politics: Identities in a Changing World. Routledge.
Allen, Amy. (2000). The Power of Feminist Theory: Domination, Resistance, Solidarity. Westview Press.
Allen, Carolyn, and Judith A. Howard. (eds). (1999). Provoking Feminisms. University of Chicago Press.
Amin N., Beer F., McPherson K., Medovarski A., Miles A., and G. Rezai-Rashti. (1999). Canadian Woman Studies: An Introductory Reader. Toronto: Inanna Publications Inc.
Andermahr, Sonya, Lovell, Terry, and Wolkowitz, Carol. (eds). (1997). A Glossary of Feminist Theory. St. Martins: Scholarly and Reference Division.
Andersen, Margaret L. (1992). Thinking About Women: Sociological perspectives on sex and gender. New York: Macmillan.
Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Sciences, Volume 571,
Issue 1, 2000.
Preface / Williams, Christine L. (8-13).
Traversing Lines of Control: Feminist Anthropology Today / Aggarwal, Ravina
(14-29).
Feminism and Federally Funded Social Science: Notes from Inside / Auerbach,
Judith D. (30-41).
Feminism and Family Studies for a New Century / Zinn, Maxine Baca (42-56).
Feminism in Criminology: Engendering the Outlaw / Britton, Dana M. (57-76).
From Pornography to Sadomasochism: Reconciling Feminist Differences / Chancer,
Lynn S. (77-88).
Feminist Scholarship in Archaeology / Hays-gilpin, Kelley (89-106).
Feminism and Migration / Hondagneu-sotelo, Pierrette (107-120).
The State of Gender Studies in Political Science / Ritter, Gretchen; Mellow,
Nicole (121-134).
Spaces for Feminism in Geography / Staeheli, Lynn A.; Martin, Patricia M.
(135-150).
Feminist Media Criticism and Feminist Media Practices / Watkins, S. Craig;
Emerson, Rana A. (151-166).
Feminism at Work / Wharton, Amy S. (167-182).
Feminism in Psychology: Revolution or Evolution? / Worell, Judith (183-196).
Anzaldua, Gloria, and AnaLouise Keating. (eds.). (2002). This Bridge We Call Home: Radical Visions for Transformation. New York: Routledge.
Armstrong, C. (2002). Complex equality: Beyond equality and difference. Feminist Theory, 3(1): 67-82.
Armstrong, Elisabeth. (2002). The Retreat from Organization: U.S. Feminism Reconceptualized. Albany: State University of New York Press.
Arneil, Barbara. (1999). Politics and Feminism. Oxford: Blackwell.
Bacchi, Carol. (1996). The Politics of Affirmative Action: ‘Women’, Equality and Category Politics. Sage.
Bacchi, Carol. (2004). Gender/ing impact assessment: Can it be made to work? Journal of Interdisciplinary Gender Studies, 9(2), Dec.: 93-111.
Bagguley, Paul. (2001). Contemporary British Feminism: A social movement in abeyance?. Social Movement Studies, Volume 1 Number 2, October.
Bail, Kathy. (ed.). (1996). DIY Feminism. Sydney: Allen & Unwin.
Barrett, Michele, and Anne Phillips. (eds). (1992). Destabilizing Theory: Contemporary Feminist Debates. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.
Bashevkin, Sylvia. (1998). Women on the Defensive: Living Through Conservative Times. Chicago & London: University of Chicago Press.
Bergmann, Barbara (1996) In Defense of Affirmative Action. New York: Basic Books.
Bielski, Joan (2005). Australian feminism 2004: Gains, losses, countervailing forces, some failures and sobering thoughts. Social Alternatives, v. 24 no. 2: 6-10.
Bird, Delys, Wendy Were, and Terri-Ann White (eds.) (2003). Future Imaginings: Sexualities and Genders in the New Millenium. Crawley, Perth: University of Western Australia Press.
Bock, Gisela, and Susan James. (eds). (1992). Beyond Equality and Difference: Citizenship, Feminist Politics & Female Subjectivity. New York: Routledge.
Bolzendahl, Catherine I., and Daniel J. Myers. (2004). Feminist Attitudes and Support for Gender Equality: Opinion Change in Women and Men, 1974-1998. Social Forces, Dec., Vol. 83, Iss. 2.
Bottomley, Gill, and Marie M. de Lepervanche. (eds). (1984). Ethnicity, Class and Gender in Australia. Sydney: Allen & Unwin.
Bowen, Jan. (1998). Feminists Fatale: The Changing Face of Australian Feminism. Sydney: HarperCollins.
Brodribb S. (Ed.). (1999). Reclaiming the Future: Women’s Strategies for the 21st Century women in Alberta. Calgary: Detselig Ent. Inc.
Brooks, Ann. (1997). Postfeminisms: Feminism, Cultural Theory and Cultural forms. Routledge.
Browne, Jude. (ed). (2007). The Future of Gender. Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press;
Part I. Reorienting the Feminist Imagination.
1. Mapping the feminist imagination: from redistribution to recognition to
representation Nancy Fraser.
2. Perspectives on gender equality: challenging the terms of debate Valerie
Bryson.
3. When will society be gender just? Ingrid Robeyns.
Part II. Variations on the Theme of ‘Gender’.
4. Does biology play any role in sex differences in the mind? Simon Baron-Cohen.
5. Sex and the social construction of gender: can feminism and evolutionary
psychology be reconciled? Susan Hurley.
6. ‘Trans’ trouble: trans-sexuality and the end of gender Terrell
Carver.
7. Gender and social change Tony Lawson.
8. Procreative mothers (sexual difference) and child-free sisters (gender)
Juliet Mitchell.
Part III. Gender and Political Practice.
9. The politics of female diversity in the 21st century Catherine Hakim.
10. Gender inequality and the gendered division of labour Rosemary Crompton.
11. The equal treatment principle and ‘gender’: theory and practice
Jude Browne.
Brownmiller, Susan. In Our Time: Memoir of a revolution.
Bryant, Alyssa N. (2003). Changes in attitudes toward women’s roles: Predicting gender-role traditionalism among college students. Sex Roles, February, Vol. 48, Iss. 3/4.
Bryld, Mette Marie, and Nina Lykke. (2000). Cosmodolphins: Feminist Cultural Studies of Technology, Animals, and the Sacred. Zed Books, Ltd.
Bucholtz, Mary, A.C. Liang, and Laurel A. Sutton. (eds). (1999). Reinventing Identities: The Gendered Self in Discourse. Oxford University Press.
Buhaenko, Helen, et. al. (2005). What Men and Women Want: A Practical Guide to Gender and Participation. Oxfam GB.
Bulbeck, Chilla. (1997). Living Feminism: The Impact of the Women’s Movement on Three Generations of Australian Women. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Bulbeck, Chilla. (2001). Histories of the Australian women’s movement as represented in feminist journals. Lilith, number 10: 18-40.
Bulbeck, Chilla. (2003). ‘I wish to become the leader of women and give them equal rights in society’: How young Australians and Asians understand feminism and the women’s movement. Journal of Interdisciplinary Gender Studies, v.7, nos 1-2, Nov.: 4-25.
Bulbeck, Chilla. (2005). ‘Women are exploited way too often’: Feminist rhetorics at the end of equality. Australian Feminist Studies, Volume 20 Number 46, March.
Bullock, Heather E., and Julian L. Fernald. (2003). “Feminism Lite?” Feminist Identification, Speaker Appearance, and Perceptions of Feminist and Antifeminist Messengers. Psychology of Women Quarterly, Volume 27 Issue 4, December.
Bullough, B., V.L. Bullough, and J. Elias. (1997). Gender Blending, Amherst, NY: Prometheus.
Bunch, Charlotte. (1988). Passionate Politics: Essays 1968-1986: Feminist Theory in Action. New York: St Martin’s Press.
Burack, Cynthia, and Jyl J. Josephson. (eds.). (2003). Fundamental Differences: Feminists Talk Back to Social Conservatives. Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield.
Burke, Phyllis. (1996). Gender Shock: Exploding the Myths of Male and Female. New York: Doubleday/Anchor.
Butler, J., and J. Scott. (eds). (1992). Feminists Theorize the Political. New York: Routledge.
Butler, Judith. (1990). Gender Trouble: Feminism and the Subversion of Identity. New York & London: Routledge.
Cambridge Women’s Group. (eds). (1981). Women in Society: Interdisciplinary Essays. London: Virago.
Campbell, Jan. (2000). Arguing With the Phallus: Feminist, Queer, and Postcolonial Theory: A Psychoanalytic Contribution. St. Martin’ s Press.
Campbell, Kate. (ed.). (1992). Critical Feminism: Arguments From the Disciplines. Buckingham & Philadelphia: Open University Press.
Campo, Natasha (2005). ‘Having it all’ or ‘had enough’?: blaming feminism in the Age and the Sydney Morning Herald, 1980-2004. [Paper in: Backburning. Addison-Smith, Helen; Nguyen, An and Tallis, Denise (eds.). ] JAS, Australia’s Public Intellectual Forum, no. 84, 2005: (63)-72,236-237.
Card, Claudia. (ed.). (1999). On Feminist Ethics and Politics. Lawrence:
University Press of Kansas
Contents: 1. Groping Through Gray Zones / Claudia Card -- Pt. 1. Character
and Moral Luck. 2. In Defense of Guilt / Sandra Lee Bartky. 3. On the Malleability
of Character / Marcia L. Homiak. 4. Moral Failure / Cheshire Calhoun -- Pt.
2. The Ethics of Feminist Politics. 5. Public Address As a Sign of Political
Inclusion / Iris Marion Young. 6. (Re)reading Mary Daly As a Sister Insider
/ Amber L. Katherine. 7. Revolutionary Community / Jacqueline Anderson. 8.
Beyond Pluralism and Assimilationism in the Politics of Gender / Anna Stubblefield
-- Pt. 3. Violence and Harm. 9. Philosophical Reflections on War Rape / Robin
May Schott. 10. The Uses of Narrative in the Aftermath of Violence / Susan
J. Brison. 11. Pornographic Subordination: How Pornography Silences Women
/ Lynne Tirrell. 12. Speech That Harms: The Case of Lesbian Families / Joan
C. Callahan -- Pt. 4. Love and Respect. 13. Feminist Sex at Century’s
End: On Justice and Joy / Chris J. Cuomo. 14. Liberalism and the Ethics of
Care / Virginia Held. 15. Getting to the Bottom of Things / Sharon Bishop.
16. Ways to Think About Dying / Jean P. Rumsey.
Carmody, Denise Lardner. (1994). Responses to 101 Questions About Feminism. London: Geoffrey Chapman
Casey, Emma, and Lydia Martens. (eds). (2007). Gender and Consumption: Domestic Cultures and the Commercialisation of Everyday Life. Aldershot, Hampshire: Ashgate.
Cassell, Justine, and Henry Jenkins. (eds). (1998). From Barbie to Mortal Kombat: Gender and Computer Games. MIT Press.
Chafetz, T.S. Feminist Sociology: An Overview of Contemporary Theories.
Chodorow, Nancy. (1978). The Reproduction of Mothering. Berkeley: University of California Press.
Code, Lorraine. (ed.). (2000). Encyclopedia of Feminist Theories. Routledge.
Cole, Alyson M. (1999). ‘There Are No Victims in This Class’: On Female Suffering and Anti-’Victim Feminism’. NWSA Journal, Vol. 11 No. 1, Spring (and Response by Joan D. Mandle).
Cook, Rebecca J. (ed.). (1994). Human Rights of Women: National and International Perspectives.
Coppock et. al. The Illusions of ‘Post-feminism’.
Cornell, Drucilla. (1998). At the Heart of Freedom: Feminism, Sex, and Equality. Princeton University Press.
Cornell, Drucilla. (2000). Just Cause: Freedom, Identity, and Rights. Rowman and Littlefield.
Cowan, Gloria. (1992). Predictors of Feminist Self-Labeling. Sex Roles, 27: 7/8, October.
Coward, Rosalind. (1999). Do We Need a New Feminism?. Women: A Cultural Review, 10(2), Summer.
Cranny-Francis, Anne. (1992). Engendered Fictions: Analysing Gender in the Production and Reception of Texts. Sydney: New South Wales University Press.
Crow, Barbara A. (ed.). (1999). Radical Feminism: An Historical Reader. New York University Press.
Crow, Barbara A. Radical Feminism: A documentary History. New York University Press.
Crowley, H., and S. Himmelweit. (eds). (1992). Knowing Women: Feminism and Knowledge. Polity.
Curthoys, Jean. (1997). Feminist Amnesia: The Wake of Women’s Liberation. Routledge.
Daly, Mary. (1978). Gyn/Ecology: The Metaethics of Radical Feminism. Boston: Beacon Press.
Daly, Mary. (1999). Quintessence. Realizing the Archaic Future: A Radical Elemental Feminist Manifesto. Beacon.
de Beauvoir, Simone. (1961). The Second Sex. New York: Bantom Books.
Dean, Jodi. (ed.). (1997). Feminism and the New Democracy. London: Sage.
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of the Social Organization of Dependency Work and Gender Equality / Eva Feder
Kittay -- 2. Reconciling Equality to Difference: Caring (F)or Justice for
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Brides: Immigrant Women, Domestic Violence, and Immigration Law / Uma Narayan
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-- 9. Mixed Black and White Race and Public Policy / Naomi Zack. 10. Agency
and Alliance in Public Discourses About Sexualities / Janet R. Jakobsen --
11. ‘Undemocratic Afflictions’: A Feminist Response to the AIDs
Epidemic / Kate Mehuron -- 12. Pornography: An Uncivil Liberty? / Alisa L.
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Autonomy and Informed Consent / Lisa S. Parker -- 14. Sex-Selective Abortion:
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Hannah Warren.
Feminist research methodologies and development: overview and practical application
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Participation, values, and implementation: three research challenges in developing
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Appropriate gender-analysis tools for unpacking the gender-energy-poverty
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Deepening our understanding of community-based participatory research: lessons
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Achieving respondent-led research in Madagascar / Cathy Farnworth.
Reflections on the use of the life history method in researching rural African
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A neutral feminist observer? Observation-based research and the politics of
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PART ONE: SOCIAL AND HISTORICAL CONSTRUCTIONS OF GENDER.
Introducing the Chapter.
SECTION 1: SEX DIFFERENCES AND CHANGING IDEAS OF GENDER.
Nelly Oudshoorn, ‘Sex and the Body’.
Emily Martin, ‘The Egg and the Sperm’.
Kathryn M. Ringrose, ‘Gender and Byzantine Culture’.
BOX: Joan Wallach Scott, ‘Gender the Politics of History’.
Charlotte Furth, ‘Androgynous Males and Deficient Females: Biology and
Gender Boundaries in Sixteenth- and Seventeenth-Century China’.
Carole S. Vance, ‘Social Construction Theory: Problems in the History
of Sexuality’.
SECTION 2: THE RISE OF WESTERN SCIENCE.
Linda Gordon, ‘Magic’.
Sheila Rowbotham, ‘Feminist Approaches to Technology’.
Anne Fausto-Sterling, ‘The Biological Connection’.
Stephan Jay Gould, ‘Women’s Brains’.
Udo Schuklenk, Edward Stein, Jacinta Kerin, and William Byne, ‘The Ethics
of Genetic Research on Sexual Orientation’.
SECTION 3: THE MAKING OF RACE, SEX AND EMPIRE.
Ian F. Haney LÛpez, ‘The Social Construction of Race’.
Linda Gordon, ‘Malthusianism’.
Anna Davin, ‘Imperialism and Motherhood’.
Frank Dikkoter, ‘Race Culture: Recent Perspectives on the History of
Eugenics’.
Evelynn M. Hammonds, ‘New Technologies of Race’.
SECTION 4: MEDICINE IN A HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE.
Nongenile Masithathu Zenani, ‘And So I Grew Up’.
Barbara Ehrenreich and Dierdre English, ‘Exorcising the Midwives’.
David Arnold, ‘Women and Medicine’.
Ben Barker-Benfield, ‘Sexual Surgery in Late-Nineteenth-Century America’.
Rogaia Abusharaf, ‘Unmasking Tradition’.
SECTION 5: POPULATION CONTROL AND REPRODUCTIVE RIGHTS: TECHNOLOGY AND POWER.
Susan Davis, ‘Contested Terrain: The Historical Struggle for Fertility
Control’.
GRAPHIC: ‘The Price of Abortion’.
Angela Davis, ‘Reproductive Rights’.
Betsy Hartmann, ‘Family Matters’.
Committee on Women, Population and the Environment, ‘Call for a New
Approach’.
Debra Harry, ‘The Human Genome Diversity Project: Implications for Indigenous
Peoples’.
SECTION 6: STRATEGIZING HEALTH EDUCATION AND ADVOCACY.
Maureen Larkin, ‘Global Aspects of Health and Health Policy in Third
World Countries’.
GRAPHIC: ‘Default Isnt Ours’.
Sandra Morgen, ‘Conceiving History’.
Nadia Farah, ‘The Egyptian Womens Health Book Collective’.
Andrea Densham, ‘CDC, NIH, ACS, FDA - Alphabet City: The Institutional
and Organizational Terrain of Breast Cancer and AIDS Activism’.
Kathryn Carovano, ‘More Than Mothers and Whores: Redefining the AIDS
Prevention Needs of Women’.
Sabine Russell, ‘The Role of Prostitution in South Asias Epidemic: Push
for safe sex in red-light districts. ‘.
National Latina Health Organization, ‘Norplant Information Sheet’.
Refelcting on the Section.
PART TWO: GENDERED IDENTITIES IN NATIONS AND STATES.
Introducing the Chapter.
SECTION 7: CITIZENSHIP AND EQUALITY: THE PRIVATE/PUBLIC DIVIDE.
BOX: Geoffrey Ponton and Peter Gill, ‘Paradigms, models and Ideologies’.
Carole Pateman, ‘Feminist Critiques of the Public/Private Dichotomy’.
Amy Kaplan, ‘Manifest Domesticity’.
Mary Wollstonecraft, Excerpt from A Vindication of the Rights of Woman.
Jan Jindy Pettman, ‘Women and Citizenship’.
Athalia Molokomme, Lelobe Molema, Opha Dube, Motsei Madisa, Ruth Motsete,
and Onalenna Selowane, ‘Citizenship: An Open Letter to the Attorney-General’.
SECTION 8: GENDER AND THE RISE OF THE MODERN STATE.
Jan Jindy Pettman, ‘Women, Gender, and the State’.
Jeffrey Weeks, ‘Power and the State’.
Margot Badran, ‘Competing Agenda: Feminists, Islam, and the State in
Nineteenth-and Twentieth-Century Egypt’.
Gail Bederman, ‘Remaking Manhood through Race and ëCivilization’.
SECTION 9: NEW SOCIAL MOVEMENTS AND IDENTITY POLITICS.
Kathryn Woodward, ‘Concepts of Identity and Difference’.
Alexandra Kollontai, ‘Feminism and the Question of Class’.
KimberlÈ Crenshaw, ‘Mapping the Margins: Intersectionality, Identity
Politics, and Violence against Women of Color’.
Alma Garc’a, ‘The Development of Chicana Feminist Discourse’.
Lisa Duggan, ‘Making it Perfectly Queer’.
SECTION 10: COMMUNITIES AND NATIONS.
BOX: Benedict Anderson, Excerpt from Imagined Communities.
Nira Yuval-Davis, ‘Gender and Nation’.
Cynthia Enloe, ‘Nationalism and Masculinity’.
Amitra Basu, ‘Feminism Inverted: The Gendered Imagery and Real Women
of Hindu Nationalism’.
Kathleen M. Blee, ‘The First Ku Klux Klan’.
SECTION 11: FEMINIST ORGANIZING ACROSS BORDERS.
Leila J. Rupp, ‘The International First Wave’.
Farida Shaheed, ‘Controlled or Autonomous Identity and the Experience
of the Network, Women Living Under Muslim Laws’.
Lepa Mladjenovic and Vera Litricin, ‘Belgrade Feminists 1992: Separation,
Guilt, and Identity Crisis’.
Winnie Woodhull, ‘Global Feminists, Transnational Political Economies,
Third World Cultural Production’.
Laura Hershey, ‘Disabled Women Organize Worldwide’.
PART THREE: REPRESENTATIONS, CULTURES, MEDIA, AND MARKETS.
Introducing the Chapter.
SECTION 12: WAYS OF SEEING: REPRESENTATION AND ART PRACTICES.
John Berger, Excerpts from Ways of Seeing.
Catherine King, ‘Making Things Mean: Cultural Representation in Objects’.
BOX: Griselda Pollock, ‘Women and Art History’.
GRAPHIC: Guerilla Girls, ‘Top Ten Ways to Tell if Youre an Art World
Token’.
Suzanne Lustig, ‘How and Why Did the Guerilla Girls Alter the Art World
Establishment in New York City, 1985-1995?’.
SECTION 13: ARTISTIC PRODUCTION AND RECEPTION.
Judith Fryer Davidov, ‘Prologue’.
Judith Halberstam, ‘Mackdaddy, Superfly, Rapper: Gender, Race, and Masculinity
in the Drag King Scene’.
Andrea Weiss, ‘Female Pleasures and Perversions in the Silent and Early
Sound Cinema’.
Lila Abu-Lughod, ‘The Interpretation of Culture(s) after Television’.
SECTION 14: GENDER AND LITERACY: THE RISE OF PRINT AND MEDIA CULTURES.
Stuart Ewen and Elizabeth Ewen, ‘The Bribe of Frankenstein’.
Rassundari Devi, ‘The Sixth Compostion’.
Pat Dean, ‘Literacy: Liberation of Lip Service?’.
M. S. Mlahleki, ‘Literacy: No Panacea for Womens Problems’.
William Wresch, ‘World Media’.
SECTION 15: REPRESENTING WOMEN IN COLONIAL CONTEXTS.
Judith Williamson, ‘Woman Is an Island’Femininity and Colonization’.
Catherine A. Lutz and Jane L. Collins, Excerpt from Reading National Geographic.
Marnia Lazreg, ‘Feminism and Difference’.
Sara Graham-Brown, Excerpt from Images of Women: The Portrayal of Women in
Photography of the Middle East.
SECTION 16: CONSUMER CULTURE AND THE BUSINESS OF ADVERTISING.
Robert Bocock, ‘Gender and Consumption’.
Elaine S. Abelson, ‘Urban Women and the Emergence of Shopping’.
Jennifer Scanlon, Excerpt from Inarticulate Longings.
Amy Gluckman and Betsey Reed, ‘The Gay Marketing Moment”.
SECTION 17: CONSUMER BEAUTY CULTURE: COMMODIFYING THE BODY.
Rosalind Coward, ‘The Body Beautiful’.
Nancy Worcester, ‘Nourishing Ourselves’.
Roland Marchand, ‘Grotesque Moderne’.
Celestine Bohlen, ‘Italians Contemplate Beauty in a Caribbean Brow’.
Barry Bearak, ‘Ugliness in India over Miss World’.
Rone Tempest, ‘Barbie in the World Economy’.
Figure 17. 5: ‘Toys Are Serious Business for U. S. ‘.
SECTION 18: CYBERCULTURE.
Somini Sengupta, ‘When Do-Gooders Dont Know What Theyre Doing’.
Juana Maria Rodriguez, ‘‘Welcome to the Global Stageî: Confessions
of a Latina Cyber-Slut’.
Vernadette V. Gonzalez and Robyn Magalit Rodriguez, ‘Filipina. com:
Wives, Workers and Whores on the Cyberfrontier. ‘.
PART FOUR: GENDERING GLOBALIZATION AND DISPLACEMENT.
Introductory Essay.
SECTION 19: TRAVEL AND TOURISM.
Cynthia Enloe, ‘On the Beach: Sexism and Tourism’.
Mary Seacole, ‘Wonderful Adventures of Mrs. Seacole in Many Lands’.
Sylvia M. Jacobs, ‘Give a Thought to Africa: Black Women Missionaries
in Southern Africa’.
Sylvia Chant, ‘Female Employment in Puerto Vallarta: A Case Study’.
SECTION 20: FORCED RELOCATIONS AND REMOVALS.
Lydia Potts, Excerpt from The World Labor Market: A History of Migration.
Wilma Mankiller and Michael Wallis, Excerpt from Mankiller: A Chief and Her
People.
Phil Marfleet, ‘The Refugee’.
Ayesha Khan, ‘Afghan Refugee Womens Experience of Conflict and Disintegration’.
SECTION 21: DIASPORAS.
Stuart Hall, ‘From ëRoutes to Roots’.
Claudette Williams, ‘GalÖYou Come from Foreign’.
Mimi Nguyen, ‘Viet Nam Journal/ Journey’.
Ella Shohat, ‘Dislocated Identities: Reflections of an Arab Jew’.
SECTION 22: WOMEN, WORK, AND IMMIGRATION.
Evelyn Nakano Glenn, ‘Women and Labor Migration’.
Leslie Salzinger, ‘A Maid by Any Other Name: The Transformation of ëDirty
Work by Central American Immigrants’.
Fig. 22. 1: Ads for Domestic Workers.
Rigoberta Menchœ, ‘A Maid in the Capital’.
Photo: ‘What They Were Thinking’.
Satoko Watenabe, ‘From Thailand to Japan: Migrant Sex Workers as Autonomous
Subjects’.
SECTION 23: THE GENDER POLITICS OF ECONOMIC GLOBALIZATION.
Augusta Dwyer, ‘Welcome to the Border’.
Human Rights Watch, ‘Sex Discrimination in the Maquiladoras’.
BOX: Richard P. Appelbaum, ‘Nikes Business’.
Amber Ault and Eve Sandberg, ‘Our Policies, Their Consequences: Zambian
Womens Lives under Structural Adjustment’.
BOX: ‘Questions and Answers About the IMF’.
Faye V. Harrison, ‘The Gendered Politics and Violence of Structural
Adjustment: A View from Jamaica’.
SECTION 24: GLOBAL FOOD PRODUCTION AND CONSUMPTION.
Ecumenical Coalition for Economic Justice, ‘Tomasitos Guide to Economic
Integration: A Whirlwind Tour with Your Guide Tomasito, the Tomato.
Martha McMahon, ‘Resisting Globalization: Women Organic Farmers and
Local Food Systems’.
Helen Zweifel, ‘The Gendered Nature of Biodiversity Conservation’.
Nancy Worcester, ‘The Obesity of the Food Industry’.
CONCLUSION: FEMINIST FUTURES: TRANSNATIONAL PERSPECTIVES.
Concluding Comment.
Cynthia Enloe, ‘Beyond the Global Victim.
Reflecting on the Conclusion.
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Third Edition.
PART I. THE VARIETY OF FEMINISMS AND THEIR CONTRIBUTIONS TO GENDER EQUALITY.
A Brief History of Organized Feminism.
Feminism’s Second Wave.
Gender Inequality.
Feminist Theories.
Feminist Politics.
Feminism and the Gendered Social Order.
Types of Feminisms.
Continuities in Second Wave Feminism.
Organization of the Book.
Suggested Readings.
PART II. GENDER REFORM FEMINISMS.
Overview.
1. Liberal Feminism.
“Numbers: Minorities and Majorities” / Rosabeth Moss Kanter.
“Integrating Family and Work in the 21st Century” / Jerry A. Jacobs
and Kathleen Gerson.
2. Marxist Feminism.
“Capitalism and Patriarchy” / Heidi Hartmann.
“Public and Private Patriarchies” / Myra Marx Ferree.
3. Socialist Feminism.
“Gender, Race, and Citizenship” / Evelyn Nakano Glenn.
“Redistribution, Recognition, and Cross-Redressing” / Nancy Fraser.
4. Post-Colonial Feminism.
“Gender and Development” / Edna Acosta-BelÉn and Christine
E. Bose.
“Under Western Eyes at the Turn of the Century” / Chandra Talpede
Mohanty.
PART III. GENDER RESISTANCE FEMINISMS.
Overview.
5. Radical Feminism.
“Sex and Violence” / Catharine A. MacKinnon.
“Maternal Thinking” / Sara Ruddick.
6. Lesbian Feminism.
“Romantic Friendship and Lesbian Love” / Lillian Faderman.
“Questions of Identity Revisited” / Arlene Stein.
7. Psychoanalytic Feminism.
“Oedipal Asymmetries and Heterosexual Knots”.
Nancy J. Chodorow.
“This Sex Which Is Not One” / Luce Irigaray.
8. Standpoint Feminism.
“The Nature of a Standpoint” / Nancy C. M. Hartsock.
“Where’s the Power?” / Patricia Hill Collins.
PART IV. GENDER REBELLION FEMINISMS.
Overview.
9. Multicultural/Multiracial Feminism.
“What Is Multiracial Feminism?” / Maxine Baca Zinn and Bonnie
Thornton Dill.
“Nego-Feminism” / Obioma Nnaemeka.
10. Feminist Studies of Men.
“The Hegemony of Men” / Jeff Hearn.
“Gender, Class, and Terrorism” / Michael S. Kimmel.
11. Social Construction Feminism.
“Seeing and Doing Gender at Work” / Patricia Yancey Martin.
“Gender Lessons for Adults” / Barrie Thorne.
12. Postmodern Feminism.
“Gender, Sex, and Sexual Performativity” / Judith Butler.
“Thinking About Drag as Social Protest” / Leila J. Rupp and Verta
Taylor.
13. Third-Wave Feminism.
“Sisters vs. Daughters” / Astrid Henry.
“Third-Wave Black Feminism?” / Kimberly Springer.
PART V. DO WE NEED A NEW FEMINISM?.
Gender Feminism and Difference Feminism.
New Directions in Feminist Research.
The View From Somewhere.
Feminist Politics and Multiple Identities.
A New Feminism.
Glossary.
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I. GENDER SOCIALIZATION AND PARENTING.
1. Nancy Chodorow, The Sexual Sociology of Adult Life.
2. David D. Gilmore, The Manhood Puzzle.
3. Barbara J. Risman, Necessity and the Invention of Mothering.
4. Ann Willard, Cultural Scripts for Mothering.
5. Patricia Hill Collins, Black Mother-Daughter Relationships.
II. GENDER AND WORK.
6. Barbara F. Reskin and Irene Padavic, The Doctrine of Separate Spheres.
7. Charlotte Perkins Gilman, The Yellow Wallpaper.
8. Betty Friedan, The Problem That Has No Name.
9. Arlie Hochschild and Anne Machung, Marriage in the Stalled Revolution.
10. Barbara R. Bergmann, What Is Affirmative Action?
11. Elizabeth Higginbotham, Black Professional Women: Job Ceilings and Employment
Sectors.
III. GENDER AND SEXUALITY.
12. Deborah L. Tolman, Daring to Desire: Culture and the Bodies of Adolescent
Girls.
13. Lillian B. Rubin, The Sexual Dilemma.
14. Michael Messner, Sexuality and Sexual Identity.
15. Benjamin P. Bowser, Social Class in Black Sexuality.
16. Becky W. Thompson, Childhood Lessons: Culture, Race, Class, and Sexuality.
17. John D’Emilio, Capitalism and Gay Identity.
18. Arlene Stein, Difference, Desire, and the Self.
IV. GENDER AND EDUCATION.
19. Peggy Orenstein, Unbalanced Equations: Girls, Math, and the Confidence
Gap.
20. Barrie Thorne, Girls and Boys Together…But Mostly Apart: Gender
Arrangements in Elementary Schools.
V. GENDER, MATH AND SCIENCE.
21. Ruth Hubbard, Fact Making and Feminism.
22. Ruth Bleier, Theories of Human Origins and Cultural Evolution: Man the
Hunter.
23. Henry Etzkowitz, Carol Kemelgor, Michael Neuschatz, and Brian Uzzi, Athena
Unbound: Barriers to Women in Academic Science and Engineering.
VI. GENDER AND RELIGION.
24. Fatima Mernissi, The Muslim Concept of Active Female Sexuality.
25. Susan A. Farrell, It’s Our Church, Too: Women’s Position in
the Catholic Church Today.
26. Judith Plaskow, Setting the Problem, Laying the Ground.
VII. GENDER, HEALTH, AND ILLNESS.
27. Vicki S. Helgesen, Masculinity, Men’s Roles and Coronary Heart Disease.
28. Hortensia Amaro, Love, Sex, and Power: Considering Women’s Realities
in HIV Prevention.
29. Roberta Satow, Where Has All the Hysteria Gone?
VIII. GENDER AND REPRODUCTIVE TECHNOLOGY.
30. Jennifer Strickler, The New Reproductive Technology: Problem or Solution?
31. Laura R. Woliver, Reproductive Technologies, Surrogacy Arrangements, and
the Politics of Motherhood.
IX. GENDER AND POLITICS.
32. Linda Gordon, The Politics of Birth Control, 1920-1940: The Impact of
Professionals.
33. Sally Avery Bermanzohn, The 1996 Welfare Law: Dismantling Aid to Families
with Dependent Children.
X. GENDER AND THE LAW.
34. Rosemarie Skain, Defining Sexual Harassment.
35. Rosalind Pollack Petchesky, Protecting Family Integrity: The Rightward
Drift in the Courts.
36. Anonymous, Nora.
XI. GENDER AND VIOLENCE.
37. Patricia Yancey Martin and Robert A. Hummer, Fraternities and Rape on
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38. Alan Soble, Pornography in Capitalism: Powerlessness.
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A Room of One’s Own (extract); V. Woolf.
A Future for Materialist Feminist Criticism?; C. Belsey.
Towards a More Feminist Criticism; A. Rich.
Under Western Eyes: Feminist Scholarship and Colonial Discourses; C. T. Mohanty.
MASCULINITIES.
Look Back in Anger: Men in the Fifties; L. Segal.
Mr. Nice (and Mr. Nasty); J. Rutherford.
Are You a Man or a Mouse?; H. Bhabha.
CONSTRUCTIONS OF GENDER.
The Medical Construction of a Gender: Case Management in Intersexed Infants;
S. J. Kessler.
How to Build a Man; A. Fausto-Sterling.
Femininity and its Discontents; J. Rose.
Womanliness as a Masquerade; J. Riviere.
Joan Riviere and the Masquerade; S. Heath.
CURRENT DEVELOPMENTS AND FUTURE QUESTIONS.
Critically Queer; J. Butler.
Gender or Sex?; D. Elam.
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It Made Us Think Differently: Unger’s ‘Toward a Redefinition of
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The Subtleties of Meaning: Still Arguing After All These Years / Joan C. Chrisler
(442-446).
On the Necessity of Distinguishing Between Sex and Gender / Marie-France Pichevin
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Adding Gender to the Mix: A Commentary on ‘Toward a Redefinition of
Sex and Gender’ / Meredith M. Kimball (453-458).
Feminist Questions, Feminist Answers: Towards a Redefinition / Alexandra Rutherford
(459-464).
Redefinition Reviewed: What ‘Toward a Redefinition of Sex and Gender’
Can Offer Today / Rose Capdevila (465-469).
Meanings of Sex and Gender for a New Generation of Feminist Psychologists
/ Alyssa N. Zucker and Joan M. Ostrove (470-474).
Reconsidering ‘Sex’ and ‘Gender’: two Steps Forward,
One Step Back / Eileen L. Zurbriggen and Aurora M. Sherman (475-480).
From Sex to gender and Back Again: Co-optation of a Feminist Language Reform
/ Mary Crawford and Annie Fox (481-486).
Afterword: From Inside and Out: Reflecting on a Feminist Politics of Gender
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4. Caring for Children / Julia Brannen -- 5. What Do Older Women Want? / Mary
Maynard -- 6. Women’s Pension Poverty: Prospects and Options for Change
/ Jay Ginn and Sara Arber -- 7. Revisiting the Sex Equality Laws / Jeanne
Gregory -- 8. Violence Against Women: a Policy of Neglect or a Neglect of
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Oxford University Press.
Introduction: Sex and Gender Through the Prism of Difference.
I. Perspectives on Sex, Gender, and Difference.
1. Anne Fausto-Sterling / The Five Sexes, Revisited.
2. Maxine Baca Zinn & Bonnie Thornton Dill / Theorizing Difference from
Multiracial Feminism.
3. Deniz Kandiyoti / Bargaining with Patriarchy.
4. R W. Connell / Masculinities and Globalization.
5. Barbara Ehrenreich and Arlie Russell Hochschild / Global Woman.
6. Chandra Talpade Mohanty / Antiglobalization Pedagogies and Feminism.
II. BODIES, CONTROL AND RESISTANCE.
7. Jane Sprague Zones / Beauty Myths and Realities and Their Impact on Women’s
Health.
8. Nomy Lamm / It’s a Big Fat Revolution.
9. Tamara Beauboeuf-Lafontant / Strong and Large Black Women? Exploring Relationships
Between Deviant Womanhood and Weight.
10. Jen’nan Ghazal Read and John P. Bartkowski / To Veil or Not to Veil?
A Case Study of Identity Negotiation Among Muslim Women in Austin, Texas.
11. Don Sabo / Doing Time, Doing Masculinity: Sports in Prison.
12. Betsy Lucal / What it Means to be Gendered Me: Life on the Boundaries
of a Dichotomous Gender System.
VIOLENCE.
13. Cecilia Menjívar and Olivia Salcido / Immigrant Women and Domestic
Violence: Common Experiences in Different Countries.
14. Afroza Anwary / Acid Violence and Medical Care Bangladesh: Women’s
Activism as Carework.
15. Patricia Albanese / Nationalism, War, and Archaization of Gender Relations
in the Balkans.
16. Michael Kimmel / Gender, Class, and Terrorism.
III. SEXUALITIES: SEXUAL RELATIONS, INTIMACY, POWER.
17. Karin A. Martin / “I couldn’t ever picture myself having sex.”:
Gender Differences in Sex and Sexual Subjectivity.
18. Matthew C. Guttman / Male Discretion and Sexual Indiscretion in Working
Class Mexico City.
19. Kevin Bales / Because She Looks Like a Child.
20. Julie O’Connell Davidson / The Sex Tourist, The Expatriate, His
Ex-Wife, and her “Other”: The Politics of Loss, Difference, and
Desire.
Sexuality and Identity.
21. Dennis Altman / The Globalization of Sexual Identities.
22. Michael A. Messner / Becoming 100% Straight.
23. Yen Le Espiritu / “Americans Have a Different Attitude”: Family,
Sexuality, and Gender in Filipina American Lives.
IV. IDENTITIES.
24. Audre Lorde / Age, Race, Class, and Sex: Women Redefining Difference.
25. Elliott Femynye Bat Tzedek / The Rights and Wrongs of Identity Politics
and Sexual Identities.
26. Almas Sayeed / Chappals and Gym Shorts: An Indian Muslim Woman in the
Land of Oz.
27. Karen D. Pyke and Denise L. Johnson / Asian American Women and Racialized
Femininities: “Doing” Gender Across Cultural Worlds.
28. Peggy McIntosh / White Privilege: Unpacking the Invisible Knapsack.
V. FAMILIES, MOTHERHOOD, FATHERHOOD.
29. Patricia Hill Collins / The Meaning of Motherhood in Black Culture and
Black Mother-Daughter Relationships.
30. Lisa J. Udell / Revision and Resistance: The Politics of Native Women’s
Motherwork.
31. Pierrette Hondagneu-Sotelo and Ernestine Avila / “I’m Here
but I’m There”: The Meanings of Latina Transnational Motherhood.
32. Marcia C. Inhorn / “The Worms are Weak”: Male Infertility
and Patriarchal Paradoxes in Egypt.
WORK AND FAMILIES.
33. Pei-Chia Lan / Maid or Madam? Filipina Migrant Workers and the Continuity
of Domestic Labor.
34. M. Patricia Fernández Kelly / Delicate Transactions: Gender, Home,
and Employment Among Hispanic Women.
35. Elizabeth Higginbotham and Lynn Weber / Moving Up with Kin and Community:
Upward Social Mobility for Black and White Women.
36. Kathryn Edin / What Do Low-Income Single Mothers Say About Marriage?.
VI. CONSTRUCTING GENDER IN THE WORKPLACE.
37. Peter Levin / Gendering the Market: Temporality, Work, and Gender on a
National Futures Exchange.
38. Patti A. Giuffre and Christine L. Williams / Boundary Lines: Labeling
Sexual Harassment in Restaurants.
39. Karen J. Hossfield / “Their Logic Against Them”: Contradictions
in Sex, Race, and Class in Silicon Valley.
40. Pierrette Hondagneu-Sotelo / Go Away. But Stay Close Enough.
VII. EDUCATION AND SCHOOLS.
41. Ann Arnett Ferguson / Naughty by Nature.
42. Julie Bettie / How Working-Class Chicas Get Working-Class Lives.
43. Nancy Lopez / Homegrown: How the Family Does Gender.
44. Yoshiko Nozaki / Feminism, Nationalism, and the Japanese Textbook Controversy
Over “Comfort Women”.
VIII. POPULAR CULTURE.
45. Barry Glassner / Black Men: How to Perpetuate Prejudice Without Really
Trying.
46. Catherine A. Lutz and Jane L. Collins / The Color of Sex: Postwar Photographic
Histories of Race and Gender in National Geographic Magazine.
47. Susan Jane Gilman / Klaus Barbie, and Other Dolls I’d Like to See.
48. Mimi Schippers / Sexuality and Gender Maneuvering.
49. Laurie Kendall / “Oh No! I’m a Nerd!” Hegemonic Masculinity
on an Online Forum.
IX. CHANGE AND POLITICS.
50. King-To Yeung and Mindy Stombler / Gay and Greek: The Identity Paradox
of Gay Fraternities.
51. Mary Pardo / Mexican American Women, Grassroots Community Activists: “Mothers
of East Los Angeles”.
52. Radhika Gajjala and Annapurna Mamidipudi / Cyberfeminism, Technology,
and International “Development”.
53. Kevin Powell / Confessions of a Recovering Misogynist.
Zucker, Alyssa N. (2004). Disavowing Social Identities: What It Means When Women Say, “I’m Not A Feminist, But.” Psychology of Women Quarterly, December, Vol. 28 Issue 4.
Feminist journals
Affilia: Journal Of Women And Social Work
Australian Feminist Studies
European Journal of Women’s Studies
Feminism & Psychology
Feminist Review (US)
Feminist Media Studies
Feminist Studies
Feminist Teacher
Feminist Theory (began April 2000, Sage)
Frontiers: A Journal of Women’s Studies (New Mexico)
Gender & Society
Hecate (Australia)
Hypatia (US)
International Feminist Journal of Politics (began 1999. Routledge)
Journal of Gender Studies
Journal of Interdisciplinary Gender Studies (Australia)
NORA: Nordic Journal of Women’s Studies
Resources for Feminist Research (Canada)
Sex Roles
Signs
Social Politics: International Studies in Gender, State & Society
Studies on Women Abstracts
Women & Politics (Haworth Press)
Women: A Cultural Review
Women’s Studies International Forum
Women’s Studies Quarterly (US)
Excerpted from The Men's Bibliography: A comprehensive bibliography of writing on men, masculinities, gender, and sexualities, compiled by Michael Flood.
19th edition, 2008, Canberra, Australia. ISBN 0 646 18088 6
E-mail: mflood[at]vichealth.vic.gov.au
Home URL: http://mensbiblio.xyonline.net/
Note: Also see "Growing up female" under "Growing up male" below.
Abrams, Laura S. (2003). Contextual Variations in Young Women’s Gender Identity Negotiations. Psychology of Women Quarterly, Volume 27 Issue 1, March.
Aikau, Hokulani, Karla Erickson, and Wendy LeMoore. (2003). Three Women Writing/Riding Feminism’s Third Wave. Qualitative Sociology, Volume 26, Issue 3, Sept., pp. 397-425.
Alfonso, Rita, and Jo Triglio. (1997). Surfing the Third Wave: A Dialogue Between Two Third- Wave Feminists. Hypatia, 12, June, pp. 1-10.
Arneil, Barbara. (1999). Politics and Feminism. Oxford: Blackwell.
Arnold, Lorin Basden. (2000). “What is a feminist?:” Students’ descriptions. Women and Language, Fall, Vol. 23, Iss. 2.
Aronson, P. (2003). Feminists or “Postfeminists”? Young women’s attitudes towards feminism and gender relations. Gender & Society, 17(6), Dec.: 903-922.
Banet-Weiser, Sarah. (2004). Girls rule!: Gender, feminism, and nickelodeon. Critical Studies in Media Communication, Volume 21, Number 2, June, pp. 119-139.
Braithwaite, A. (2002). The personal, the political, third-wave, and postfeminisms. Feminist Theory, 3(3): 335-344.
Budgeon, Shelley. (2001). Emergent Feminist(?) Identities: Young Women and the Practice of Micropolitics. European Journal of Women’s Studies, 8(1), February
Bulbeck, Chilla. (2001). Feminism by Any Other Name? Skirting the Generation Debate. Outskirts: Feminisms Along the Edge, Vol. 8, May [http://mmc.arts.uwa.edu.au/chloe/outskirts/article3.html] Accessed 13 June. (2001).
Carlip, Hillary. (1995). Girlpower. New York: Warner Books.
Chancer, Lynn. (1998). Third-wave feminisms and beyond. Chapter 9 in Reconcilable Differences: Confronting Beauty, Pornography, and the Future of Feminism. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press.
Dicker, Rory, and Alison Piepmeier. (eds). (2003). Catching a Wave: Reclaiming
Feminism for the 21st Century. Northeastern University Press.
Introduction, Rory Dicker and Alison Piepmeier
Part One: Needing Feminism
1. “The ‘Big Lie’: False Feminist Death Syndrome, Profit,
and the Media,” Jennifer L. Pozner
2. “In a Word, Baywatch,” Susannah B. Mintz
3. “Reviving Lolita; or, Because Junior High Is Still Hell,” Alyssa
Harad
Part Two: Coming to Feminism
4. “ ‘That’s Not Fair!’: Nurturing Girls’ Natural
Feminism,” Nancy Gruver
5. “Voices and Visions: A Mother and Daughter Discuss Coming to Feminism
and Being Feminist,” Roxanne Harde and Erin Harde
6. “Please-Stop Thinking About Tomorrow: Building a Feminist Movement
on College Campuses for Today,” Sarah Boonin
Part Three: Recognizing Feminism
7. “Who’s the Next Gloria?: The Quest for the Third Wave Superleader,”
Jennifer Baumgardner and Amy Richards
8. “Buffy the Vampire Slayer: The Next Generation of Television,”
Michele Byers
9. “Third Wave, Third World Feminism(s): The Evolution of Arab American
Feminism,” Susan Muaddi Darraj
Part Four: Redefining Feminism
10. “Feminism’s Family Problem: Feminist Generations and the Mother-Daughter
Trope,” Astrid Henry
11. “Do the Ladies Run This.? Some Thoughts on Hip-Hop Feminism,”
Gwendolyn D. Pough
12. “The Transfeminist Manifesto,” Emi Koyama
Part Five: Doing Feminism
13. “Hearing the Daughter Voice: The Bat Kol as Rrrabbi Grrrl,”
Alana Suskin
14. “Rocking the Gender Order,” Mimi Schippers
15. “Pranks and Fake Porn: Doing Feminism My Way,” Kristina S. Wong
Afterword: A Correspondence between Katha Pollitt and Jennifer Baumgardner.
Driscoll, Catherine. (1999). Girl Culture, Revenge and Global Capitalism: Cybergirls, Riot Grrls, Spice Girls. Australian Feminist Studies, Volume 14 Number 29, April.
Else-Mitchell, Rosalind, and Naomi Flutter. (eds). (1998). Talking Up: Young Women’s Take on Feminism. Melbourne: Spinifex
European Journal of Women’s Studies, November 2004, Volume 11, No. 4;
Lisa Adkins / Passing on Feminism: From Consciousness to Reflexivity?
Belinda Giannessi / Voiceless Woman: Observe, But from the Centre
EJW Anniversary Conference: Passing on Feminism.
renee c. hoogland, Petra de Vries, and Iris van der Tuin / Feminist Theory in
Intergenerational Perspective.
Gloria Wekker / Still Crazy after All Those Years.: Feminism for the New Millennium.
Findlen, Barbara ed. (1995). Listen Up: Voices of the Next Generation. Seattle: Seal Press.
Fixmer, N., and J. T. Wood. (2005). The Personal is Still Political: Embodied Politics in Third Wave Feminism. Women’s Studies in Communication, 28(2): 235.
Friend, Tad. (1996). Do-Me Feminism. Esquire, February, pp. 47-56.
Garrison, Ednie Kaeh. (2000). U.S. Feminism - Grrrl Style! Youth (Sub)Cultures and the Technologies of the Third Wave. Feminist Studies. 26(1), Spring.
Gillis, Stacy, Gillian Howie and Rebecca Munford. (eds.). (2007). Third Wave
Feminism: A Critical Exploration, expanded 2nd edn. Basingstoke and New York:
Palgrave Macmillan.
Foreword; I.Whelehan.
Introduction; S.Gillis, G.Howie & R.Munford.
PART I: GENERATIONS AND GENEALOGIES.
‘Feminists Love a Utopia’: Collaboration, Conflict and the Futures
of Feminism; L.S.Sanders.
On the Genealogy of Women: A Defence of Anti-Essentialism; A.Stone.
Kristeva and the Trans-missions of the Intertext: Signs, Mothers and Speaking
in Tongues; M.Orr.
Feminist Dissonance: The Logic of Late Feminism; G.Howie & A.Tauchert.
Transgender Feminism: Queering the Woman Question; S.Stryker.
Theorizing the Intermezzo: The Contributions of Postfeminism and Third Wave
Feminism; A.D.Lotz.
‘You’re not One of Those Boring Masculinists, Are You?’: The
Question of Male-Embodied Feminist Criticism; Andrew Shail.
PART II: LOCALES AND LOCATIONS.
Wa(i)ving it all Away: Subject Formation and Knowledge Formation in Feminisms
of Colour; M.N.Chakraborty.
‘It’s all About the Benjamins’: Economic Determinants of Third
Wave Feminism in the United States; L.Heywood & J.Drake.
Imagining Feminist Futures: The Third Wave, Postfeminism and Eco/feminism; N.Moore.
A Different Chronology: Reflections on Feminism in Contemporary Poland; A.Graff.
Global Feminism, Transnational Political Economies, Third World Cultural Production;
W.Woodhull.
Neither Cyborg nor Goddess: The (Im)possibilities of Cyberfeminism; S.Gillis.
PART III: POLITICS AND POPULAR CULTURE.
Contests for the Meaning of Third Wave Feminism: Feminism and Popular Consciousness;
E.K.Garrison.
‘Also I Wanted so Much to Leave for the West’: Postcolonial Feminism
Rides the Third Wave; A.Valassopoulos.
(Un)fashionable Feminists: The Media and Ally McBeal; K.Gorton.
‘Kicking Ass is Comfort Food’: Buffy as Third Wave Feminist Icon;
P.Pender.
‘My Guns are in the Fendi!’: The Postfeminist Female Action Hero;
C.L.Stasia.
Sexing it Up? Women, Pornography and the Third Wave Feminism; M.Waters.
‘Wake Up and Smell the Lipgloss’: Gender, Generation and the (A)politics
of Girl Power; R.Munford.
IN DIALOGUE.
Interview with Luce Irigaray; G.Howie.
Interview with Elaine Showalter; S.Gillis & R.Munford.
Afterword; J.Spencer
Gillis, Stacy, Gillian Howie, and Rebecca Munford. (eds.). (2004). Third-wave feminism: a critical exploration. Basingstoke/New York: Palgrave Macmillan.
Harris, Anita. (2001). ‘Not Waving or Drowning’: Young Women, Feminism, and the Limits of the Next Wave Debate. Outskirts: Feminisms Along the Edge, Vol. 8, May. [http://www.chloe.uwa.edu.au/outskirts/archive/VOL8/article4.html] Accessed 13 June 2001.
Harris, Anita. (2001). Revisiting Bedroom Culture: New Spaces for Young Women’s Politics. Hecate. 27(1).
Harris, Anita. (2005). Discourses of Desire as Governmentality: Young Women, Sexuality and the Significance of Safe Spaces. Feminism & Psychology, vol. 15, no. 1, pp. 39-43, February.
Henry, Astrid. (2004). Not My Mother’s Sister: Generational Conflict and Third-Wave Feminism. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.
Hernández, Daisy, and Bushra Rehman. (eds.). (2002). Colonize This! Young Women of Color on Today’s Feminism. Seattle, WA: Seal Press.
Heywood, L., and J. Drake. (eds). (1997). Third Wave Agenda: Being Feminist, Doing Feminism, Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
Hogeland, Lisa Marie. (1994). Fear of Feminism: Why Young Women Get the Willies. Ms, November/December, pp. 18-21.
Hopkins, Susan. (2002). Girl Heroes: The New Force in Popular Culture. Sydney: Pluto Press.
Hughes, Kate. (2005). ‘I’ve been pondering whether you can be a part-feminist’: Young Australian Women’s Studies students discuss gender. Women’s Studies International Forum, Volume 28, Issue 1, January-February, pp. 37-49.
Jensen, Michelle. (2000). Riding the Third Wave. The Nation, December 11, pp. 24-32.
Journal of International Women’s Studies. (2003). Special Issue: Harvesting
Our Strengths: Third Wave Feminism and Women’s Studies.Vol. 4, No. 2,
April.
Harvesting Our Strengths: Third Wave Feminism and Women’s Studies / Stacy
Gillis and Rebecca Munford.
Beyond Trashiness: The Sexual Language of 1970s Feminist Fiction / Meryl Altman.
Mothers of Future Kings: The Madonna Redux Phenomenon / Colleen Denney.
The ANA Sanctuary: Women’s Pro-Anorexia Narratives in Cyberspace / Karen
Dias.
Feminist Futures: Trauma, The Post-9/11 World And A Fourth Feminism? / E. Ann
Kaplan.
Women’s Space “Inside The Haveli”: Incarceration Or Insurrection?
/ Daphne Grace.
Global Feminisms, Transnational Political Economies, Third World Cultural Production
/ Winnie Woodhull.
From Suffagist To Apologist: The Loss Of Feminist Politics In A Politically
Correct Patriarchy / Ashleigh Harris.
Lost Between The Waves? The Paradoxes Of Feminist Chronology And Activism In
Contemporary Poland / Agnieszka Graff.
Is Women’s Studies Dead? / Marysia Zalewski.
Kamen, Paula. (1991). Feminist Fatale: Voices From the ‘Twentysomething’ Generation Explore the Future of the ‘Women’s Movement’. New York: Donald I. Fine.
Kamen, Paula. (2000). Her Way: Young Women Remake the Sexual Revolution. New York University Press.
Karp, Marcelle, and Debbie Stoller. (eds). (1999). The Bust Guide to the New Girl Order. New York: Penguin.
Kearney, Mary Celeste. (1998). ‘Don’t Need You’: Rethinking Identity Politics and Separatism from a Grrrl Perspective. Jonathan Epstein, ed. Youth Culture: Identity in a Postmodern World. Malden: Blackwell, pp. 148-88.
Keddie, A. (2003). Young Women and Feminisms. Redress, 12(3), pp. 15-18.
Kinser, Amber E. (2004). Negotiating Spaces For/Through Third-Wave Feminism. NWSA Journal, Volume 16, Number 3, Fall.
Labi, Nadya. (1998). Girl Power. Time, 29 June.
Liss, Miriam, Christy O’Connor, Elena Morosky, and Mary Crawford. (2001). What Makes a Feminist? Predictors and Correlates of Feminist Social Identity in College Women. Psychology of Women Quarterly, Volume 25 Issue 2, June.
Long, Jane. (2001). ‘A Certain Kind of Modern Feminism’: Memory, Feminist Futures and ‘Generational Cleavage’ in Historical Perspective. Outskirts: Feminisms Along the Edge, Vol. 8, May [http://mmc.arts.uwa.edu.au/chloe/outskirts/article2.html] Accessed 13 June. (2001).
Looser, D. (1997), “Gen X Feminists? Youthism, careerism and the Third Wave” in Looser, D. & Kaplan, E.A. (eds), Generations: Academic feminists in dialogue, University of Minneapolis Press, Minneapolis.
Mack-Canty, Colleen. (2004). Third-Wave Feminism and the Need to Reweave the Nature/Culture Duality. NWSA Journal, Volume 16, Number 3, Fall.
Maddison, Sarah. (2002). Bombing the patriarchy or just trying to get a cab: challenges facing the next generation of feminist activists. Outskirts: Feminisms Along the Edge, Vol. 10, November - December. [http://www.chloe.uwa.edu.au/outskirts/article3.html] Accessed 28 May 2003.
Maddison, Sarah. (2004). Young Women in the Australian Women’s Movement. International Feminist Journal of Politics, Volume 6, Number 2, June, pp. 234-256.
Mitchell, Allyson, Lisa Bryn Rundle, and Lara Karaian. (eds). (2001). Turbo Chicks: Talking Young Feminisms. Sumach Press.
Murphy, Kylie. (2001). ‘I’m Sorry - I’m Not Really Sorry’: Courtney Love and Notions of Authenticity. Hecate. 27(1).
Muscio, Inga. (1998). Cunt: A Declaration of Independence. Seattle: Seal Press.
O’Barr, Jean, and Mary Wyer. (eds). (1992). Engaging Feminisms: Students Speak Up & Speak Out. Charlottesville & London: University Press of Virginia.
Pomerantz, Shauna, Dawn H. Currie, and Deirdre M. Kelly. (2004). Sk8er girls: Skateboarders, girlhood and feminism in motion. Women’s Studies International Forum, Volume 27, Issues 5-6, November-December, pp. 547-557.
Purvis, J. (2004). Grrrls and Women Together in the Third Wave: Embracing the Challenges of Intergenerational Feminism(s). NWSA Journal, 16(3): 93.
Purvis, Jennifer. (2004). Grrrls and Women Together in the Third Wave: Embracing the Challenges of Intergenerational Feminism(s). NWSA Journal, Volume 16, Number 3, Fall.Rich, Emma. (2005). Young women, feminist identities and neo-liberalism. Women’s Studies International Forum, Volume 28, Issue 6, November-December: 495-508.
Richards, Amy, and Jennifer Baumgardner. (2000). Manifesta: Young Women, Feminism, and the Future. Farrar, Straus, and Giroux.
Rowe-Finkbeiner, Kristin. (2004). The F-Word: Feminism in Jeopardy: Women, Politics, and the Future. Seal Press.
Ruittenberg, Dayna (ed). (2001). Yentyl’s Revenge: The Next Wave of Jewish Feminism. Seal Press.
Sharpe, S. (2001). Going For It: Young Women Face the Future. Feminism & Psychology. 11(2), pp. 177–181.
Shugart, Helene A. (2001). Isn’t It Ironic? The Intersection of Third-Wave Feminism and Generation X. Women’s Studies in Communication, 24(2), February.
Shugart, Helene A., C.E. Waggoner, and D.L. O’Brien Hallstein. (2001). Mediating Third Wave Feminism: Appropriation as post modern media practice. Critical Studies in Media Communication, 18(2), pp. 194-210.
Siegel, Deborah. (2007). Sisterhood, Interrupted: From Radical Women to Grrls Gone Wild. Palgrave Macmillan.
Springer, Kimberly. (2002). Third Wave Black Feminism? Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society, 27: 1059-82.
Taormino, Tristan, and Karen Green. (eds). (1997). A Girl’s Guide to Taking Over the World: Writings from the Girl Zine Revolution. St. Martin’s Press.
Taylor, Anthea. (2003). What’s new about ‘the new femininity’?: Feminism, femininity and the discourse of the new. Hecate, v.29 no.2: 182-198.
Trioli, Virginia. (1996). The Times They Are Confusing: The Price of Being a Feminist in the Nineties. Chapter 2 (pp. 48-70) in Generation f: Sex, Power & the Young Feminist, Port Melbourne: Minerva
Valenti, Jessica. (2007). Full Frontal Feminism: A Young Woman’s Guide to Why Feminism Matters. Seal Press.
Walker, Rebecca. (ed). (1995). To Be Real: Telling the Truth and Changing the Face of Feminism. New York: Anchor Books.
Walter, Natasha (ed.). (1999). On the Move: Feminism for a new generation. London: Virago.
Whelehan, Imelda. (2000). Girl Power?. Chapter 2 in Overloaded: Popular Culture and the Future of Feminism. London: Women’s Press
Zita, Jacquelyn N. (ed.). (1997). Hypatia, Special Issue: Third Wave Feminisms, 12(3), Summer.
Zobl, Elke. (2004). Persephone is pissed!: Grrl zine reading, making and distributing across the globe. Hecate, v.30, no.2: 156-175.
Excerpted from The Men's Bibliography: A comprehensive bibliography of writing on men, masculinities, gender, and sexualities, compiled by Michael Flood.
19th edition, 2008, Canberra, Australia. ISBN 0 646 18088 6
E-mail: mflood[at]vichealth.vic.gov.au
Home URL: http://mensbiblio.xyonline.net/
d) Postmodern feminism / feminist postmodernism, French feminism
Agger, Ben. (1993). Gender, Culture, and Power: Toward a feminist postmodern critical theory. Praeger, Westpoint.
Ahmed, Sara. (1996). Beyond Humanism and Postmodernism: Theorizing a Feminist Practice. Hypatia, 11(2), Spring.
Ahmed, Sara. (1998). Differences that Matter: Feminist Theory and Postmodernism. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Assiter, Alison. (1996). Enlightened Women: Modernist feminism in a postmodern age.
Benhabib, Seyla, Judith Butler, Drucilla Cornell, and Nancy Fraser. (1995). Feminist Contentions: A philosophical exchange. New York: Routledge.
Benhabib, Seyla. (1992). Situating the Self: Gender, community, and postmodernism in contemporary ethics. Cambridge: Polity Press.
Best, Steven, and Douglas Kellner. (1991). Postmodern Theory: Critical interrogations. New York: Guilford Press.
Braidotti, Rosi. (1994). Nomadic Subjects: Embodiments and sexual difference in contemporary feminist theory. New York: Columbia U.P.
Braidotti, Rosi. (2005). A Critical Cartography of Feminist Post-postmodernism. Australian Feminist Studies, Volume 20 Number 47, July.
Brodribb, Somer. (1992). Nothing Matters: A feminist critique of postmodernism. North Melbourne, VIC: Spinifex Press.
Buchanan, Ian, and Claire Colebrook. (eds). (2000). Deleuze and Feminist Theory. Edinburgh University Press.
Butler, Judith. (1997). Excitable Speech: A Politics of the Performative. London: Routledge.
Carver, Terrell. (1996). Feminist Theories of Politics and Postmodern Theories of Gender. Chapter 1 in Gender is Not a Synonym for Women. Boulder, Colorado: Lynne Rienne Publishers.
Deutscher, Penelope. (1997). Yielding Gender: Feminism, deconstruction and the history of philosophy. London & New York: Routledge.
Diamond, Irene, and Lee Quinby. (eds). (1988). Feminism and Foucault: Reflections on Resistance.
diLeonardo, Micaela. (1991). Gender at the Crossroads of Knowledge: Feminist anthropology in the postmodern era.
Downs. (1993). If woman is just an empty category, then why am I afraid to walk alone at night? Identity politics meets the postmodern subject. Comparative Studies in Society and History, 35(2).
Ebert, Teresa L. Patriarchal Narratives.
Elam, Diane. (1992). Romancing the Postmodern.
Elam, Diane. (1994). Feminism and Deconstruction.
Elam, Diane, and Robyn Wiegman. (eds). (1995). Feminism Beside Itself.
Feder, Ellen K., Mary Rawlinson, and Emily Zakin. (eds). (1997). Derrida and Feminism.
Felski, Rita. (2000). Doing Time: Feminist Theory and Postmodern Culture. New York University Press.
Ferguson, Margaret W., and Jennifer Wicke. (eds). Feminism and Postmodernism. Duke University Press.
Fox, N. (1993). Postmodernism, Sociology and Health. Buckingham: Open University Press.
Gambaudo, S. A. (2007). French Feminism vs Anglo-American Feminism: A Reconstruction. European Journal of Women’s Studies, 14(2): 93-108.
Griffiths, Morwenna. (1995). Feminisms and The Self.
Grosz, Elizabeth. (1989). Sexual Subversions: Three French Feminists. Sydney: Allen and Unwin.
Gutterman, D. (1994). Postmodernism and the Interrogation of Masculinity. In H. Brod and M. Kaufman. (eds). Theorising Masculinities. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.
Hekman, Susan. (1990). Gender and Knowledge: Elements of a Postmodern Feminism. Cambridge: Polity Press.
Hoff, Joan. (1994). Gender as a Postmodern Category of Paralysis. Women’s Studies International Forum, 17(4).
Holland, Nancy J. (ed.). Feminist Interpretations of Jacques Derrida. Penn State University Press.
Kaplan, Caren. Questions of Travel: Postmodern Discourses of Displacement, Duke University Press.
Lather, Patti. (1991). Getting Smart: Feminist research and pedagogy with/in the postmodern. New York: Routledge.
Lurie, Susan. Unsettled Subjects: Restoring feminist politics to poststructuralist critique. Duke University Press.
Lyon, David. (1998). Postmodernity. (2nd edition) Open University Press.
Marchand, Marianne H., and Jane Parpart. (eds). (1994). Feminism / Postmodernism / Development. London: Routledge.
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Parker, Andrew, and Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick. (eds). Performativity and Performance. New York: Routledge.
Patton, Paul. (ed.). (1993). Nietzsche, Feminism, and Political Theory.
Pease, Bob. (2000). Postmodern Feminism and the Critical Study of Men. Chapter 3 in Recreating Men: Postmodern Masculinity Politics. London: Sage.
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Sarup, M. (1992). An Introductory Guide to Poststructuralism and Postmodernism. Harvester Wheatsheath. London.
Sawicki, Jana. (1991). Disciplining Foucault: Feminism, power, and the body.
Scott, Joan W. (1988). Deconstructing equality-versus-difference: Or, the uses of poststructuralist theory for feminism. Feminist Studies, 14(1), Spring.
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Soper, K. (1990). ‘Feminism, Humanism and Postmodernism’. Radical Philosophy. No. 55, (Summer): 11-17.
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Excerpted from The Men's Bibliography: A comprehensive bibliography of writing on men, masculinities, gender, and sexualities, compiled by Michael Flood.
19th edition, 2008, Canberra, Australia. ISBN 0 646 18088 6
E-mail: mflood[at]vichealth.vic.gov.au
Home URL: http://mensbiblio.xyonline.net/