This edited volume brings transnational feminisms in conversation with intersectional and decolonial approaches. The conversation is pluriversal; it voices and reflects upon a plurality of geo- and corpopolitical as well as epistemic locations in specific Global South/East/North/West contexts. The aim is to explore analytical modes that encourage transgressing methodological nationalisms which sustain unequal global power relations and which are still ingrained in the disciplinary perspectives that define much social science and humanities research.
A main focus of the volume is methodological. It asks how an engagement with transnational, intersectional, and decolonial feminisms can stimulate border crossings. Boundaries in academic knowledge-building, shaped by the limitations imposed by methodological nationalisms, are challenged in the book. The same applies to boundaries of conventional · disembodied and ethically unaffected · academic writing modes. The transgressive methodological aims are also pursued through mixing genres and shifting boundaries between academic and creative writing.
Pluriversal Conversations on Transnational Feminisms
is intended for broad global audiences of researchers, teachers, professionals, students (from undergraduate to postgraduate levels), activists, and NGOs, interested in questions about decoloniality, intersectionality, and transnational feminisms, as well as in methodologies for boundary transgressing knowledge-building.
This edited volume brings transnational feminisms in conversation with intersectional and decolonial approaches. The conversation is pluriversal; it voices and reflects upon a plurality of geo- and corpopolitical as well as epistemic locations in specific Global South/East/North/West contexts.
Recenzijos
Assembling urgent conversations in decolonial, transnational, and intersectional feminist research from a rich array of geopolitical perspectives, the editors of Pluriversal Conversations on Transnational Feminisms compellingly argue for the need to transgress methodological nationalism. The book will be a vital resource for scholars interested in genre- and border-crossing knowledge production.
Prof. Neda Atanasoski, Dept. of Women, Gender and Sexuality Studies, University of Maryland College Park, USA; Author of Humanitarian Violence: the U.S. Deployment of Diversity (2013)
This volume of outstanding essays contributes to current conversations on pluriversality, by bringing together transnational, intersectional and decolonial feminist methods and perspectives. It draws on a multiplicity of locations and modes of knowing and forms of writing to radically rethink key questions around justice and solidarity, for feminists across the Global North and South.
Prof. Srila Roy, University of Witwaterstrand, South Africa; Author of Changing the Subject. Feminist and Queer Politics in Neoliberal India (2022)
This edited collection is, as Marisol de Cadena and Mario Blaser (2018) express it A world of many worlds, capaciously conversing across South/East/North/ West disparate contexts, using a smorgasbord of academic and creative genres to transgress methodological nationalism. It is an experimental and adventurous text, which includes both emerging and seasoned academic voices. One gets the feeling that the process of pluriversal conversing and writing the book was as significant as the book product for the authors.
Vivienne Bozalek, Emerita Professor, Department of Womens and Gender Studies, University of the Western Cape, South Africa; Co-editor of Higher Education Hauntologies. Living with Ghosts for a Justice-to-come (2021)
Epigraph: Sister Ode;
1. Colliding Words and Worlds: Pluriversal
Conversations on Transnational Feminisms; Part I: Myriad Tongues and Multiple
Emotions (On Affected Writing and Ethics);
2. A Black Woman Died at The
Intersection(ality) Today;
3. Pedagogies of Precarity;
4. Scenes of
Precarity: Where is the Exit?;
5. Affected Writing: A Decolonial,
Intersectional Feminist Engagement with Narratives of Sexual Violence;
6.
Notes from My Field Diary: Revisiting Emotions in the Field;
7. Whiteness as
Friction: Vulnerability as a Method in Transnational Research;
8. From
Affective Pedagogies to Affected Pedagogues A Conversation;
9. I will Meet
You at Twilight: On Subjectivity, Identity and Transnational Intersectional
Feminist Research;
10. Living an African Feminist Life: Decolonial
Perspectives A Conversation; Part II: Portals of Possibility (On
Methodologies);
11. Can Methodologies be Decolonial? Towards a Relational
Experiential Epistemic Togetherness;
12. Reading Transnationally: Literary
Transduction as a Feminist Tool;
13. Writing Love Letters Across Borders: A
Conversation on Indigenous-Centred Methodologies; Part III: Intrepid Journeys
(On the Epistemic Implications of Geopolitical Situatedness);
14. #MeToo
Through a Decolonial Feminist Lens: Critical Reflections on Transnational
Online Activism Against Sexual Violence;
15. Translocality, a Decolonial Take
on Feminist Strategies;
16. Re-Routing the Sexual: A Regional and Relational
Lens in Theorizing Sexuality in the Middle East (West Asia);
17. Beautiful
Diversity? Diversity Rhetoric, Ethnicized Visions and Nesting Post-Soviet
Hegemonies in the Multimedia Project The Ethnic Origins of Beauty;
18.
Reducing Costs While Optimizing Health? A Transnational Feminist Engagement
with Personalized Medicine;
19. The Meanings of Chronopolitics and Temporal
Awareness in Feminist Ethnographic Research;
20. Disrupting the Colonial
Gaze: Towards Alternative Sexual Justice Engagements with Young People in
South Africa;
21. Studying Happiness in Post-Colonial and Post-Apartheid
South Africa: Theoretical and Methodological Considerations;
22. On
Decolonization, the University and Transnational Solidarities A Conversation
Nina Lykke is Professor Emerita, Gender Studies, Linkoping University, Sweden, and Adjunct Professor, Aarhus University, Denmark.
Redi Koobak is Chancellors Fellow and Senior Lecturer in Interdisciplinary Gender Studies, University of Strathclyde, UK.
Petra Bakos is a literary scholar with a PhD in comparative gender studies from the Central European University (CEU), Hungary/Austria.
Swati Arora is Lecturer in Performance and Global South Studies at Queen Mary University of London, UK.
Kharnita Mohamed is Lecturer in Anthropology at the University of Cape Town (UCT), South Africa.