Ripping, Cutting, Stitching: Feminist Knowledge Destruction and Creation in Global Politics: Creative Interventions in Global Politics
Autor shine choi, Saara Särmä, Cristina Masters, Marysia Zalewski, Michelle Lee Brown, Swati Parasharen Limba Engleză Paperback – 16 oct 2023
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781538171387
ISBN-10: 1538171384
Pagini: 246
Ilustrații: 30 b/w photos;
Dimensiuni: 146 x 226 x 12 mm
Greutate: 0.36 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Seria Creative Interventions in Global Politics
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 1538171384
Pagini: 246
Ilustrații: 30 b/w photos;
Dimensiuni: 146 x 226 x 12 mm
Greutate: 0.36 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Seria Creative Interventions in Global Politics
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Cuprins
Part I
1: how to read this book that is not a book
2: frankenstinian encounters: feeling the ways
3: on writing
4: collective writing/writing collectively
5: playground relations
6: calling out (via) disjunctures
7: what is at stake?
A pause, a breather: I was distracted .
PART II
8: black cats, the seduction of usefulness and cracks
9: perverse love letter
10: writing exhaustion - the unbearable weight of white feminism
11: composting anger: why I/we refuse your 'diversity' and the 'womanofcolour' tag
12: planet white boys
13: on exhaustion and enchantment
14: can feminism be a comma?
15: exhausted (again) of the normal
16: academic friendships and angers (not?) worth holding onto
17: on writing and this book
PART III
18: a shaking.
19: feminist practices of knowledge formation.
20: trajectories..?
21: imagining other futures.
22: dreaming of other futures.
23: Poetics of a handbook - or some suggestions for better practices. (for those still in academia.)
24: be(co
1: how to read this book that is not a book
2: frankenstinian encounters: feeling the ways
3: on writing
4: collective writing/writing collectively
5: playground relations
6: calling out (via) disjunctures
7: what is at stake?
A pause, a breather: I was distracted .
PART II
8: black cats, the seduction of usefulness and cracks
9: perverse love letter
10: writing exhaustion - the unbearable weight of white feminism
11: composting anger: why I/we refuse your 'diversity' and the 'womanofcolour' tag
12: planet white boys
13: on exhaustion and enchantment
14: can feminism be a comma?
15: exhausted (again) of the normal
16: academic friendships and angers (not?) worth holding onto
17: on writing and this book
PART III
18: a shaking.
19: feminist practices of knowledge formation.
20: trajectories..?
21: imagining other futures.
22: dreaming of other futures.
23: Poetics of a handbook - or some suggestions for better practices. (for those still in academia.)
24: be(co
Recenzii
Given our everyday of global crises, anxious observers ask how thinking, writing and especially feeling might/could/should be other than what today's disciplinary IR offers. By shifting our attention, this extraordinary book exposes what disciplining practices in academia make 'small' (invisible, unemotional, insignificant), connects the everyday of what is made small to the violent continuities of global politics, and offers a daring, disruptive and richly rewarding exploration of what is vastly at stake in (not) thinking IR otherwise. This uniquely collaborative project concludes by inviting us to imagine other futures and identifying strategies for doing so.
Gloriously messy and maddeningly relevant, this book is a wonderful companion for all of us current, soon-to-be, or once-upon-a-time feminist academics who are trying to figure out why and how we study international relations/global politics, and what happens to us when we do. If you do not find something that resonates so deeply that you wonder if this collective has been bugging your calls or tracking your devices, then you might need to ask yourself if you have been engaging in the harm and gatekeeping they describe.
This book is a gift, an avalanche of deep feminist critique that exposes IR's violent performativity: the larping of the Important Scholar at the conference panel and other sites of power in academia. It is a kick-ass exercise of complaint, an (anti-)methods book on writing and collaboration. You will want to devour it in one go.
Ripping, Cutting, Stitching is an extraordinary book - a burst of imagination and critical insight that breathes imagined and dreamed 'other futures' into life with incredible sharpness, care, creativity, and humour.
Gloriously messy and maddeningly relevant, this book is a wonderful companion for all of us current, soon-to-be, or once-upon-a-time feminist academics who are trying to figure out why and how we study international relations/global politics, and what happens to us when we do. If you do not find something that resonates so deeply that you wonder if this collective has been bugging your calls or tracking your devices, then you might need to ask yourself if you have been engaging in the harm and gatekeeping they describe.
This book is a gift, an avalanche of deep feminist critique that exposes IR's violent performativity: the larping of the Important Scholar at the conference panel and other sites of power in academia. It is a kick-ass exercise of complaint, an (anti-)methods book on writing and collaboration. You will want to devour it in one go.
Ripping, Cutting, Stitching is an extraordinary book - a burst of imagination and critical insight that breathes imagined and dreamed 'other futures' into life with incredible sharpness, care, creativity, and humour.