• Gender epistemologies and Eurasian borderlands
  • [NT 42944] Record Type: [NT 8598] Electronic resources : [NT 40817] monographic
    [NT 47261] Author: TlostanovaM. V.,
    [NT 47356] Secondary Intellectual Responsibility: Palgrave Connect (Online service)
    [NT 47351] Place of Publication: New York, NY
    [NT 47263] Published: Palgrave Macmillan;
    [NT 47352] Year of Publication: 2010
    [NT 50960] Edition: 1st ed.
    [NT 47264] Description: 1 online resource (xx, 240 p.)ill. :
    [NT 47298] Series: Comparative feminist studies series
    [NT 47266] Subject: Feminism - Asia, Central. -
    [NT 47266] Subject: Women - Identity. - Asia, Central -
    [NT 47266] Subject: Postcolonialism - Asia, Central. -
    [NT 47266] Subject: Asia, Central. -
    [NT 47266] Subject: Feminism. -
    [NT 47266] Subject: Identity. -
    [NT 47266] Subject: Postcolonialism. -
    [NT 47266] Subject: Women. -
    [NT 47266] Subject: SOCIAL SCIENCE - Feminism & Feminist Theory. -
    [NT 51458] Online resource: http://www.palgraveconnect.com/doifinder/10.1057/9780230113923An electronic book accessible through the World Wide Web; click for information
    [NT 47265] Notes: Description based on print version record.
    [NT 51398] Summary: In an important contribution to postcolonial, gender, and Eurasian ethnic studies, Madina Tlostanova examines Central Asia and the Caucasus to trace the genealogy of feminism in those regions following the dissolution of the USSR. The forms it takes, she finds, resist interpretation through the lenses of both Western feminist theory and woman of color feminism. Tlostanova argues that Eurasian borderland feminism must chart a third path sensitive to the region's own unique past.
    [NT 50961] ISBN: 9780230113923electronic bk.
    [NT 50961] ISBN: 0230113923electronic bk.
    [NT 60779] Content Note: From third-world feminism to decolonial gender epistemologies Between third-world/women of color feminism and decolonial feminism Decolonial feminism and the decolonial turn Coloniality of gender in the world of the secondary colonial difference (Caucasus and Central Asia) Race/body/gender and coloniality in the Russian/Soviet Empire and its colonies Quasi-scientific racism and gender in Russian and Soviet discourses Dirt fetish and commodity racism Soviet way Colonial gender tricksterism in Central Asia and Caucasus Trans-epistemic dialogues and contemporary gender discourses in Caucasus and Central Asia Eurasian borderlands in dialogue with Mesoamerica Two dialogues Conclusion: why cut the feet in order to fit the Western shoes?
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