Tag: Feminism

Vanishing Women Magic, Film, and Feminism


Free Download Karen Redrobe, "Vanishing Women: Magic, Film, and Feminism"
English | 2003 | ISBN: 0822330741, 082233125X | PDF | pages: 250 | 1.4 mb
With the help of mirrors, trap doors, elevators, photographs, and film, women vanish and return in increasingly spectacular ways throughout the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Karen Beckman tracks the proliferation of this elusive figure, the vanishing woman, from her genesis in Victorian stage magic through her development in conjunction with photography and film. Beckman reveals how these new visual technologies projected their anxieties about insubstantiality and reproducibility onto the female body, producing an image of "woman" as utterly unstable and constantly prone to disappearance.

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Woman Suffrage and The Origins of Liberal Feminism in the United States, 1820-1920


Free Download Woman Suffrage and The Origins of Liberal Feminism in the United States, 1820-1920 By Suzanne Marilley
1997 | 304 Pages | ISBN: 0674954653 | PDF | 19 MB
In demanding equal rights and the vote for women, woman suffragists introduced liberal feminist dissent into an emerging national movement against absolute power in the forms of patriarchy, church administrations, slavery, and false dogmas. In their struggle, these women developed three types of liberal arguments, each predominant during a different phase of the movement. The feminism of equal rights, which called for freedom through equality, emerged during the Jacksonian era to counter those opposed to women’s public participation in antislavery reform. The feminism of fear, the defense of women’s right to live free from fear of violent injury or death perpetrated particularly by drunken men, flourished after the Civil War. And in the early 1900s, the feminism of personal development called for women’s freedom through opportunities to become full persons. The practical need to blend concepts in order to justify and achieve goals created many contradictions in the suffragists’ ideologies. By putting suffrage first, these women introduced radical goals, but as a politically powerless group, they could not win the vote without appeals and bargains that men considered acceptable. Ironically, American woman suffragists used illiberal ideals and arguments to sustain the quest for the most fundamental liberal feminist citizenship goal: the vote. In this book, Suzanne Marilley reframes the debate on this important topic in a fresh, provocative, and persuasive style.

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Translation and Gender Translating in the ‘Era of Feminism’


Free Download Translation and Gender: Translating in the ‘Era of Feminism’ By Luise von Flotow
1997 | 128 Pages | ISBN: 0776604481 | PDF | 7 MB
Translation and Gender places recent work in translation against the background of the women’s movement and its critique of "patriarchal" language. It explains translation practices derived from experimental feminist writing, the development of openly interventionist translation practices, the initiative to retranslate fundamental texts such as the Bible, translating as a way of recuperating writings "lost" in patriarchy, and translation history as a means of focusing on women translators of the past.

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Full Frontal Feminism A Young Woman s Guide to Why Feminism Matters


Free Download Jessica Valenti, "Full Frontal Feminism: A Young Woman s Guide to Why Feminism Matters"
English | 2007 | pages: 288 | ISBN: 1580052010 | EPUB | 0,5 mb
Feminism isn’t dead. It just isn’t very cool anymore. Enter Full Frontal Feminism, a book that embodies the forward-looking messages that author Jessica Valenti propagated as founder of the popular website, Feministing.com.

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Woman Up Invoking Feminism in Quality Television


Free Download Julia Havas, "Woman Up: Invoking Feminism in Quality Television "
English | ISBN: 0814346561 | 2022 | 282 pages | EPUB | 1012 KB
While American television has long relied on a strategic foregrounding of feminist politics to promote certain programming’s cultural value, Woman Up: Invoking Feminism in Quality Television is the first sustained critical analysis of the twenty-first-century resurgence of this tradition. In Woman Up, Julia Havas’scentral argument is that postmillennial "feminist quality television" springs from a rhetorical subversion of the (much-debated) masculine-coded "quality television" culture on the one hand and the dominance of postfeminist popular culture on the other.

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The body and shame phenomenology, feminism, and the socially shaped body


Free Download The body and shame : phenomenology, feminism, and the socially shaped body By Dolezal, Luna
2015 | 183 Pages | ISBN: 0739181688 | EPUB | 1 MB
The Body and Shame: Phenomenology, Feminism, and the Socially Shaped Body investigates the concept of body shame and explores its significance when considering philosophical accounts of embodied subjectivity. Body shame only finds its full articulation in the presence (actual or imagined) of others within a rule and norm governed milieu. As such, it bridges our personal, individual and embodied experience with the social, cultural and political world that contains us. Luna Dolezal argues that understanding body shame can shed light on how the social is embodied, that is, how the body-experienced in its phenomenological primacy by the subject-becomes a social and cultural artifact, shaped by external forces and demands.The Body and Shame introduces leading twentieth-century phenomenological and sociological accounts of embodied subjectivity through the work of Edmund Husserl, Maurice Merleau-Ponty, Jean-Paul Sartre, Michel Foucault and Norbert Elias. Dolezal examines the embodied, social and political features of body shame. contending that body shame is both a necessary and constitutive part of embodied subjectivity while simultaneously a potential site of oppression and marginalization. Exploring the cultural politics of shame, the final chapters of this work explore the phenomenology of self-presentation and a feminist analysis of shame and gender, with a critical focus on the practice of cosmetic surgery, a site where the body is literally shaped by shame. The Body and Shame will be of great interest to scholars and students in a wide variety of fields, including philosophy, phenomenology, feminist theory, women’s studies, social theory, cultural studies, psychology, sociology, and medical humanities.

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The Literary Afterlives of Simone Weil Feminism, Justice, and the Challenge of Religion


Free Download Cynthia R. Wallace, "The Literary Afterlives of Simone Weil: Feminism, Justice, and the Challenge of Religion "
English | ISBN: 0231214197 | 2024 | 312 pages | PDF | 2 MB
The French philosopher-mystic-activist Simone Weil (1909-1943) has drawn both passionate admiration and scornful dismissal since her early death and the posthumous publication of her writings. She has also provoked an extraordinary range of literary writing focused on not only her ideas but also her person: novels, nonfiction, and especially poetry. Given the challenges of Weil’s ethic of self-emptying attention, what accounts for her appeal, especially among women writers?

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The Birth of Feminism Woman as Intellect in Renaissance Italy and England


Free Download Sarah Gwyneth Ross, "The Birth of Feminism: Woman as Intellect in Renaissance Italy and England"
English | 2009 | pages: 416 | ISBN: 0674034546 | PDF | 2,2 mb
In this illuminating work, surveying 300 years and two nations, Sarah Gwyneth Ross demonstrates how the expanding ranks of learned women in the Renaissance era presented the first significant challenge to the traditional definition of "woman" in the West.

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Modern Misogyny Anti-Feminism in a Post-Feminist Era


Free Download Modern Misogyny: Anti-Feminism in a Post-Feminist Era By Kristin J. Anderson
2014 | 208 Pages | ISBN: 019932817X | EPUB | 1 MB
Pundits and politicians often opine on the irrelevance of feminism and the women’s movement today. Some commentators describe the state of feminism as "post-feminist," alongside equally questionable claims of Barack Obama’s election as signaling a "post-racial" America. Modern Misogyny examines contemporary anti-feminism in a "post-feminist" era. It considers the widespread notion that the feminist movement has ended, in large part because the work of feminism has been completed. In fact, the argument goes, women have been so successful in achieving equality, it is now men who currently are at risk of becoming irrelevant and unnecessary. These sentiments make up modern anti-feminism. Modern Misogyny argues that equality has not been fully achieved and that anti-feminism is now packaged in a more palatable, but stealthy form. This book addresses the nature, function, and implications of modern anti-feminism in the United States.Modern Misogyny explores the landscape of popular culture and politics, emphasizing relatively recent moves away from feminist activism to individualism and consumerism where "self-empowerment" represents women’s progress. It also explores the retreat to traditional gender roles after September 11, 2001. It interrogates the assumption that feminism is unnecessary, that women have achieved equality, and therefore those women who do insist on being feminists want to get ahead of men. Finally, it takes a fresh look at the positive role that feminism plays in today’s "post-feminist" era, and how feminism does and might function in women’s lives. Post-feminist discourse encourages young women to believe that they were born into a free society, so if they experience discrimination, it is an individual, isolated problem that may even be their own fault. Modern Misogyny examines that rendering of feminism as irrelevant and as the silencing and marginalizing of feminists. Anderson calls for a revived feminism that is vigilant in combatting modern forms of sexism.

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