Indo-Caribbean Feminist Thought Genealogies, Theories, Enactments /

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor Corporativo: SpringerLink (Online service)
Outros autores: Hosein, Gabrielle Jamela (Editor), Outar, Lisa (Editor)
Summary:XIII, 349 p. 10 illus., 9 illus. in color.
text
Idioma:inglés
Publicado: New York : Palgrave Macmillan US : Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan, 2016.
Edición:1st ed. 2016.
Series:New Caribbean Studies,
Subjects:
Acceso en liña:https://doi.org/10.1057/978-1-137-55937-1
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Table of Contents:
  • Gabrielle Jamela Hosein and Lisa Outar, “Introduction: Interrogating an Indo-Caribbean Feminist Epistemology”
  • Part 1: Tracing the Emergence of Indo-Caribbean Feminist Perspectives
  • Patricia Mohammed, “A Vindication for Indo-Caribbean Feminism”
  • Preeia D. Surajbali, “Indo-Caribbean Feminist Epistemology: A Personal and Scholarly Journey”
  • Andil Gosine, “My Mother’s Baby: Wrecking Work after Indentureship”
  • Part 2: Transgressive Storytelling
  • Alison Klein, “‘Seeing Greater Distances’: An Interview with Peggy Mohan on the Voyages of Indo-Caribbean Women”
  • Anita Baksh,“Indentureship, Land, and Indo-Caribbean Feminist Thought in the Literature of Rajkumari Singh and Mahadai Das”
  • Lisa Outar, “Post-Indentureship Cosmopolitan Feminism: Indo-Caribbean and Indo-Mauritian Women’s Writing and the Public Sphere”
  • Tuli Chatterji, “‘Mini Death and a Rebirth’: Talking the Crossing in Shani Mootoo’s Moving Forward Sideways Like a Crab”
  • Part 3:Art, Archives and Cultural Practices
  • Kavita Ashana Singh, “Comparative Caribbean Feminisms: Jahaji Bhain in Carnival”
  • Krystal Nandini Ghisyawan, “Unsettling the Politics of Identity and Sexuality Among Same-Sex Loving Indo-Trinidadian Women”
  • Angelique V. Nixon, “Seeing Difference: Visual Feminist Praxis, Identity and Desire in Indo-Caribbean Women’s Art and Knowledge”
  • Lisa Outar, “Art, Violence and Non-Return: An Interview with Guadeloupean Artist Kelly Sinnapah Mary”
  • Part 4: Dougla Feminisms
  • Gabrielle Jamela Hosein, “Dougla Poetics and Politics in Indian Feminist Thought: Reflection and Reconceptualization”
  • Sue Ann Barratt, “Nicki Minaj, Indian In/Visibility and the Paradox of Dougla Feminism”
  • Kaneesha Cherelle Parsard, “Cutlass: Objects Toward a Dougla Feminist Theory of Representation”
  • Part 5: New Masculinities and Femininities
  • Rhoda Reddock, “Indo-Caribbean Masculinities and Indo-Caribbean Feminisms: Where are We Now?”
  • Michael Niblett, “Belaboring Masculinity: Ecology, Work, and the Body in Michel Ponnamah’s Dérive de Josaphat”
  • Stephanie L. Jackson, “From Stigma to Shakti: The Politics of Indo-Guyanese Women’s Trance and the Transformative Potentials of Ecstatic Goddess Worship in New York City”
  • Epilogue, Shalini Puri
  • Postscript, Shivanee M. Ramlochan
  • Notes on Contributors
  • Index.