Critical Social Inquiry 0246 - Transnational Feminisms

Transnational Feminisms

Fall
2024
1
4.00
Jina Fast

01:00PM-02:20PM TU;01:00PM-02:20PM TH

Hampshire College
338456
Franklin Patterson Hall 105;Franklin Patterson Hall 105
jmfCSI@hampshire.edu
This course critically engages a range of transnational feminist theories, movements, and praxis to analyze structures of power shaping people's lives in global and local contexts. By focusing on African, Asian, South American, Indigenous, and Middle Eastern feminisms, this course seeks to decenter a body of feminist scholarship that often assumes shared visions of gender equality. Such studies conceptualize gender issues and concerns through a Eurocentric/colonial viewpoint by overlooking differences among people with respect to race, class, sexuality/sexual orientation, and nationality. Course readings explore the ethics of cross-cultural knowledge production, activism, warfare, commodification of women and queer peoples' bodies, sexualities, and local resources. The main goals of the course are to expose students to a broad range of feminist thought and action and locate transnational feminist theories in relation to colonial and post-colonial narratives. It urges students to examine their own positions within global systems that connect the (often uneven) exchange of persons, capital, and ways of knowing. Keywords:Feminist Theory, Queer Theory, Postcolonial feminisms, African/a Philosophy

In/Justice The content of this course deals with issues of race and power Students should expect to spend 8 hours weekly on work and preparation outside of class time

Permission is required for interchange registration during the add/drop period only.