Women,Gender,Sexuality Studies 691J - S- Just Economies?
Spring
2021
01
3.00
Kiran Asher
W 4:00PM 6:30PM
UMass Amherst
85013
Fully Remote Class
kasher@umass.edu
85012
The modern economy is shaped by uneven capitalist development and premised on exploiting colonialized/raced, gendered, sexualized and non-human Others. That is, racial, sexual and environmental violence are at the heart of social relations of production and reproduction, but they are also invisibilized or undervalued under capitalism. Thus, critical analyses of the systemic inequities engendered by colonial/racial capitalism, and imagining just economies is fundamental to abolition and climate justice. A wide range of intellectuals and activists - feminists, post-colonial, transnational, black, queer, decolonial, indigenous and others - are engaged in these tasks. We will engage in close reading of some of their works, particularly the writings of Silvia Federici, Silvia Rivera Cusicanqui, Cindi Katz, Ruthie Gilmore, Dean Spade, Donna Haraway, and Gayatri Spivak.
This an advanced level interdisciplinary seminar open to undergraduates and graduates. Everyone learns at their level and pace but should have a solid working knowledge (through course work or self-study) of core concepts of political economy of development, feminism, and social theory.
This course fulfills the theory requirement for students accepted into the Graduate Certificate in Feminist Studies.
This course fulfills the theory requirement for students accepted into the Graduate Certificate in Feminist Studies.