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Introduction

Moving Feminism: How to ‘Trans’ the National?

Pages 1-12 | Published online: 21 Feb 2012
 

Notes

1I would like to thank the co-editor of this issue, Clare Tebbutt for her involvement in the development of this introduction. Thanks are also due to Kaye Mitchell for her input in the early stages of the special issue, and to Barbara Rosenbaum at Women: A Cultural Review for her patience and support as Clare and I edited the issue. Finally, special thanks are due to Anastasia Valassopoulos for her comments on an earlier draft of this introduction, and her unstinting encouragement and guidance as the issue was put together.

2Thanks are due to Anastasia Valassopoulos and Mary Macfarlane for all their support in the organising of this conference, as well as all the academics, artists and activists who participated.

3 See also Mendoza ‘Transnational Feminisms in Question’ (2002) for a discussion of the usage of the terms ‘transnational,’ and its effectiveness as both theory and practice.

4See Mary Maynard, ‘“Race,” Gender and the Concept of ‘Difference’ in Feminist Thought’ for more discussion of this.

5Also see Erel et al. ‘On the Depoliticisation of Intersectionality Talk’ (2008) for a reassessment and appraisal of this term/approach.

6See Kaplan ‘The Politics of Location as Transnational Feminist Practice’ (1994) for a discussion of the limitations of Rich's formulation as it conceptualises ‘woman’ as subject who is situated rather than woman who emerges through conditions.

7See Morgan, Sisterhood is Global (1996), and Mohanty, Feminism Without Borders (2003) for a transnational feminist response to Morgan's text.

8This is akin to how Ella Shohat has theorised multicultural feminism in her introduction to Talking Visions (2001).

9See also Spivak ‘“Woman” as Theatre’ (1996) for a critique of the 1995 UN Conference on Women in Beijing.

10As Griffin points out, states have much to do with how the affective is regulated. The connections between governmentality and affect were explored in depth by Anne-Marie Fortier in her keynote at the conference. Fortier argued for the role of the British government's community cohesion agenda in the affective management of difference. See also Fortier, ‘Proximity by Design?’ (2010).

11Al-Ali and Pratt (2009).

12Riley et al. (2008).

13See Jayawardena Feminism and Nationalism in the Third World (1986).

14See Said, The World, The Text and the Critic (1983) for a detailed illumination of this concept.

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