November 21, 2022
How do feminist and queer activist imaginaries respond to, initiate, mitigate, enable and complicate the ongoing process of radical transformation in the world? This special issue brings together insightful analyses of how the famous feminist dictum, ‘the personal is political’ is finding new expression in this era of climatic, pandemic, economic and political crises, particularly in the European context. Check below the Table of Contents:
Table of Contents European Journal of Women's Studies- Volume: 29, Number: 4 (November 2022) |
Introduction
Feminist+ solidarity as transformative politics |
Ayşe Gül Altınay and Andrea Pető |
Interview
Women’s courageous resistance to gender apartheid in Afghanistan: A conversation with Shaharzad Akbar |
Ayşe Gül Altınay and Andrea Pető |
Articles
‘Look at me!’ Post-mastectomy transformative politics |
Kathy Davis |
Little prayer: Ambiguous grief in the LGBTQIA+ movement in Turkey |
Elif Irem Az |
Sounding possible worlds: The cacophony of the Istanbul Feminist Night Marches |
Ege Akdemir |
‘We just want to make art’ – Women with experiences of racial othering reflect on art, activism and representation |
Mehek Muftee and René León Rosales |
Planetary activism at the end of the world: Feminist and posthumanist imaginaries beyond Man |
Sanna Karkulehto, Aino-Kaisa Koistinen, and Nóra Ugron |
Worker-led feminist mobilizing for the museum of the future |
Margaret Middleton and Jamie J Hagen |
Open Forum
Open Forum: Feminist+ solidarity |
Ayşe Gül Altınay, Andrea Pető, Arlene Voski Avakian, Oksana Dutchak, Cynthia Enloe, Mert Koçak, María López Belloso, and madeleine kennedy-macfoy |
Book reviews
Book review: Karol Radziszewski: The Power of Secrets |
Gyula Muskovics |
Book review: Black Trans Feminism |
Alanah Mortlock |