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7 Decolonizing Feminist Geopolitics

  • Linn Biorklund and Jennifer Hyndman
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Abstract

Building on feminist geopolitics and geographies of embodied violence, this chapter foregrounds cuerpo-territorio (body-territory) as a lens to advance and extend feminist political geography in ways that connect intimate, state, economic, and conflict-related violence across bodies, borders, and communities. For decades, feminist geographers have challenged the assumptions of dominant Western geopolitics and notions of violence by rescaling analysis to focus on the impact and responses of violence on those most affected. Efforts to incorporate knowledge and methods from feminist geographies in languages other than English and beyond Global North locations have, however, been limited. Drawing inspiration specifically from communitarian and decolonial feminist scholars, including geographers, in Latin America, the case is made for a body-territory epistemological framing and approach to understanding violence as a geopolitical economy of embodiment. A body-territory-centered assemblage offers a situated, embodied, and intersectional approach to theorizing and tracing visceral geographies of violence and ways of living beyond and despite that violence.

Abstract

Building on feminist geopolitics and geographies of embodied violence, this chapter foregrounds cuerpo-territorio (body-territory) as a lens to advance and extend feminist political geography in ways that connect intimate, state, economic, and conflict-related violence across bodies, borders, and communities. For decades, feminist geographers have challenged the assumptions of dominant Western geopolitics and notions of violence by rescaling analysis to focus on the impact and responses of violence on those most affected. Efforts to incorporate knowledge and methods from feminist geographies in languages other than English and beyond Global North locations have, however, been limited. Drawing inspiration specifically from communitarian and decolonial feminist scholars, including geographers, in Latin America, the case is made for a body-territory epistemological framing and approach to understanding violence as a geopolitical economy of embodiment. A body-territory-centered assemblage offers a situated, embodied, and intersectional approach to theorizing and tracing visceral geographies of violence and ways of living beyond and despite that violence.

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