Chapter
Licensed
Unlicensed
Requires Authentication
15 TRIPLE JEOPARDY The Third World Women’s Alliance and the Transnational Roots of Women-of-Color Feminisms
-
Maylei Blackwell
You are currently not able to access this content.
You are currently not able to access this content.
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- CONTENTS ix
- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS xv
- FOREWORD: THE CHALLENGES OF CONSTRUCTING A TRANSNATIONAL HISTORY xix
-
PART 1 CHALLENGING MALE DOMINANCE Antiquity to 1800
- 1 FEMINIST THOUGHT BEFORE THE RENAISSANCE 3
- 2 CHRISTINE DE PIZAN AND THE QUERELLE DES FEMMES 19
- 3 SOR JUANA INÉS DE LA CRUZ Early Feminism in the Americas or the Right of Every Woman to Study 28
- 4 RADICAL DOUBT AND THE LIBERATION OF WOMEN 62
-
PART 2 ACTIVISM ON THREE CONTINENTS Nineteenth to Early Twentieth Centuries
- 5 SEXUAL POLITICS IN ENGLAND AND INDIA The Case of Prostitution 77
- 6 WOMEN’S SUFFRAGE Transnational Connections 98
-
PART 3 TALKING BACK TO SEXISM BEFORE “WOMEN’S LIBERATION” Nineteenth to Mid-Twentieth Centuries
- 7 THE MYTHOLOGY OF THE DOUDOU Sexualizing Black Female Bodies, Constructing Culture in the French Caribbean 131
- 8 LOCATING THE FEMINIST SPIRIT IN THE NINETEENTH AND EARLY TWENTIETH CENTURIES IN INDIA Tarabai Shinde and Lalithambika Antherjanam 144
- 9 PROBLEMS OF TRANSLATION AND TRANSNATIONAL FEMINISMS On Gu Ruopu and Li Ruzhen 169
- 10 A ROOM OF ONE’S OWN IN TRANSRACIAL PERSPECTIVE 183
- 11 SIMONE DE BEAUVOIR The Feminist Philosopher as Other 193
-
PART 4 DISCOVERING GENDER AND REMAPPING FEMINISM 1955–1975
- 12 THE “PERSONAL POLITICS” OF CLASS 213
- 13 FEMINISTS REIMAGINE THE BODY 231
- 14 THE U.S. WOMEN’S LIBERATION MOVEMENT AND BLACK FEMINIST “SISTERHOOD” 260
- 15 TRIPLE JEOPARDY The Third World Women’s Alliance and the Transnational Roots of Women-of-Color Feminisms 280
- 16 STRAINED SISTERHOOD Lesbianism, Feminism, and the U.S. Women’s Liberation Movement 292
- 17 THE LATIN AMERICAN LESBIAN MOVEMENT Its Shaping and Its Search for Autonomy 312
- 18 WHO IS YOUR MOTHER? Red Roots of White Feminism 321
- 19 SUFFERING LIKE AN AFRICAN GIRL Trauma Embodied in Tsitsi Dangarembga’s Nervous Conditions 335
- 20 THE MEANING OF SPATIAL BOUNDARIES 350
-
PART 5 BEYOND “THE DECADE OF THE WOMAN” 1975 to the Present
- 21 MOTHERS, GUERRILLAS, AND REVOLUTIONARIES Women’s Mobilization and Activism in Latin America 379
- 22 FEMINIST ORGANIZING AROUND VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN IN MALI, PERU, AND INDIA 402
- 23 FREEDOM FROM SEXISM VERSUS SEXUAL FREEDOM A Short History of the Feminist Sex Wars 430
- 24 TWO GENERATIONS OF FEMINIST ACTIVISM Snapshots from the Middle East and North Africa since 1970 451
- 25 MEN AND WOMEN’S STUDIES Promise, Pitfalls, and Possibility 471
- 26 IDENTITY, ACTIVISM, AND THIRD WAVE FEMINISM IN THE UNITED STATES 501
- 27 CAPTURED IN TRANSLATION Africa and Feminisms in the Age of Globalization 522
- 28 GENDERING THE ARAB SPRING 530
- CONTRIBUTORS 537
- CREDITS 543
- AUTHOR AND TITLE INDEX 549
- SUBJECT INDEX 552
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- CONTENTS ix
- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS xv
- FOREWORD: THE CHALLENGES OF CONSTRUCTING A TRANSNATIONAL HISTORY xix
-
PART 1 CHALLENGING MALE DOMINANCE Antiquity to 1800
- 1 FEMINIST THOUGHT BEFORE THE RENAISSANCE 3
- 2 CHRISTINE DE PIZAN AND THE QUERELLE DES FEMMES 19
- 3 SOR JUANA INÉS DE LA CRUZ Early Feminism in the Americas or the Right of Every Woman to Study 28
- 4 RADICAL DOUBT AND THE LIBERATION OF WOMEN 62
-
PART 2 ACTIVISM ON THREE CONTINENTS Nineteenth to Early Twentieth Centuries
- 5 SEXUAL POLITICS IN ENGLAND AND INDIA The Case of Prostitution 77
- 6 WOMEN’S SUFFRAGE Transnational Connections 98
-
PART 3 TALKING BACK TO SEXISM BEFORE “WOMEN’S LIBERATION” Nineteenth to Mid-Twentieth Centuries
- 7 THE MYTHOLOGY OF THE DOUDOU Sexualizing Black Female Bodies, Constructing Culture in the French Caribbean 131
- 8 LOCATING THE FEMINIST SPIRIT IN THE NINETEENTH AND EARLY TWENTIETH CENTURIES IN INDIA Tarabai Shinde and Lalithambika Antherjanam 144
- 9 PROBLEMS OF TRANSLATION AND TRANSNATIONAL FEMINISMS On Gu Ruopu and Li Ruzhen 169
- 10 A ROOM OF ONE’S OWN IN TRANSRACIAL PERSPECTIVE 183
- 11 SIMONE DE BEAUVOIR The Feminist Philosopher as Other 193
-
PART 4 DISCOVERING GENDER AND REMAPPING FEMINISM 1955–1975
- 12 THE “PERSONAL POLITICS” OF CLASS 213
- 13 FEMINISTS REIMAGINE THE BODY 231
- 14 THE U.S. WOMEN’S LIBERATION MOVEMENT AND BLACK FEMINIST “SISTERHOOD” 260
- 15 TRIPLE JEOPARDY The Third World Women’s Alliance and the Transnational Roots of Women-of-Color Feminisms 280
- 16 STRAINED SISTERHOOD Lesbianism, Feminism, and the U.S. Women’s Liberation Movement 292
- 17 THE LATIN AMERICAN LESBIAN MOVEMENT Its Shaping and Its Search for Autonomy 312
- 18 WHO IS YOUR MOTHER? Red Roots of White Feminism 321
- 19 SUFFERING LIKE AN AFRICAN GIRL Trauma Embodied in Tsitsi Dangarembga’s Nervous Conditions 335
- 20 THE MEANING OF SPATIAL BOUNDARIES 350
-
PART 5 BEYOND “THE DECADE OF THE WOMAN” 1975 to the Present
- 21 MOTHERS, GUERRILLAS, AND REVOLUTIONARIES Women’s Mobilization and Activism in Latin America 379
- 22 FEMINIST ORGANIZING AROUND VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN IN MALI, PERU, AND INDIA 402
- 23 FREEDOM FROM SEXISM VERSUS SEXUAL FREEDOM A Short History of the Feminist Sex Wars 430
- 24 TWO GENERATIONS OF FEMINIST ACTIVISM Snapshots from the Middle East and North Africa since 1970 451
- 25 MEN AND WOMEN’S STUDIES Promise, Pitfalls, and Possibility 471
- 26 IDENTITY, ACTIVISM, AND THIRD WAVE FEMINISM IN THE UNITED STATES 501
- 27 CAPTURED IN TRANSLATION Africa and Feminisms in the Age of Globalization 522
- 28 GENDERING THE ARAB SPRING 530
- CONTRIBUTORS 537
- CREDITS 543
- AUTHOR AND TITLE INDEX 549
- SUBJECT INDEX 552