The tense but enduring engagement between anthropology and gender and sexuality studies has had profound effects upon anthropological theory and practice. Bringing together contributions from an international team of authors, this Handbook shows that anthropological work has taken inspiration from feminist and LGBTQI movements to create a transformative body of research. It provides an accessible, state-of-the-art overview of the anthropology of gender and sexuality whilst also documenting its historical emergence, highlighting the varied impact gender and sexuality studies have had on anthropological theory. It is split into five parts, with each chapter introducing a contemporary anthropological theory through in-depth ethnographical discussion. It features intersectional, black, and indigenous authors, providing a forum for established and emerging voices to gesture towards futures of anthropology of gender and sexuality. Authoritative and cutting-edge, it is essential reading for researchers and students in anthropology, and will set the agenda for future research in the field.
Les mer
1. Introduction to the Cambridge handbook of the anthropology of gender and sexuality Silvia Posocco, Cecilia McCallum and Martin Fotta; Part I. Openings and Orientations: 2. Remixing feminist epistemology and methodology Sameena Mulla and Daná-Ain Davis; 3. Critical ethnography as a collective feminist project Henrike Donner; 4. Kinship and relatedness as vital lens Resto Cruz; 5. Reframing the social, rethinking the body, confronting biologism Victor Sacha Cova and Heather Anne Swanson; Part II. Knowledges and Domains: 6. Gender, sociality and the person Cecilia McCallum; 7. The postmodern moment in gender studies and anthropology Sarah Green and Tuija Pulkkinen; 8. Gender(ed) language and the linguistics of sexuality Stephanie Rudwick; 9. Conceptualising bodies, hierarchy and gendering across cultures Subhadra Mitra Channa; 10. Language, gender & sexuality and performativity William L. Leap; 11. Anthropological engagements with men and masculinities Paul Scheibelhofer and Daniel Monterescu; Part III. Resistances and Intersections: 12. Social and cultural politics of resistance and empowerment Mengia Tschalaer; 13. Re-working black feminist anthropology through transnational scholar-activism and anti-racist solidarity in Africa and its diaspora Riché J. Daniel Barnes; 14. Gender in decolonial indigenous perspectives Olga Ulturgasheva; 15. Anthropologies of reproduction, abortion, and biopolitics Michele Rivkin-Fish; 16. Gender, capitalism, and the Erotics of finance Caroline E. Schuster; 17. Untying poverty's gendered knots past and present Vigdis Broch-Due; Part IV. Desires and Relations: 18. Subjectivities, knowledge and gendered and sexual transitions Paul Boyce and Akshay Khanna; 19. Feminist and queer theories of the non/human & paradoxical possibilities of the slash Logan Natalie O'Laughlin; 20. Blood, gender and politics in indigenous View Luisa Elvira Belaunde and Cecilia McCallum; 21. 'At home' in Botox, feminism and ethics Jeanette Edwards; Part V. Recursivities and Futures: 22. Ontological sex-genders E. J. Gonzalez-Polledo; 23. Futures Emilia Sanabria.
Les mer
With contributions from a diverse team of authors, this is a state-of-the-art overview of the anthropology of gender and sexuality.

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781108427449
Publisert
2023-10-19
Utgiver
Vendor
Cambridge University Press
Vekt
1290 gr
Høyde
251 mm
Bredde
175 mm
Dybde
39 mm
Aldersnivå
G, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
655

Om bidragsyterne

Cecilia McCallum is a social anthropologist specialising in gender, health, reproduction, sexuality, kinship, personhood and sociality in Brazil. She is known for her work on indigenous Amazonia and on Bahia for publications in leading journals on a wide range of topics. Silvia Posocco is a social anthropologist with interdisciplinary research interests in gender and sexuality studies and violence, conflict and genocide studies. Posocco's research has focused on insurgent movements in Guatemala, the archives of transnational adoption across sites and temporalities, and most recently, forensic archives, bioinformation and data worlds. Martin Fotta is a social anthropologist with interest in in peripatetic economic strategies, welfare state transformations, violence and masculinity. His current project explores racialisation of Romanies across the Portuguese-language Atlantic.