Public Feminism in Times of Crisis: From Sappho's Fragments to Viral Hashtags

Public Feminism in Times of Crisis: From Sappho's Fragments to Viral Hashtags

Public Feminism in Times of Crisis: From Sappho's Fragments to Viral Hashtags

Public Feminism in Times of Crisis: From Sappho's Fragments to Viral Hashtags

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Overview

Public Feminism in Times of Crisis examines the public practice of feminism in the age of social media. While their concept of public feminism emerges from a moment of acute crisis (the Trump years and the Covid-19 pandemic), Leila Easa and Jennifer Stager locate its foundations in history, journeying through broad swatches of time looking for connections between the centuries through art and literature and culture. Each chapter focuses on what public feminists do in the world: Public feminists gain control over an archive that otherwise contains or excludes them; they recover their own stories and subjective experiences, sometimes for activist use; they examine images and language that construct women in patriarchal texts; they situate the individual within a collective and the collective within an individual; they confront the limitations of such situating due to the containment of patriarchy and reclaim new systems of power in response; and they resurface a deep history for the alternative strategies of memorializing they employ. In navigating these practices, the authors also attend to the material conditions of writing histories as well as those shaping and enabling public feminist acts and protests more broadly.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781793648105
Publisher: Lexington Books
Publication date: 08/01/2022
Pages: 296
Sales rank: 879,101
Product dimensions: 6.31(w) x 8.94(h) x 0.88(d)

About the Author

Leila Easa is professor in the English department at City College of San Francisco.

Jennifer Stager is assistant professor of history of art at Johns Hopkins University and author of Seeing Color in Classical Art: Theories, Practice, and Reception from Antiquity to the Present.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments

Introduction

Chapter One: Managing the Public Body: The Archive, Trauma, and Silence

Chapter Two: Mapping Enclosure and Disclosure

Chapter Three: On the Gendered Politics of Translation

Chapter Four: The Collective Lyric I

Chapter Five: The Parabolic Curve

Chapter Six: Scaling Loss, Listing Names

Conclusion

Bibliography

About the Authors

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