Palgrave MacMillan
Indo-Caribbean Feminist Thought: Genealogies, Theories, Enactments
Indo-Caribbean Feminist Thought: Genealogies, Theories, Enactments
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CONTENTS
Acknowledgements
1. Gabrielle Jamela Hosein and Lisa Outar, "Introduction: Interrogating an Indo-Caribbean Feminist Epistemology"
Part 1: Tracing the Emergence of Indo-Caribbean Feminist Perspectives
2. Patricia Mohammed, "A Vindication for Indo-Caribbean Feminism"
3. Preeia D. Surajbali, "Indo-Caribbean Feminist Epistemology: A Personal and Scholarly Journey"
4. Andil Gosine, "My Mother's Baby: Wrecking Work after Indentureship"
Part 2: Transgressive Storytelling
5. Alison Klein, "'Seeing Greater Distances': An Interview with Peggy Mohan on the Voyages of Indo-Caribbean Women"
6. Anita Baksh, "Indentureship, Land, and Indo-Caribbean Feminist Thought in the Literature of Rajkumari Singh and Mahadai Das"
7. Lisa Outar, "Post-Indentureship Cosmopolitan Feminism: Indo-Caribbean and Indo-Mauritian Women's Writing and the Public Sphere"
8. Tuli Chatterji, "'Mini Death and a Rebirth': Talking the Crossing in Shani Mootoo's Moving Forward Sideways Like a Crab"
Part 3: Art, Archives and Cultural Practices
9. Kavita Ashana Singh, "Comparative Caribbean Feminisms: Jahaji Bhain in Carnival"
10. Krystal Nandini Ghisyawan, "Unsettling the Politics of Identity and Sexuality Among Same-Sex Loving Indo-Trinidadian Women"
11. Angelique V. Nixon, "Seeing Difference: Visual Feminist Praxis, Identity and Desire in Indo-Caribbean Women's Art and Knowledge"
12. Lisa Outar, "Art, Violence and Non-Return: An Interview with Guadeloupean Artist Kelly Sinnapah Mary"
Part 4: Dougla Feminisms
Gabrielle Jamela Hosein, "Dougla Poetics and Politics in Indian Feminist Thought: Reflection and Reconceptualization"
14. Sue Ann Barratt, "Nicki Minaj, Indian In/Visibility and the Paradox of Dougla Feminism"15. Kaneesha Cherelle Parsard, "Cutlass: Objects Toward a Dougla Feminist Theory of Representation"
Part 5: New Masculinities and Femininities
16. Rhoda Reddock, "Indo-Caribbean Masculinities and Indo-Caribbean Feminisms: Where are We Now?"
17. Michael Niblett, "Belaboring Masculinity: Ecology, Work, and the Body in Michel Ponnamah's Dérive de Josaphat"
18. Stephanie L. Jackson, "From Stigma to Shakti: The Politics of Indo-Guyanese Women's Trance and the Transformative Potentials of Ecstatic Goddess Worship in New York City"
Epilogue
Shalini Puri
Postscript
Shivanee M. Ramlochan
Notes on Contributors
Index
Author: Gabrielle Jamela Hosein
Publisher: Palgrave MacMillan
Published: 11/30/2016
Pages: 349
Binding Type: Hardcover
Weight: 1.70lbs
Size: 8.30h x 6.00w x 0.90d
ISBN: 9781137570796
About the Author
Gabrielle Jamela Hosein is Head of the Institute for Gender and Development Studies at The University of the West Indies, St. Augustine, Trinidad and Tobago. She is Associate Editor of The Caribbean Review of Gender Studies. She works in the areas of politics and governance and Caribbean feminism. Her column, Diary of a Mothering Worker, is published weekly in the Trinidad Guardian.
Lisa Outar is an Independent Scholar who researches Anglophone and Francophone Caribbean literature. She publishes in the areas of Indo-Caribbean literature, feminist writing, and the connections between the Caribbean and other sites of the indentureship diaspora. She serves as an editor of the Journal of West Indian Literature.
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