50 Key Concepts in Gender Studies

Front Cover
SAGE, Apr 10, 2004 - Social Science - 193 pages
`Lively and impressive. I can easily imagine this text being used by both gender and women's studies undergraduates and postgraduates. In particular it will enable students to get a sense of how older and more contemporary theoretical movements and debates relate to one another' - Lisa Adkins, Department of Sociology, University of Manchester

Part of a new `Key Concepts' series published by SAGE, Key Concepts in Gender Studies offers 1,500 word expositions of 50 topics central to the field.

Jane Pilcher and Imelda Whelehan's introduction gives an account of gender studies - what it is and how it originated. Their selection of topics is authoritative and the 50 entries reflect the complex, multi-faceted nature of the field in an accessible dictionary format.

Each of the 50 key concepts:

· begins with a concise definition

· includes illustrations of how the concept has been applied within the field

· offers examples which allow a critical re-evaluation of the concept

· is cross-referenced with the other key concepts

· makes further reading suggestions.

The level of detail offered encourages understanding of gender studies without sacrificing depth detail and critical evaluation essential to convey the complexity of the issues dealt with. As such, the book appeals both to undergraduate and postgraduate students across a range of social science disciplines.

50 Key Concepts in Gender Studies gives testimony to the health of gender studies and related disciplines and looks forward to an ever-shifting dynamic of debates and ideas.

 

Contents

Acknowledgements
1984
Backlash
1988
Citizenship
1994
Consciousness Raising
1997
Dichotomy
1997
Domestic Division of Labour
1997
Essentialism
1997
Feminisms
2003
93
1975
Postcolonial Theory
1979
Power
1961
Psychoanalytical Feminism
1961
RaceEthnicity
1961
Reproductive Technologies
1961
Separatism
1961
Socialisation
2008

Gendered
2003
Heterosexism
1963
Lesbian Continuum
1966
85
1971
vi
2008
Womens Studies
2008
Copyright

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