Talking Gender assesses the state of women's studies in the
1990s. The contributors write from the perspective of their own
academic disciplines and experiences, but they also address more
general issues of women's lives and circumstances. The result is a
broad picture of women's studies and feminist scholarship, which
emerge as a rich, if sometimes dissonant, chorus of voices. These
original essays cover a range of topics and a variety of times and
places: images of women inherited from Roman oratory, visual images
from cultures of trauma; verbal imagery in today's pornography
debates; political and social identities in the state of Israel;
boundaries between private and public lives of African American
women leaders; voices and audiences of African American women
writers; stereotypes of HIV-positive women; what women's studies
can teach men about themselves; and the place of women in global
industry. The introduction and conclusion place the collection
within the context of historical debates in women's studies and
suggest some new directions for the field. The contributors:
Cynthia Enloe (Clark University) Sara M. Evans (University of
Minnesota) Kathy E. Ferguson (University of Hawai'i at Manoa) Karla
F. C. Holloway (Duke University) Michael S. Kimmel (SUNY-Stony
Brook) Mandy Merck (London) Barbara Ogur (Cambridge Neighborhood
Health Centers) Amy Richlin (University of Southern California)
Kristine Stiles (Duke University) Deborah Gray White (Rutgers
University).
Originally published in 1996.
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