Announcements Questions on syllabus/course?

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Roundtable on Participatory Action Research with Racialised Girls in Victoria Dr. Jo-Anne Lee, University of Victoria Sandrina de Finney, University of.
Advertisements

Approaches to Ancient History Week 9: Identity. Exploitation and discrimination Class is controversial: objective state (even if no class consciousness),
Money, Sex and Power Gendered power and the development of colonialism Week
Presentation of BIG Themes - History Randy William Widdis University of Regina.
Power of Naming Feminist Perspectives on Women and Computers WS 445/545 – Spring 2005 Pat Samuel.
+ A Politics of Location Positionality and Ethical Analytical Frameworks.
Sociology 1201 The feminist movement and the family How did the social construction of gender and the relative power and privileges of men and women become.
Chapter 2, continued Colonialism: Capitalism on a World Scale –The exploitation of foreign resources by European industrializing nations –Simultaneous.
The feminization of Labor in an era of global capitalism
Immigration, Ethnicity, and Race: The Transformation of Transnationalism, Localism, and Identities -
Feminist Theories Course Code: 4647 Ms Mehreen Qaisar
Sociology of Gender GenderThrough the Prism of Difference Chapter One: Part two Theorizing Difference from Multiracial Feminism.
Dr Riffat Haque The word patriarchy literally means the rule of the father or the ‘patriarch’, and originally it was used to describe a specific.
Lecture 12 Global Inequality: (Dis)connecting Consumption from Production.
Gender Through the Prism of Difference Chapter One
Prof. Aurora Javate de Dios Women and Gender Institute-Miriam College.
Bargaining with Patriarchy. Feminism considers patriarchy and class under capitalism determine monolithic conception of male dominance Hence, women strategize.
White Supremacy. What Is it? White supremacy is the belief that white people are superior to people of other racial backgrounds. The term is used specifically.
THE POLITICS OF IDENTITY. To racialize MX immigrants as illegal is dehumanizing. It obscures & simplifies social, political, & economic conditions of.
Overview Definition of Terms Postcolonial Feminist Theories Chandra Mohanty.
ANNOUNCEMENTS: Midterm prompts posted on wordpress Office hours by appointment on MW, 1 to SSB 243 Feel free to send s, but give 24 hour turnaround!
Cynthia Enloe Power infuses all international relationships. Paying serious attention to gender politics and women changes in a fundamental way how the.
Lecture Three The (Racial) History of the US. Who is American? When you hear the word “American” who do you think of?  Describe this person. Why do we.
Racial Formations & Asian American Identity What does it mean to be Asian American?
GLOBAL, REGIONAL, AND NATIONAL MIGRATION FLOWS WHERE DO PEOPLE MIGRATE?
IMMIGRATION, CITIZENSHIP, RACE & CULTURE IMMIGRANT ACTS.
Lecture 1: What is race?. race (n): 1. a local geographic or global human population distinguished as a more or less distinct group by genetically transmitted.
September 9 th Attendance & participation cards Lead class discussion sign up Homework Discussion: What is feminism? Lecture One: The Gendered Society.
Announcements Crashers, come see me after class Response paper prompt posted on course website 3-4pg paper due.
February 3 rd Sign in & participation cards Pass out Research Project #1 Homework Discussion: What is feminism? Lecture One: The Gendered Society Homework:
Week 9: Migrating Selves
+ Announcements TONIGHT!11/21, 6-10pm – Open Mic Fundraiser for Typhoon Filipino Food and Bakery. All proceeds go to National Alliance for Filipino.
The Cold War Intro Essential Question: – What was the Cold War? Objective: – To understand, in a basic sense, what the Cold War was, and its importance.
Colonialism. What is colonialism/imperialism? Waylen distinguishes ‘old’ and ‘new’ forms of colonialism Old colonialism – late 15 th and 16 th centuries.
Rhonda Vonshay Sharpe Bucknell University. The successful applicant will possess an outstanding record of scholarship focused on gender and public policy,
SPR Gender Perspectives in Social Work Practice Magda Frišaufová, Ph.D. Spring semester 2016.
Gender Inequality: Marxist and Feminist views
Feminism Perspective.
What is ideology? Ideology is a belief system. A plan how to improve society and how it should work. Ideologies are not supposed to be calm and even rational.
Room Mothers Sangeeta Appel
SW 840 Week 3.
Ethics and Values for Professionals Chapter 2: Ethical Relativism
Studying Women’s & Gender History
Origins of development: Colonialism and Decolonızation
Where do people migrate?
Political Parties Unit One.
History, Race, & Homelessness
Cultural Constructions of Gender and Sexuality
1. Why did the alignment of nations (east vs west) affect the relationship of European nations? It established a political division between Eastern and.
Outlining Booooooooooo.
Where do People Migrate?
Space, Place and Movement in the Making of Slave Societies: Brazil, Cuba, and the Atlantic World, Introduction.
Commonly Made Mistakes
The Dimensions of Social Organization
Unit 3: Political Beliefs & Behaviors
The Continuity and Change Over Time (CCOT) Essay
The world is changing Warm-up 1. Why study China?
African American and Ethnic Literary Criticism
Being an effective leader
AP Review: Unit 5.4 (Industrialization)
African American and Ethnic Literary Criticism
Migration.
African American and Ethnic Literary Criticism
Feminist Theory.
Lecture Code: PS_L.11 ENGL 559: Postcolonial Studies UNIT 2: Multi-Disciplinarity “Feminism and Womanism” by Nana Wilson-Tagoe Min Pun, PhD, Associate.
African American and Ethnic Literary Criticism
Cultural Competence Britt Andreatta, Ph.D..
Colonial and Capitalistic Perspectives of Gender
Warm Up – May 15 Answer the following questions on a post it:
Gender and Management-An Overview
Presentation transcript:

Announcements Questions on syllabus/course? Presentation groups posted on course website Midterm Paper due M 8/19 prompts will be posted on course website

Gender, Race, Globalization Introduction to key terms of the course – will be returning to these terms/ideas over and over again in these 5 weeks Gender, Race, Globalization The Feminization of Transnational Labor

Questions How do we define gender? How are gender and race related? What is globalization? Why is globalization a powerful factor in the migration of women?

gender How do we define “gender”? How is it different from sex? “gender ideology produces the epistemological framework within which sex takes on meaning rather than the other way around” (Halberstam 117) Gender is (118): “a marker of social difference” “a bodily performance of normativity and the challenges made to it” “a social relation that subjects often experience as organic, ingrained, ‘real,’ invisible, and immutable” “a primary mode of oppression that sorts human bodies into binary categories in order to assign labor, responsibilities, moral attributes, and emotional styles” gender

race What is the relationship between race and gender? Race and gender both “render the body into a text upon which histories of [(racial)] differentiation, exclusion and violence are inscribed” (Ferguson 192) Biological inheritance vs racial formations naturalization of subjugation vs analyses of freedom & power “’[Race] has established who can be imported and who exported, who are immigrants and who are indigenous, who may be property and who are citizens; and among the latter who get to vote and who do not, who are protected by the law and who are its objects, who are employable and who are not, who have access, and privilege and who are (to be) marginalized’” (192) race

Parallel processes of racialization and gendering should not blind us to the fact that anti-racist projects can uphold patriarchy and heteronormativity Race can never be divorced from gender; gender can never be divorced from race “’We need to articulate the real class situation of persons who are not merely raceless, sexless, workers, but for whom racial and sexual oppression are significant determinants in their working/economic lives’” (Ferguson 195) Gendered and racialized bodies are marked for certain forms of labor; certain forms of labor become defined by gendered and racialized assumptions intersectionality

globalization How does Prof. Lowe define globalization? The late 20th century conditions of “economic, social, and political interdependence across cultures, societies, nations, and regions precipitated by an unprecedented expansion of capitalism on a global scale” (Lowe 120) Why is globalization a powerful factor in the migration of women? the feminization of transnational labor Flows of globalization depend on rootedness of global city = explosion in low-skilled, invisible, service & informal industries Debt burden, structural adjustment programs, foreign investments, austerity measures (cuts to public programs) in developing nations forge survival circuits = women bear burden of holding up developing nations globalization

Cycle of Globalization Survival Circuit: Previously colonized countries Debt burdens Structural adjustment Foreign investment Austerity measures Global cities Directs movements of global capital Depends on low-skilled, invisible, informal & service labor What is an ethical framework of the study of the feminization of transnational labor? All women do not experience globalization in similar ways. All racialized minorities do not experience white supremacy in the same way. How do we recognize difference and still act together for common purposes of justice, liberation, and self-determination?

How NOT to do it… “oppression olympics” vs “oppression uniformity” “feminist-as-tourist” Add brown women and stir White women saving brown women from brown men “The effects of this strategy are that students and teachers are left with a clear sense of difference and the distance between the local (defined as self, nation, and Western) and the global (defined as other, non-western, transnational”  ie. the US is always the norm “feminist-as-explorer” The orientalist mode of seeing the world  “Distance from ‘home’ is fundamental to the definition of the international” Cultural relativism makes impossible studies of interconnections and analyses of power

(Re-)Considering Terms First world – capitalized, industrialized nations of the West (primarily US and Western Europe) Second world – socialist, communist, industrializing nations of the USSR-PRC bloc Third world – recently de-colonized nations forced to choose between 1st and 2nd world alliances/subordinations (Asia, Africa, Latin America, Oceania) Global North/South “a metaphorical rather than geographical distinction, where North refers to the pathways of transnational capital and South to the marginalized poor of the world regardless of geographical distinction”

Global North and South End of Cold War and entry of PRC into global capitalism calls into question 3-world system

1/3 versus 2/3 of the world 1/3 of the world = social minority “the haves” anywhere in the world Enjoy modern Western life and high standard of living Employed in formal sector Beneficiaries of globalization Citizens of the global city 2/3 of the world = social majority “the have nots” anywhere in the world No regular access to to the goods/services that define average standard of living Employed in informal and service sectors Necessary to but marginalized by globalization Invisible workers of the global city To recognize movement of those from global south into global north

politics of location “I am clearly located within the One- Third World… I straddle both categories. I am of the Two-Thirds World in the One-Third World. I am clearly a part of the social minority now, with all its privileges; however, my political choices, struggles, and vision for change place me alongside the Two-Thirds World. Thus, I am for the Two-Thirds World, but with the privileges of the One-Third World. I speak as person situated in the One- Third World, but from the space and vision of, and in solidarity with, communities in struggle in the Two- Thirds World.”

Questions to consider What does it mean according to Mohanty to engage in anticapitalist transnational feminist practice? What does it mean to possess “place consciousness” and why is it so important to Mohanty? Does Rosa Linda Fregoso and demonstrate “place consciousness”? Why or why not? What does it mean to recognize “common differences”? And how does it become the basis of feminist solidarity?