社论导言:跨国女权运动、团结与分析

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Knowing the inspiration for the image makes it all the more heartbreaking. In it, meticulously painted blue butterflies gather at the bottom while shards of blue swirl up around them, creating an effect suggestive of an explosion or a storm. Naming this piece and the other works in the \"Say My Name\" series after the children is significant, given that their lives and stories were virtually erased. Thus, the paintings document the names of these children, and offer viewers a way to bear witness to the violence that claimed their young lives. [End Page vii] The first article to appear in this issue is the winner of the Feminist Formations/National Women's Studies Association (NWSA) award of 2022, \"Socio-Legal Empowerment for Working Women in Bangladesh\" by Fauzia Erfan Ahmed, Jyotsana Parajuli, and Anna Lucia Feldman. In this article, Ahmed, Parajuli, and Feldman argue that earning income is not necessarily equivalent to economic empowerment for women in Bangladesh. 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And congratulations to Fauzia Erfan Ahmed, Jyotsana Parajuli, and Anna Lucia Feldman! Kai Hang Cheang, in...","PeriodicalId":190295,"journal":{"name":"Feminist Formations","volume":"31 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-06-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Editorial Introduction: Transnational Feminist Movement(s), Solidarities, and Analyses\",\"authors\":\"\",\"doi\":\"10.1353/ff.2023.a907918\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Editorial Introduction:Transnational Feminist Movement(s), Solidarities, and Analyses Patti Duncan Sitting outside on a hot summer day in Portland, Oregon, I'm reminded of other summers in other places … long humid summers spent in Atlanta during graduate school, cooler summers growing up near the mountains of Colorado, summers spent traveling in various countries, sometimes with groups of students or to be with friends and family. Moving through time and space in these memories, I think about my mother's journey from South Korea, finding herself in the strange, foreign world of the 1970s United States, longing always for some version of home that no longer existed once she had left. I have a vivid memory of a summer during my childhood when she traveled to Korea and returned feeling melancholy about how everything there had changed so drastically. While I mostly remember missing my mom that summer, I realize now that her visit provoked a complex set of feelings for her about her place in the world. Her experiences—and my own—reflect the realities of moving between and among nation-states, making meaning of living transnationally. Themes and questions related to transnational movement/s surface throughout this issue of Feminist Formations, beginning with our cover, featuring the evocative work of Ambreen Butt. This image, \\\"Shoaib (8)\\\" (2018), created with watercolor with torn and collaged text on tea stained paper, is part of her series, \\\"Say My Name.\\\" Ambreen Butt, a Pakistani American artist, engages feminist and political ideas through traditional Persian art, and is known for her drawings, paintings, prints, and collages. \\\"Shoaib (8)\\\" offers the name and age of a young victim of a US drone strike. All the pieces in the series are titled after children who were killed by US drones in Afghanistan and Pakistan. Knowing the inspiration for the image makes it all the more heartbreaking. In it, meticulously painted blue butterflies gather at the bottom while shards of blue swirl up around them, creating an effect suggestive of an explosion or a storm. Naming this piece and the other works in the \\\"Say My Name\\\" series after the children is significant, given that their lives and stories were virtually erased. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

在俄勒冈州波特兰市一个炎热的夏日,坐在户外,我想起了其他地方的夏天……在亚特兰大读研究生时度过的漫长潮湿的夏天,在科罗拉多州山区附近长大的凉爽的夏天,在不同国家旅行的夏天,有时和一群学生在一起,有时和朋友和家人在一起。在这些记忆中穿越时空,我想起了母亲从韩国出发的旅程,她发现自己身处20世纪70年代美国的陌生、陌生的世界,总是渴望着某种形式的家,而这种家一旦离开就不复存在了。我还清楚地记得小时候的一个夏天,她去韩国旅行,回来后对那里的一切发生了如此巨大的变化感到悲伤。虽然我最想念的是那个夏天的妈妈,但我现在意识到,她的来访激起了我对她在这个世界上的位置的一种复杂的感情。她的经历——以及我自己的经历——反映了在民族国家之间流动的现实,让跨国生活变得有意义。与跨国运动相关的主题和问题贯穿这期《女权主义形成》,首先是我们的封面,展示了Ambreen Butt令人回味的作品。这张图片,“Shoaib(8)”(2018)是她的“说出我的名字”(Say My Name)系列的一部分,她在茶渍纸上用水彩创作了撕裂和拼贴的文字。Ambreen Butt是一位巴基斯坦裔美国艺术家,她通过传统的波斯艺术参与女权主义和政治思想,并以素描、油画、版画和拼贴画而闻名。“Shoaib(8岁)”提供了一名美国无人机袭击的年轻受害者的名字和年龄。该系列的所有作品都以在阿富汗和巴基斯坦被美国无人机杀害的儿童命名。知道这张照片的灵感来源让它更令人心碎。在这幅画中,精心绘制的蓝色蝴蝶聚集在底部,蓝色碎片在它们周围旋转,创造出一种爆炸或风暴的效果。考虑到他们的生活和故事几乎被抹去,以这些孩子的名字命名这件作品和“说出我的名字”系列中的其他作品意义重大。因此,这些画作记录了这些孩子的名字,并为观众提供了一种见证夺走他们年轻生命的暴力的方式。本期刊登的第一篇文章是2022年女权主义组织/全国妇女研究协会(NWSA)奖得主,作者是Fauzia Erfan Ahmed、Jyotsana Parajuli和Anna Lucia Feldman。在这篇文章中,Ahmed、Parajuli和Feldman认为,在孟加拉国,获得收入并不一定等同于赋予妇女经济权力。在这样做时,他们发现了进步发展叙述中的一个悖论,即经济进步不一定导致政治和社会进步,事实上,发展的经济模式经常掩盖赋予妇女权力的各个方面。通过他们的父权威慑概念,作者认为基于性别的暴力威胁阻止了孟加拉国许多妇女参加劳动力,暴力可能发生在家庭、街头和工作场所。正如她们所写的那样,女性参与劳动力“如果那些为增加家庭物质福利、国家外汇储备和全球经济利润而工作的女性自己每天都受到暴力的侮辱,那么她们的参与就没有什么意义。”因此,艾哈迈德、帕拉uli和费尔德曼提出了一种社会法律赋权理论,提出了一种整合社会责任和地方司法系统的模式,如非政府组织改革的沙利什(Shalish),这是一种非正式的司法系统,专注于调解,理想情况下包括女性陪审员和对伊斯兰教的女权主义解释。正如我们的评奖委员会成员所说:“在我们考虑恢复和变革正义时,非政府组织运营的沙利什具有令人难以置信的跨学科创新潜力。”我们向2022年女权主义组织/NWSA奖委员会的成员们表示最深切的感谢:Karma Chávez、Elora halm Chowdhury和Nana Osei-Kofi。祝贺Fauzia Erfan Ahmed, Jyotsana Parajuli和Anna Lucia Feldman!张启航,在…
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Editorial Introduction: Transnational Feminist Movement(s), Solidarities, and Analyses
Editorial Introduction:Transnational Feminist Movement(s), Solidarities, and Analyses Patti Duncan Sitting outside on a hot summer day in Portland, Oregon, I'm reminded of other summers in other places … long humid summers spent in Atlanta during graduate school, cooler summers growing up near the mountains of Colorado, summers spent traveling in various countries, sometimes with groups of students or to be with friends and family. Moving through time and space in these memories, I think about my mother's journey from South Korea, finding herself in the strange, foreign world of the 1970s United States, longing always for some version of home that no longer existed once she had left. I have a vivid memory of a summer during my childhood when she traveled to Korea and returned feeling melancholy about how everything there had changed so drastically. While I mostly remember missing my mom that summer, I realize now that her visit provoked a complex set of feelings for her about her place in the world. Her experiences—and my own—reflect the realities of moving between and among nation-states, making meaning of living transnationally. Themes and questions related to transnational movement/s surface throughout this issue of Feminist Formations, beginning with our cover, featuring the evocative work of Ambreen Butt. This image, "Shoaib (8)" (2018), created with watercolor with torn and collaged text on tea stained paper, is part of her series, "Say My Name." Ambreen Butt, a Pakistani American artist, engages feminist and political ideas through traditional Persian art, and is known for her drawings, paintings, prints, and collages. "Shoaib (8)" offers the name and age of a young victim of a US drone strike. All the pieces in the series are titled after children who were killed by US drones in Afghanistan and Pakistan. Knowing the inspiration for the image makes it all the more heartbreaking. In it, meticulously painted blue butterflies gather at the bottom while shards of blue swirl up around them, creating an effect suggestive of an explosion or a storm. Naming this piece and the other works in the "Say My Name" series after the children is significant, given that their lives and stories were virtually erased. Thus, the paintings document the names of these children, and offer viewers a way to bear witness to the violence that claimed their young lives. [End Page vii] The first article to appear in this issue is the winner of the Feminist Formations/National Women's Studies Association (NWSA) award of 2022, "Socio-Legal Empowerment for Working Women in Bangladesh" by Fauzia Erfan Ahmed, Jyotsana Parajuli, and Anna Lucia Feldman. In this article, Ahmed, Parajuli, and Feldman argue that earning income is not necessarily equivalent to economic empowerment for women in Bangladesh. In doing so, they identify a paradox in progressive development narratives stating that economic advancement does not necessarily lead to political and social advancement, and in fact the economic model of development frequently obscures various dimensions of women's empowerment. Through their concept of patriarchal deterrence, the authors suggest that the threat of gender-based violence deters many women in Bangladesh from participating in the labor force, with violence potentially occurring in the home, on the streets, and at the workplace. As they write, women's labor force participation "has little meaning if the women who work to increase the material welfare of the family, the foreign exchange reserves of the nation, and the profits of the global economy are themselves subject to the indignity of daily violence." Hence, Ahmed, Parajuli, and Feldman offer a theory of socio-legal empowerment, proposing a model that integrates social accountability and local justice systems such as the NGO-reformed Shalish, an informal justice system focused on mediation that ideally includes women jurors and feminist interpretations of Islam. As the members of our awards committee stated: "The NGO-run Shalish has incredibly innovative interdisciplinary potential as we think about restorative and transformative justice." We express our deepest appreciation to the members of the 2022 Feminist Formations/NWSA awards committee: Karma Chávez, Elora Halim Chowdhury, and Nana Osei-Kofi. And congratulations to Fauzia Erfan Ahmed, Jyotsana Parajuli, and Anna Lucia Feldman! Kai Hang Cheang, in...
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