"青椒、西红柿和柠檬,团结起来!":战争时期的女权团结

IF 2.6 1区 社会学 Q1 ANTHROPOLOGY American Anthropologist Pub Date : 2024-04-27 DOI:10.1111/aman.13978
Serra Hakyemez, Ozlem Yasak
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本文聚焦于跨越种族界限和学术界与活动家分歧的女性身体,探讨在全球反恐战争的超男性和极端民族主义规范秩序中,女权主义团结的潜力和制约因素。人类学研究通过揭示全球反恐战争的种族化和阶级化结构,解构了全球反恐战争的虚幻叙事。然而,对种族化女性身体如何受制于这场战争的生物权力和死亡权力的研究仍然不足。这篇人种学研究集中探讨了本文的共同作者厄兹莱姆-亚萨克(Özlem Yasak)和塞拉-哈克耶梅兹(Serra Hakyemez)之间的女权主义团结,这一团结持续了 13 年,在殖民地和大都市、全球南方和全球北方之间游走。文章探讨了一位土耳其学者和一位库尔德活动家(均为中下层妇女)如何在从移民局到家庭住所再到新自由主义大学的过程中建立、培养和修复他们的同志关系。本文以我们称之为 "他者书法 "的新女权主义方法为基础,论证了随着人道主义和新自由主义权力体制招募活动家和学者,全球反恐战争的影响范围不断扩大,以自主主体性的幻想来反对她们可能的政治团结。
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“Green peppers, tomatoes, and lemons, disunite!”: Feminist solidarity in times of wars

This article focuses on female bodies co-laboring across the racial lines and academic-activist divides to explore both the potentials and constraints of feminist solidarity in the hyper-masculine and ultra-nationalist normative order of the global war on terror. Anthropological studies have deconstructed phantasmatic narratives of the global war on terror by disclosing its racialized and classed structure. However, what remains understudied is how racialized female bodies are subjected to the biopower and necropower of this war. This ethnography concentrates on the feminist solidarity between Özlem Yasak and Serra Hakyemez, the coauthors of this article, which stretches over 13 years and moves between the colony and the metropole and the Global South and Global North. It examines how a Turkish academic and a Kurdish activist (both lower middle-class women) forge, cultivate, and repair their comradeship as they move from an immigration office to their family house to neoliberal universities. Based on what we call the Other-graphy as a new feminist method, this article argues that the global war on terror expands its reach as the humanitarian and neoliberal regimes of power recruit activists and academics to the fantasy of autonomous subjectivity posited against their possible political solidarity.

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来源期刊
American Anthropologist
American Anthropologist ANTHROPOLOGY-
CiteScore
4.30
自引率
11.40%
发文量
114
期刊介绍: American Anthropologist is the flagship journal of the American Anthropological Association, reaching well over 12,000 readers with each issue. The journal advances the Association mission through publishing articles that add to, integrate, synthesize, and interpret anthropological knowledge; commentaries and essays on issues of importance to the discipline; and reviews of books, films, sound recordings and exhibits.
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Issue Information Toward an anthropology that cares: Lessons from the Academic Carework project Parenting and the production of ethnographic knowledge Why I quit and why I stay Paul Edward Farmer (1959–2022)
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