Table of Contents
~ Articles
~ Reviews
~ Fiction
~ Outlook
~ Links to Contributors' Websites & Email
Reviews |
Abstract |
|
"Far from establishing a separate and separatist gay and lesbian canon (as the title might indicate) Griffin thus aims at imploding the notion of a "high-brow" canon itself by juxtaposing homosexual and heterosexual writers, ancient and very contemporary ones, texts from "high" and popular culture (xi). [...] What makes the Who's Who interesting for all already working in the field of GLQ studies, or looking for an introduction to it, is precisely that it offers informative, well researched articles on gay and lesbian writing of the twentieth century, and especially on contemporary writers. |
View this book's entry in the gender Inn database | |
With an exclusive focus on women writers, Ikas sets out to counter prevailing homogenized versions of ethnic identity, organized around a paradigmatic male Chicano subject. As these writers reflect upon their lives and works, stereotypical images of the self-sacrificing, devout, submissive and inarticulate Mexican (American) woman fade. What emerges instead is a rich panorama of articulate and indeed very literate women 'daring to speak out and tackle the multiple forms of discrimination within Mexican American culture and society in general' (XIV)." |
View this book's entry in the gender Inn database | |
"The main purpose of Christina Hughes' Key Concepts in Feminist Theory and Research is to introduce a "conceptual literacy" for social science students. Hughes' differentiated explorations of equality, difference, choice, care, time and experience, which are key concepts in feminist theory, and her balanced overview of sociological and connected studies are based on topical postmodernist and poststructuralist approaches. [...] As a whole, Key Concepts is a very useful handbook, which is at once accessible for beginners and complex enough to account for the multidimensionality of poststructuralism. It is certainly always topical and is thus an invaluable guide through the jungle of gender theory in the social sciences." |
View this book's entry in the gender Inn database |
This issue features an excerpt from Diane Samuels' novel-in-progress
Cinderella's Daughter.
Diane has recently written Mrs Gorsky about an American mother, housewife
and communist spy for Birmingham Rep Theatre. She was awarded a Science on
Stage and Screen Award by the Wellcome Trust in 2001 to undertake an
experimental collaboration with three medical specialists, playwright Sarah
Woods, visual artist Alexa Wright and performer Catherine Long to make an
innovative piece of documentary, visual theatre about the nature of pain.
The resulting work, PUSH, was showcased at The People Show Studios in London
in June 2003. She is currently writing a new play for the Unicorn Theatre
about Narcissus and completing her novel Cinderella's Daughter.
The upcoming issue Anybody's Concerns II
will present the following articles:
ajaykumar: "The 'feminine principle' in Butoh: a methodology that spans history,
cultures, or disciplines? Or: Developing a feminine body-space on a Sunday?"
Konstanze Kutzbach: "AnyBody's Simulacra: A Theoretical Approach to (Gender) Identity"
Beate Neumeier: "Sarah Kane's Theater of the Abject"
Lee Sung-Ae: "Body, Otherness and Abjection in George Eliot's Novels"
In addition, there will be reviews of recent books within Gender Studies, among them Nancy Ordover's
American Eugenics and Richardson and Seidman's Handbook of Gay and Lesbian Studies.
The fiction section of Anybody's Concerns II will feature
an interview with the British-Jewish writer Julia Pascal and some work-in-progress
by her.
Links to Contributors' Websites & Email
Contributor |
Website |
|
Anna Furse | drs01af@gold.ac.uk | www.athletesoftheheart.org |
Andrea Gutenberg | Andrea.Gutenberg@t-online.de | |
Samantha Hume | samantha.hume@uni-koeln.de | |
Tina Wald | C.Wald@uni-koeln.de | |
Andrea Birk | andrea-birk@web.de | |
Isabel Karremann | karremann@hotmail.com | |
Claudia Leitner | Claudia.Leitner@univie.ac.at | |
Miriam Wallraven | miriam.wallraven@student.uni-tuebingen.de |