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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Patricia ElliotPublisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Edition: New edition Weight: 0.540kg ISBN: 9781409403937ISBN 10: 1409403939 Pages: 208 Publication Date: 23 December 2010 Audience: College/higher education , General/trade , Tertiary & Higher Education , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviews'Patricia Elliot's book is a highly welcome addition to scholarly literature that engages critically with the theory and the lived realities of both transsexual and transgendered lives without privileging one above the other. With great integrity, she openly acknowledges her own outsider position to crucially extend the debate to the ethical responsibility to respond openly to those mutual differences that demand a significant rethinking of bodies, sex and gender.' Margrit Shildrick, Queen's University Belfast, UK 'This impressive book provides a lucid and engaging critical mapping of what Elliot identifies as key rifts in feminist, queer and trans studies conceptualizations of transsexing and transgendering. At the same time, it offers a compelling account of how and why it is that corporealities, subjectivities, and identities might best be conceived as heterogeneous sites of (un)becoming. As such, the book is, to my mind, an example of feminist practice at its most generous and engaged.' Nikki Sullivan, Macquarie University, Australia 'Thoroughly engaged and engaging, Patricia Elliot brings impassioned, critical, and nuanced sophistication to contested debates in trans Studies. Combining sometimes contentious overviews of key texts and thinkers with original and complex psychoanalytical readings of trans-embodiment, Elliot argues in terms both accessible and sensitive, that it is the scholarly heterogeneity of this field which marks its vitality.' Bobby Noble, York University, Canada 'In elaborating what she calls the 'key rifts' in and between queer and feminist studies, Patricia Elliot addresses a range of important theoretical and sociopolitical questions at the heart of current debates concerning gender, sexuality and embodiment: who gets to be a woman? What are the political and conceptual difficulties of thinking about embodied experiences other than our own? How does 'different' embodiment challenge conceptions of the normative, the intelligible and the human?... This is both a careful and a complex book which fleshes out an insightful theoretical discussion based on respect and ethical responsibility towards trans people. Elliot provides a thoughtful and articulate account which 'appreciates the complexities of other identities' (p. 147), and in which the 'conflicting views of trans people may be given the serious consideration they deserve' (p. 4), with the aim of undermining patronising, moralising, or stigmatising attitudes towards trans people... it is precisely this theoretical richness that helps the author highlight, in a very striking way, how trans and non-trans experiences and identities are interwoven with each other and why critical productive debates need to take these complexities into account.' Feminist Theory 'Patricia Elliot's book is a highly welcome addition to scholarly literature that engages critically with the theory and the lived realities of both transsexual and transgendered lives without privileging one above the other. With great integrity, she openly acknowledges her own ""outsider"" position to crucially extend the debate to the ethical responsibility to respond openly to those mutual differences that demand a significant rethinking of bodies, sex and gender.' Margrit Shildrick, Queen's University Belfast, UK 'This impressive book provides a lucid and engaging critical mapping of what Elliot identifies as key rifts in feminist, queer and trans studies conceptualizations of transsexing and transgendering. At the same time, it offers a compelling account of how and why it is that corporealities, subjectivities, and identities might best be conceived as heterogeneous sites of (un)becoming. As such, the book is, to my mind, an example of feminist practice at its most generous and engaged.' Nikki Sullivan, Macquarie University, Australia 'Thoroughly engaged and engaging, Patricia Elliot brings impassioned, critical, and nuanced sophistication to contested debates in trans Studies. Combining sometimes contentious overviews of key texts and thinkers with original and complex psychoanalytical readings of trans-embodiment, Elliot argues in terms both accessible and sensitive, that it is the scholarly heterogeneity of this field which marks its vitality.' Bobby Noble, York University, Canada ’In elaborating what she calls the ’key rifts’ in and between queer and feminist studies, Patricia Elliot addresses a range of important theoretical and sociopolitical questions at the heart of current debates concerning gender, sexuality and embodiment: who gets to be a woman? What are the political and conceptual difficulties of thinking about embodied experiences other than our own? How does ’different’ embodiment challenge conceptions of the normative, the intelli Author InformationPatricia Elliot chairs the Department of Sociology at Wilfrid Laurier University, Canada. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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