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OverviewIntroducing and engaging with womanist frameworks to center the lives of Global South women who live under colonial oppressions, this collection centers the consciousness, spirituality, philosophy, wisdom, community institutions, and ecologies found in a variety of Global South regions and diasporas. Diasporic Womanist Sociology offers a decolonial approach to critical research, interpretive frameworks, pedagogy, mentorship, activism, and building academia-community collectives of solidarity, presenting womanism as a practical framework for personal and professional development for sociologists and scholars in other fields. With contributors from South Asia, Latin America, Africa, the Caribbean, Europe, Asia, and North America, this book draws on tenets of womanism to shape their practice and engagement with students, scholars, and activists, especially those of the Global South and its diasporas. This volume makes critical contributions to fields ranging from Gender and Women Studies, Race and Ethnic Studies, and Decolonial and Postcolonial Theory, and can be assigned to undergraduate and graduate students to explore the foundational work of Black Feminism and gender non-conforming people of color and an inclusive framework of identity, spirituality, and pursuit of social justice. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Sancha Doxilly Medwinter , Tannuja Rozario Latchminarain , Monisha Issano JacksonPublisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge ISBN: 9781032464701ISBN 10: 1032464704 Pages: 274 Publication Date: 05 May 2026 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Undergraduate , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Forthcoming Availability: Not yet available This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release. Table of ContentsReviews“Diasporic Womanist Sociology is a much-needed, field-shifting intervention that recenters Global South and diasporic knowledges, elevating spiritual and community epistemologies, and naming a decolonial praxis for research, teaching, and collective action. Its womanist methodology, rooted in history, dialogue, reflexivity, healing, and justice, bridges the academy and community and models research justice in motion. Impressive in its breadth and depth, the book invites us into a deeply ethical sociology that is built on accountability, reciprocity and justice.” Julia Chinyere Oparah, Professor of Sociology and Leadership Studies, University of San Francisco “Medwinter, Latchminarain, and Jackson make a stunning contribution to the constitution of Diasporic Womanist Sociology as a field and community of scholars. Grounded in vivid personal histories and provocative discussions of theory, methodology and pedagogical praxis, the volume offers rich case studies from the global South and its diaspora to illustrate the power of womanist decolonial struggles. Its stories help us reimagine the nature of intersectional resistance and the futures that it could bring into being.” Millie Thayer, Professor of Sociology, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, and author of Transnational Feminist Itineraries: Situating Theory and Activist Practice (2021) “In this innovative volume, the editors and authors seek to decolonize not just their research, but their teaching, mentoring, and, really, their lives. In this work, the authors and editors take us on a journey of lived experience and on a path towards creating an entirely new way of being a sociologist and doing sociology. This collective diasporic womanist project is a must read for those interested in bridging the gap between academia and community.” Tiffany Taylor, Professor of Sociology, Kent State University Author InformationSancha Doxilly Medwinter, PhD, is a Diasporic Womanist Sociologist and Community-based Researcher. Her most recent book is Ecologies of Inequity: How Disaster Response Reconstitutes Race and Class Inequality. She is also a Co-author of Caribbean Womanism: Decolonial Theorizing of Caribbean Women’s Oppression, Survival, and Resistance. Tannuja Rozario Latchminarain, PhD, is a Diasporic Womanist Activist and Scholar. Her work has focused on the gender-based violence and reproductive health experiences of Indo-Caribbean women. She has published in Ethnic and Racial Studies, Social Science and Medicine, and International Sociology. Dr Latchminarain is also an Adjunct Assistant Professor at John Jay College of Criminal Justice, where she teaches courses on gender and law. Monisha Issano Jackson is a PhD Student in Sociology at Georgia State University. She has published work on queer urban spaces and intersecting oppressions as well as colorist and multiracial microaggressions. She is currently conducting research on Black queer women’s experiences in the United Kingdom and United States. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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