Pursuing Intersectionality, Unsettling Dominant Imaginaries

Author:   Vivian M. May (Syracuse University, USA)
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
ISBN:  

9780415808408


Pages:   286
Publication Date:   21 January 2015
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Pursuing Intersectionality, Unsettling Dominant Imaginaries


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Full Product Details

Author:   Vivian M. May (Syracuse University, USA)
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint:   Routledge
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.00cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.430kg
ISBN:  

9780415808408


ISBN 10:   0415808405
Pages:   286
Publication Date:   21 January 2015
Audience:   College/higher education ,  General/trade ,  Tertiary & Higher Education ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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 Contents

"Introduction: The Case for Intersectionality and the Question of Intersectionality Backlash 1. What is Intersectionality? Matrix Thinking in a Single-Axis World 2. Intersectionality’s Call to Break from Single-Axis Thinking: Still Unheard, Still Unanswered? 3. Why Are Intersectionality Critiques All the Rage? 4. Intersectionality--Now You See It, Now You Don’t: Slippages in Intersectionality Applications 5. Being ""Biased"" Toward Intersectionality: A Call for Epistemic Defiance 6. Fostering an Intersectional Disposition: Strategies for Pursuing and Practicing Intersectionality"

Reviews

Comprehensive and compelling, this book is poised to become the go to source on intersectionality. May is particularly effective at probing the ways that intersectionality has been resisted, misunderstood, and/or undermined in the name of intersectionality itself. Pursuing Intersectionality provides a rare, sustained examination of intersectionality that virtually no other scholarly work does. -Shannon Sullivan, Philosophy, University of North Carolina, Charlotte Vivian May's book is the first that analyzes intersectionality from a broad historical vantage point, taking readers back to 19th century Black feminist discourse. Complex, nuanced, thorough, and meticulous in her engagement with the debates that now swirl around this influential theoretical analytic tool, May engages its critics and advocates with passion and clarity. A must read for scholars and practitioners committed to social justice movements and anti-oppression ideologies. - Beverly Guy-Sheftall, Founding Director of the Women's Research & Resource Center, Women's Studies, Spelman College, and author of Gender Talk (with Johnetta B. Cole). At once fundamental and groundbreaking, instructive and provocative, Pursuing Intersectionality is a vital reader on a vital subject. May provides a clarifying analysis regarding the provenance, contestations, current use and disuse, and future of intersectional theory and practice in the academy and beyond. -Paula J. Giddings, E. A. Woodson 1922 Professor of Afro-American Studies, Smith College Some 25 years after being coined by Kimberle Crenshaw, the term intersectionality, if not always the idea, has traveled well beyond its origins. In this very readable book, Vivian May traces what has been lost along the way, including complexity, nuance, and perhaps most importantly, intersectionality's foundational commitment to anti-subordination and justice. She then points the way forward with a set of concrete recommendations that will be welcomed by feminists working in fields from policy, to politics, to research. -Elizabeth R. Cole, Professor, Women's Studies, Psychology, and Afroamerican & African Studies, University of Michigan


Comprehensive and compelling, this book is poised to become the go to source on intersectionality. May is particularly effective at probing the ways that intersectionality has been resisted, misunderstood, and/or undermined in the name of intersectionality itself. Pursuing Intersectionality provides a rare, sustained examination of intersectionality that virtually no other scholarly work does. -Shannon Sullivan, Philosophy, University of North Carolina, Charlotte Vivian May's book is the first that analyzes intersectionality from a broad historical vantage point, taking readers back to 19th century Black feminist discourse. Complex, nuanced, thorough, and meticulous in her engagement with the debates that now swirl around this influential theoretical analytic tool, May engages its critics and advocates with passion and clarity. A must read for scholars and practitioners committed to social justice movements and anti-oppression ideologies. - Beverly Guy-Sheftall, Founding Director of the Women's Research & Resource Center, Women's Studies, Spelman College, and author of Gender Talk (with Johnetta B. Cole). At once fundamental and groundbreaking, instructive and provocative, Pursuing Intersectionality is a vital reader on a vital subject. May provides a clarifying analysis regarding the provenance, contestations, current use and disuse, and future of intersectional theory and practice in the academy and beyond. -Paula J. Giddings, E. A. Woodson 1922 Professor of Afro-American Studies, Smith College Some 25 years after being coined by Kimberle Crenshaw, the term intersectionality, if not always the idea, has traveled well beyond its origins. In this very readable book, Vivian May traces what has been lost along the way, including complexity, nuance, and perhaps most importantly, intersectionality's foundational commitment to anti-subordination and justice. She then points the way forward with a set of concrete recommendations that will be welcomed by feminists working in fields from policy, to politics, to research. -Elizabeth R. Cole, Professor, Women's Studies, Psychology, and Afroamerican & African Studies, University of Michigan Vivian May provides a careful and thorough examination of [the] flattening and co-opting [of ntersectionality], threatening to extinguish its radical aim for justice. At the same time, the book provides casual or unfamiliar readers of intersectionality texts with a faithful consideration of its multiple facets in an accessible form and progression. [...] the book challenges feminist to consider how we have and may still drift toward a single-axis gender first approach [...], even when identifying our theoretical approach as intersectional. -Juliana Carlson, University of Kansas Journal of Women and Social Work The sections are broken down into manageable chunks that allow the reader to take the time to comprehend before moving on to the next element of the matrix. The book provides an in-depth exploration and is complex. [...] The important elements of intersectionality are made clear through the inclusion of research examples throughout the book. [...] Rather than ignoring the issues that seem to arise with the application of intersectionality, this book seeks to address issues brought up through critique, debunking the presented myths, and explaining in detail justification for its use. [...] From my own perspective as a researcher using an intersectional framework, this book made me rethink my own methods and approach. -Charlotte Dann, University of Northampton Feminism & Psychology Pursuing Intersectionality, Unsettling Dominant Imaginaries offers a thorough and comprehensive analysis of the complexities of intersectionality and explores how its potential may be enhanced and maximized. [...] Through her analysis, May convincingly demonstrates that intersectionality has been resisted, misunderstood, and misapplied by both supporters and critics of the framework. [...] Pursuing Intersectionality is a timely, useful, and important book. [...] By synthesizing the major concepts, practices, and politics of intersectionality and proposing ways to deeply engage in theoretical and political work to combat suffering and oppression in a single volume, May offers hope, tools, and inspiration for radical social change. [...] the book should be highly relevant to a multidisciplinary audience with different degrees of familiarity and engagement with the concept. -Gust Yep, University of Southern California Hypatia: A Journal of Feminist Philosophy


Comprehensive and compelling, this book is poised to become the go to source on intersectionality.ã May is particularly effective at probing the ways that intersectionality has been resisted, misunderstood, and/or undermined in the name of intersectionality itself.ã Pursuing Intersectionality provides a rare, sustained examination of intersectionality that virtually no other scholarly work does. -Shannon Sullivan, Philosophy, University of North Carolina, Charlotte Vivian May's book is the first that analyzes intersectionality from a broad historical vantage point, taking readers back to 19th century Black feminist discourse. Complex, nuanced, thorough, and meticulous in her engagement with the debates that now swirl around this influential theoretical analytic tool, May engages its critics and advocates with passion and clarity. A must read for scholars and practitioners committed to social justice movements and anti-oppression ideologies. - Beverly Guy-Sheftall, Founding Director of the Women's Research & Resource Center, Women's Studies, Spelman College, and author of Gender Talk (with Johnetta B. Cole). At once fundamental and groundbreaking, instructive and provocative, Pursuing Intersectionality is a vital reader on a vital subject. May provides a clarifying analysis regarding the provenance, contestations, current use and disuse, and future of intersectional theory and practice in the academy and beyond. -Paula J. Giddings, E. A. Woodson 1922 Professor of Afro-American Studies, Smith College Some 25 years after being coined by Kimberle Crenshaw, the term intersectionality, if not always the idea, has traveled well beyond its origins. In this very readable book, Vivian May traces what has been lost along the way, including complexity, nuance, and perhaps most importantly, intersectionality's foundational commitment to anti-subordination and justice. She then points the way forward with a set of concrete recommendations that will be welcomed by feminists working in fields from policy, to politics, to research.ã ã -Elizabeth R. Cole, Professor, Women's Studies, Psychology, and Afroamerican & African Studies, University of Michigan Vivian May provides a careful and thorough examination of [the] flattening and co-opting [of ntersectionality], threatening to extinguish its radical aim for justice. At the same time, the book provides casual or unfamiliar readers of intersectionality texts with a faithful consideration of its multiple facets in an accessible form and progression. [...] the book challenges feminist to consider how we have and may still drift toward a single-axis gender first approach [...], even when identifying our theoretical approach as intersectional. -Juliana Carlson, University of Kansas Journal of Women and Social Work The sections are broken down into manageable chunks that allow the reader to take the time to comprehend before moving on to the next element of the matrix. The book provides an in-depth exploration and is complex. [...] The important elements of intersectionality are made clear through the inclusion of research examples throughout the book. [...] Rather than ignoring the issues that seem to arise with the application of intersectionality, this book seeks to address issues brought up through critique, debunking the presented myths, and explaining in detail justification for its use. [...] From my own perspective as a researcher using an intersectional framework, this book made me rethink my own methods and approach. -Charlotte Dann, University of Northampton Feminism & Psychology Pursuing Intersectionality, Unsettling Dominant Imaginaries offers a thorough and comprehensive analysis of the complexities of intersectionality and explores how its potential may be enhanced and maximized. [...] Through her analysis, May convincingly demonstrates that intersectionality has been resisted, misunderstood, and misapplied by both supporters and critics of the framework. [...] Pursuing Intersectionality is a timely, useful, and important book. [...] By synthesizing the major concepts, practices, and politics of intersectionality and proposing ways to deeply engage in theoretical and political work to combat suffering and oppression in a single volume, May offers hope, tools, and inspiration for radical social change. [...] the book should be highly relevant to a multidisciplinary audience with different degrees of familiarity and engagement with the concept. -Gust Yep, University of Southern California Hypatia: A Journal of Feminist Philosophy


Author Information

Vivian M. May is Associate Professor and Chair of Women’s & Gender Studies at Syracuse University. She is author of Anna Julia Cooper, Visionary Black Feminist (Routledge, 2007), and of numerous articles and chapters focused on Black feminist intellectual history, feminist theory and literature, and theorizing Women’s Studies as a field. Recently, May was elected President of the National Women's Studies Association for a two-year term (2015 & 2016).

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