Author(s)
Primary author
Publisher
Routledge
Place of Publication
London
Date of Publication
2005
Number of Pages
277
Series
Routledge research in gender and society
Subjects
Classification
I Issues and movements | A Women, Family, Sexual Identity | 5 Feminism
Description
Mikula: Introduction
Lawson: Patriarchy and resistance in Singapore
Edwards: Bourgeois women and communist revolutionaries? De-revolutionizing the Chinese women's suffrage movement
Morita: Activities of the Japanese Patrioric Ladies' Association (Aikoku Fujinkai)
Elder: "I spit on your stone": national identity, Women Against Rape and the cult of ANZAC in Australia
Mikula: Embrace or resist: women and collective identification in Croatia and former Yugoslavia since WWII
Kay: Grassroots women's activism in Russia, 1992-96: surviving social change together?
Cooke: "To struggle for freedom is our responsability": Tibetan nuns in the Chinese state
Roces: The militant nun as political activist and feminist in martial law Philippines
Ghosh: "Harem women seem the happiest to me": novel women, fictions of domesticity and national development in India
Oleksy: "Women. don't interfere with us; we are fighting for Poland": Polish mothers and transgressive others
Lu: Germany: Myth and apologia in Christa Wolf's novel Medea. Voices
Allatson: A shadowy sequence: Chicana textual/sexual reinventions of Sor Juana
Lawson: Patriarchy and resistance in Singapore
Edwards: Bourgeois women and communist revolutionaries? De-revolutionizing the Chinese women's suffrage movement
Morita: Activities of the Japanese Patrioric Ladies' Association (Aikoku Fujinkai)
Elder: "I spit on your stone": national identity, Women Against Rape and the cult of ANZAC in Australia
Mikula: Embrace or resist: women and collective identification in Croatia and former Yugoslavia since WWII
Kay: Grassroots women's activism in Russia, 1992-96: surviving social change together?
Cooke: "To struggle for freedom is our responsability": Tibetan nuns in the Chinese state
Roces: The militant nun as political activist and feminist in martial law Philippines
Ghosh: "Harem women seem the happiest to me": novel women, fictions of domesticity and national development in India
Oleksy: "Women. don't interfere with us; we are fighting for Poland": Polish mothers and transgressive others
Lu: Germany: Myth and apologia in Christa Wolf's novel Medea. Voices
Allatson: A shadowy sequence: Chicana textual/sexual reinventions of Sor Juana
Copy Number
1
Identifier
I A 5 MIK
Languages