Results for 'Kimberlé Crenshaw'

61 found
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  1. Demarginalizing the Intersection of Race and Sex: A Black Feminist Critique of Antidiscrimination Doctrine, Feminist Theory and Antiracist Politics.Kimberle Crenshaw - 1989 - The University of Chicago Legal Forum 140:139-167.
  2. Mapping the Margins: Intersectionality, Identity Politics, and Violence against Women of Color.Kimberle Williams Crenshaw - 1991 - Stanford Law Review 43 (6):1241-99.
  3.  43
    Critical Race Theory: The Key Writings That Formed the Movement.Kimberlé Crenshaw, Neil Gotanda, Gary Peller & Kendall Thomas (eds.) - 1995 - New Press.
    Smoke and Mirrors is a passionate, richly nuanced work that shows television as a circus, a wishing well, and a cure for loneliness. Ranging from Ed Sullivan to cyberspace, from kid shows to cable, and from the cheap thrills of "action adventure" to the solemn boredom of PBS pledge week, Leonard argues for a whole new way of thinking about television. For Leonard, the situation comedy is a socializing agency, the talk show is a legitimating agency, the made-for-television movie is (...)
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  4. Intersectionality and identity politics: Learning from violence against women of color.Kimberle Crenshaw - 1997 - In Mary Lyndon Shanley & Uma Narayan (eds.), Reconstructing political theory: feminist perspectives. University Park, PA: Pennsylvania State University Press. pp. 178--193.
  5. An Examination of Racialized Assumptions in Antirape Discourse.Angela Davis, Patricia Hill Collins & Kimberle Williams Crenshaw - 2003 - Studies in Practical Philosophy: A Journal of Ethical and Political Philosophy 3.
  6. Kimberlé Williams Crenshaw (encyclopedia entry).Anna Carastathis - 2018 - In M. Sellers & S. Kirste (eds.), Encyclopedia of the Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy. New York, NY, USA: pp. 1-5.
    This encyclopedia entry focuses primarily on Kimberlé Williams Crenshaw’s theoretical contributions, but also discusses how through her activism, intersectionality – as a framework or an analytic sensibility for making visible the sociolegal invisibility of women of color (and multiply oppressed social groups more generally) – has become praxis, revealing how Black women and other women of color fall “through the cracks” of mutually exclusive anti-racist and feminist discourses or, rather, are pushed into the chasm produced by their respective (...)
     
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  7.  12
    Self-Critical Freedoms: White Women, Intersectionality and Excitable Speech(Judith Butler, 1997).Lara Cox - 2023 - Paragraph 46 (3):337-353.
    This article considers how those subordinated for their gender and sexual orientation, but privileged for their race and class, may be better allies to people, especially women, of colour. Judith Butler’s Excitable Speech (1997) is a helpful aid. Butler offers us a strategy to think through — albeit by way of supplementary voices such as legal theorist Kimberlé Crenshaw, French sociologist Pierre Bourdieu and philosopher George Yancy — how white women may find an ‘insurrectionary’ form of speech that (...)
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  8. A Kantian Theory of Intersectionality.Helga Varden - forthcoming - In Reiko Gotoh (ed.), Dignity, Freedom and Justice. Springer. Translated by H Kato.
    Kimberlé Crenshaw arrived at her famous phrase “intersectionality” by carefully thinking through speeches and writings given to us by early Black feminists, such as like Sojourner Truth and Anna J. Cooper. In this paper, I expand on this groundbreaking work in two somewhat surprising ways. First, I bring the ideas of these early Black feminists together with important, related proposals from W.E.B. Du Bois, Karl Marx, Hannah Arendt, and Simone de Beauvoir. Second, I relate these works to central (...)
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  9. “Speaking into the Void”? Intersectionality Critiques and Epistemic Backlash.Vivian M. May - 2014 - Hypatia 29 (1):94-112.
    Taking up Kimberlé Crenshaw's conclusion that black feminist theorists seem to continue to find themselves in many ways “speaking into the void” (Crenshaw 2011, 228), even as their works are widely celebrated, I examine intersectionality critiques as one site where power asymmetries and dominant imaginaries converge in the act of interpretation (or cooptation) of intersectionality. That is, despite its current “status,” intersectionality also faces epistemic intransigence in the ways in which it is read and applied. My aim (...)
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  10. " I would rather be a cyborg than a goddess": Becoming-Intersectional in Assemblage Theory.Jasbir K. Puar - 2012 - philoSOPHIA: A Journal of Continental Feminism 2 (1):49-66.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:“I would rather be a cyborg than a goddess”Becoming-Intersectional in Assemblage TheoryJasbir K. Puar“Grids happen” writes Brian Massumi, at a moment in Parables for the Virtual where one is tempted to be swept away by the endless affirmative becomings of movement, flux, and potential, as opposed to being pinned down by the retroactive positioning of identity (2002, 8). For the most part, Massumi has been less interested in how (...)
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  11. Intersectionality and the Changing Face of Ecofeminism.A. E. Kings - 2017 - Ethics and the Environment 22 (1):63-87.
    The term intersectionality, which is generally attributed to Kimberlé Crenshaw, began as a metaphorical and conceptual tool used to highlight the inability of a single-axis framework to capture the lived experiences of black women. Whilst many disciplines have used the ‘tools’ of intersectionality before 1989, modern day usage of the term is usually associated with Crenshaw’s specific approach. The development of Crenshaw’s intersectionality, originated from the failure of both feminist and anti-racist discourse; to represent and capture (...)
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  12.  18
    Intersectionality in digital feminist knowledge cultures: the practices and politics of a travelling theory.Akane Kanai - 2021 - Feminist Theory 22 (4):518-535.
    Intersectionality is a travelling theory; now enjoying significant contemporary visibility and popularity in the feminist blogosphere, it has moved across disciplines and borders in ways that are quite distinct from the scholarly critique developed by Kimberlé Crenshaw some time ago. In this article, I consider how intersectionality is translated, and retheorised, as an intertwined set of everyday knowledges and associated governmental practices that both echo and diverge from some of the complexities and politics of its wide-ranging scholarly uptake. (...)
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  13.  78
    Intersectionality and Epistemic Erasure: A Caution to Decolonial Feminism.K. Bailey Thomas - 2020 - Hypatia 35 (3):509-523.
    In this article I caution that María Lugones's critiques of Kimberlé Crenshaw's intersectional theory posit a dangerous form of epistemic erasure, which underlies Lugones's decolonial methodology. This essay serves as a critical engagement with Lugones's essay “Radical Multiculturalism and Women of Color Feminisms” in order to uncover the decolonial lens within Crenshaw's theory of intersectionality. In her assertion that intersectionality is a “white bourgeois feminism colluding with the oppression of Women of Color,” Lugones precludes any possibility of (...)
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  14. Black Women In Fanon's Black Skin, White Masks.Ming Wahl Emma - 2021 - Stance 14:40-52.
    In this paper, I focus on the representations of Black women in contrast to Black men found within Frantz Fanon’s philosophical work Black Skin, White Masks. I propose that while Fanon’s racial dialectical work is very significant, he often lacks acknowledgement of the multidimensionality of the Black woman’s lived experience specifically. Drawing on the theory of intersectionality, coined by Kimberlé Crenshaw, I argue that Fanon does not recognize the different layers of oppression operating in Black women’s lives to the (...)
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  15.  14
    # BlackGirlMagic as Resistant Imaginary.Qrescent Mali Mason - 2021 - Hypatia 36 (4):706-724.
    This article concerns itself with the ways that Black women have taken up #BlackGirlMagic as a critical reimagining of their subject positionalities as Black women. I argue that #BlackGirlMagic is a resistant imaginary that has significantly altered the contemporary western social imaginary and suggest that the intersectional ambiguity that Black women animate builds community among Black women toward collective liberation. Bringing together Kimberlé Crenshaw's concept of intersectionality, Simone de Beauvoir's concept of ambiguity, and María Lugones's concept of oppressed←→resisting (...)
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  16.  19
    Black Women in Fanon's Black Skin, White Masks.Emma Ming Wahl - 2021 - Stance 14 (1):41-51.
    In this paper, I focus on the representations of Black women in contrast to Black men found within Frantz Fanon’s philosophical work Black Skin, White Masks. I propose that while Fanon’s racial dialectical work is very significant, he often lacks acknowledgment of the multidimensionality of the Black woman’s lived experience specifically. Drawing on the theory of intersectionality, coined by Kimberlé Crenshaw, I argue that Fanon does not recognize the different layers of oppression operating in Black women’s lives to the (...)
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  17.  13
    Discourse, intersectionality, critique: theory, methods and practice.Eleonora Esposito - forthcoming - Critical Discourse Studies.
    For the past thirty years, Critical Discourse Studies has been consolidating as a form of linguistically-oriented, critical social research which is characterized by a deep interest in actual social issues and forms of inequality, such as racism, xenophobia, anti-Semitism and sexism, both in terms of the asymmetries between participants in discourse events and their unequal capacity to control how texts are produced, distributed and consumed. In parallel, since its coinage in Kimberlé Crenshaw's African American feminist critique of race (...)
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  18.  89
    Basements and Intersections.Anna Carastathis - 2013 - Hypatia 28 (4):698-715.
    In this paper, I revisit Kimberlé Crenshaw's argument in “Demarginalizing the Intersection of Race and Sex” (1989) to recover a companion metaphor that has been largely forgotten in the “mainstreaming” of intersectionality in (white-dominated) feminist theory. In addition to the now-famous intersection metaphor, Crenshaw offers the basement metaphor to show how—by privileging monistic, mutually exclusive, and analogically constituted categories of “race” and “sex” tethered, respectively, to masculinity and whiteness—antidiscrimination law functions to reproduce social hierarchy, rather than to (...)
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  19.  31
    Structural Violence, Intersectionality, and Justpeace: Evaluating Women's Peacebuilding Agency in Manipur, India.Karie Cross Riddle - 2017 - Hypatia 32 (3):574-592.
    The general scholarship on armed conflict in Manipur, India, ignores the experiences of women as agents. Feminist scholarship counters this tendency, revealing women's everyday responses to the violence that constrains them. However, this scholarship often fails to be intersectional, and it lauds every instance of women's agency without evaluating it in terms of its ability to build peace. Employing Kimberlé Crenshaw's underused distinction between structural and political intersectionality and Saba Mahmood's concept of agency, I analyze my field research (...)
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  20.  80
    The Politics of Paradox: A Response to Wendy Brown.Annabelle Lever - 2000 - Constellations 7 (2):242-254.
    What role should rights play in feminist politics and the quest for equality? This article examines Wendy Brown's response to that question in her 'suffering rights as paradoxes' and shows that for all its merits, it draws our attention away from the central question of how to describe women's interests, given the many differences amongst women.
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  21. Identity Categories as Potential Coalitions.Anna Carastathis - 2013 - Signs 38 (4):941-965.
    Kimberlé Williams Crenshaw ends her landmark essay “Mapping the Margins: Intersectionality, Identity Politics, and Violence against Women of Color” with a normative claim about coalitions. She suggests that we should reconceptualize identity groups as “in fact coalitions,” or at least as “potential coalitions waiting to be formed.” In this essay, I explore this largely overlooked claim by combining philosophical analysis with archival research I conducted at the Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual and Transgender Historical Society Archive in San Francisco about (...)
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  22. The Concept of Intersectionality in Feminist Theory.Anna Carastathis - 2014 - Philosophy Compass 9 (5):304-314.
    In feminist theory, intersectionality has become the predominant way of conceptualizing the relation between systems of oppression which construct our multiple identities and our social locations in hierarchies of power and privilege. The aim of this essay is to clarify the origins of intersectionality as a metaphor, and its theorization as a provisional concept in Kimberlé Williams Crenshaw’s work, followed by its uptake and mainstreaming as a paradigm by feminist theorists in a period marked by its widespread and (...)
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  23.  15
    The concept of intersectionality in bioethics: a systematic review.Lisa Brünig, Hannes Kahrass & Sabine Salloch - 2024 - BMC Medical Ethics 25 (1):1-20.
    Background Intersectionality is a concept that originated in Black feminist movements in the US-American context of the 1970s and 1980s, particularly in the work of feminist scholar and lawyer Kimberlé W. Crenshaw. Intersectional approaches aim to highlight the interconnectedness of gender and sexuality with other social categories, such as race, class, age, and ability to look at how individuals are discriminated against and privileged in institutions and societal power structures. Intersectionality is a “traveling concept”, which also made its (...)
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  24.  87
    Intersectionality: Origins, Contestations, Horizons.Anna Carastathis - 2016 - Lincoln and London: University of Nebraska Press.
    This book intervenes in the field of intersectionality studies: the integrative examination of the effects of racial, gendered, and class power on people’s lives. While “intersectionality” circulates as a buzzword, Anna Carastathis joins other critical voices to urge a more careful reading. Challenging the narratives of arrival that surround it, Carastathis argues that intersectionality is a horizon, illuminating ways of thinking that have yet to be realized; consequently, calls to “go beyond” intersectionality are premature. A provisional interpretation of intersectionality can (...)
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  25.  6
    Is intersectionality threatening French sociology (and sociologists) of social class?Isabelle Clair - 2022 - Astérion 27.
    Depuis la traduction, en 2005, de l’un des articles de Kimberlé W. Crenshaw introduisant le concept d’intersectionnalité, le mot et la perspective théorique que celui-ci labellise font l’objet d’une grande défiance de la part de nombreux·ses sociologues se revendiquant, en France, d’un positionnement critique. Le lexique de la menace est mobilisé pour disqualifier l’approche intersectionnelle – bien plus que pour la discuter – car celle-ci aurait pour visée, ou pour effet, de purement et simplement effacer la classe sociale (...)
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  26. Beyond the "Logic of Purity": "Post-Post-Intersectional" Glimpses in Decolonial Feminism.Anna Carastathis - 2019 - In Pedro J. DiPietro, Jennifer McWeeny & Shireen Roshanravan (eds.), Speaking Face to Face/Hablando Cara a Cara: The Visionary Philosophy of María Lugones. Albany: Suny Press.
    This chapter examines María Lugones’s germane and insightful attempt to theorize “intermeshed oppressions,” which, she argues, have been (mis)represented in women of color feminisms by the concepts of “interlocking systems of oppression” and, more recently, “intersectionality.” The latter, intersectionality, introduced by Black feminist legal scholar Kimberlé Williams Crenshaw as a metaphor (1989) and as a “provisional concept” (1991), has become the predominant way of referencing the mutual constitution of what have been theorized as multiple systems of oppression, constructing (...)
     
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  27.  33
    A Time to Tear down and a Time to Build up: A Rereading of Ecclesiastes.James L. Crenshaw & Michael V. Fox - 2001 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 121 (2):288.
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  28.  16
    A Living Tradition: The Book of Jeremiah in Current Research.James L. Crenshaw - 1983 - Interpretation 37 (2):117-129.
    Careful study of the Book of Jeremiah helps us remain faithful to the prophet's legacy by learning from him to weigh the traditions of the past and to use them in the struggle to forge a better world.
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  29.  15
    Altorientalische Welt in der alttestamentlichen Theologie.James L. Crenshaw & Hans Heinrich Schmid - 1979 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 99 (3):467.
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  30. Old Testament Wisdom: An Introduction.James L. Crenshaw - 1981
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  31.  6
    Jewish Wisdom in the Hellenistic Age.James L. Crenshaw & John J. Collins - 2000 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 120 (1):106.
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  32.  11
    Essays in Old Testament Ethics.Dennis Pardee, James L. Crenshaw & John T. Willis - 1978 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 98 (3):312.
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  33. Ecclesiastes: A Commentary.James L. Crenshaw - 1987
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  34.  11
    Leiden und Gerechtigkeit: Studien zu Theologie und Textgeschichte des Sirachsbuches.James L. Crenshaw & Lutz Schrader - 1998 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 118 (1):77.
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  35. Studies in Ancient Israelite Wisdom.James L. Crenshaw - 1976
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  36. A Whirlpool of Torment: Israelite Traditions of God as an Oppressive Presence.James L. Crenshaw - 1984
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  37. Education in Ancient Israel: Across the Deadening Silence.James L. Crenshaw - 1998
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  38. Old Testament Wisdom: An Introduction, Third Edition.James L. Crenshaw - 2010
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  39. Prophetic Conflict: Its Effect Upon Israelite Religion.James L. Crenshaw - 1971
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  40.  19
    Roots of Wisdom: The Oldest Proverbs of Israel and Other Peoples.James L. Crenshaw, Claus Westermann & J. Daryl Charles - 1997 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 117 (3):603.
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  41. Samson: A Secret Betrayed, A Vow Ignored.James L. Crenshaw - 1978
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  42. Sipping from the cup of wisdom.James L. Crenshaw - 2008 - In Paul K. Moser (ed.), Jesus and Philosophy: New Essays. Cambridge University Press.
     
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  43.  4
    Twice-Told Proverbs and the Composition of the Book of Proverbs.James L. Crenshaw & Daniel C. Snell - 1996 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 116 (3):543.
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  44. The Psalms: an Introduction.James L. Crenshaw & Roland E. Murphy - 2001
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  45.  15
    Ten Years toward Equity: Preliminary Results from a Follow-Up Case Study of Academic Computing Culture.Tanya L. Crenshaw, Erin W. Chambers, Cinda Heeren & Heather E. Metcalf - 2017 - Frontiers in Psychology 8.
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  46.  3
    An Ecological Approach to Evaluating Collaborative Practice in NSF Sponsored Partnership Projects: The SPARC Model.Erin M. Burr, Kimberle A. Kelly, Theresa P. Murphrey & Taniya J. Koswatta - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    From co-authored publications to sponsored projects involving multiple partner institutions, collaborative practice is an expected part of work in the academy. As evaluators of a National Science Foundation Alliances for Graduate Education and the Professoriate grant awarded to four university partners in a large southern state, the authors recognized the increasing value of collaborative practice in the design, implementation, evaluation, and dissemination of findings in the partnership over time. When planning a program among partnering institutions, stakeholders may underestimate the need (...)
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  47.  25
    Art and Truth: Reading Proust.Mary Crenshaw Rawlinson - 1982 - Philosophy and Literature 6 (1-2):1-16.
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  48. Verse: Fable of a Lost Wood.Louise Crenshaw Ray - 1950 - Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 31 (1):19.
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  49. Book Review: Seeing the Psalms: A Theology of Metaphor. [REVIEW]James L. Crenshaw - 2003 - Interpretation: A Journal of Bible and Theology 57 (3):303-304.
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  50.  91
    Book Review: Ecclesiastes: The JPS Bible Commentary. [REVIEW]James L. Crenshaw - 2005 - Interpretation: A Journal of Bible and Theology 59 (2):192-194.
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