Gender and Citizenship in Historical and Transnational Perspective
Agency, Space, Borders
Author(s):Anne Epstein, Rachel Fuchs
Red Globe Press
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Paperback - 9781137497741
10 December 2016
€32.69
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Hardcover - 9781137497758
06 December 2016
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Ebook - 9781137497765
16 September 2017
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With gender as its central focus, this book offers a transnational, multi-faceted understanding of citizenship as legislated, imagined, and exercised since the late eighteenth century. Framed around three crosscutting themes...
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With gender as its central focus, this book offers a transnational, multi-faceted understanding of citizenship as legislated, imagined, and exercised since the late eighteenth century. Framed around three crosscutting themes - agency, space and borders - leading scholars demonstrate what historians can bring to the study of citizenship and its evolving relationship with the theory and practice of democracy, and how we can make the concept of citizenship operational for studying past societies and cultures.
The essays examine the past interactions of women and men with public authorities, their participation in civic life within various kinds of polities and the meanings they attached to their actions. In analyzing the way gender operated both to promote and to inhibit civic consciousness, action, and practice, this book advances our knowledge about the history of citizenship and the evolution of the modern state.
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Introduces students to the history of citizenship and its relation to gender from the early modern period to the present day
Presents the most important research on the subject in the last ten years in an accessible and coherent way
Presents the subject in transnational perspective
Particular relevance to contemporary problems of crossing borders, women's exercise of agency, and spaces for the gendered exercise of agency
Introduction; Anne R. Epstein and Rachel G. Fuchs
PART I: AGENCY
1. Citizenship, the French Revolution, and the Limits of Martial Masculinity; Jennifer Ngaire Heuer
2. Family Despotism and the Rights of the Person [lichnost']: the Politics of the Personal in Late Imperial Russia; Barbara A. Engel
3. Gender and the Politics of Morality in Japan: A Comparison of the Suffrage Movement in the Interwar Era with Feminist Electoral Politics of the 1970s; Barbara Molony
PART II: SPACE
4. Patriarchy and Women's Resistance in Morocco on the Eve of Colonialism; Chouki El Hamel
5. Charisma in the Modern Age: The Case of Argentina and Latin America, 1946-2015; Donna Guy
6. Liminal and Legible: Gendered Citizenship and State-Formative Practices in the 1950s; Anupama Roy
PART III: BORDERS
7. The Economics of Citizenship: Gender Regimes and Property Rights in Romania in the Twentieth Century; Maria Bucur
8. Cold War Gendered Imaginaries of Citizenship and Transnational Women's Activism: The Case of the Movie Die Windrose (1957); Chiara Bonfiglioli
9. Women Citizens of the French Union Unite! Jane Vialle's Postwar Crusade; Lorelle Semley
10. The Right to Family: Chinese Marriage Immigrants, Chinese Children, and Graduated Citizenship in Taiwan; Sara L. Friedman
Conclusion: Conceptualizing Citizenship; Anne R. Epstein and Rachel G. Fuchs.