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Decolonizing and Feminizing Freedom: A Caribbean Genealogy

✍ Scribed by Denise Noble (auth.)


Publisher
Palgrave Macmillan UK
Year
2016
Tongue
English
Leaves
372
Series
Thinking Gender in Transnational Times
Edition
1
Category
Library

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✦ Synopsis


This book traces the powerful discourses and embodied practices through which Black Caribbean women have been imagined and produced as subjects of British liberal rule and modern freedom. It argues that in seeking to escape liberalism’s gendered and racialised governmentalities, Black women’s everyday self-making practices construct decolonising and feminising epistemologies of freedom. These, in turn, repeatedly interrogate the colonial logics of liberalism and Britishness. Genealogically structured, the book begins with the narratives of freedom and identity presented by Black British Caribbean women. It then analyses critical moments of crisis in British racial rule at home and abroad in which gender and Caribbean women figure as points of concern. Post-war Caribbean immigration to the UK, decolonisation of the British Caribbean and the post-emancipation reconstruction of the British Caribbean loom large in these considerations. In doing all of this, the author unravels the colonial legacies that continue to underwrite contemporary British multicultural anxieties. This thought-provoking work will appeal to students and scholars of social and cultural history, politics, feminism, race and postcoloniality.

✦ Table of Contents


Front Matter....Pages i-xii
Introduction: Decolonizing and Feminizing Freedom....Pages 1-15
Turning History Upside Down....Pages 17-51
The Old and New Ethnicities of Postcolonial Black (British)ness....Pages 53-100
‘Standing in the Bigness of Who I Am’: Black Caribbean Women and the Paradoxes of Freedom....Pages 101-157
Two Reports, One Empire: Race and Gender in British Post-War Social Welfare Discourse....Pages 159-185
Discrepant Women, Imperial Patriarchies and (De)Colonizing Masculinities....Pages 187-230
Beyond Racial Trauma: Remembering Bodies, Healing the Self....Pages 231-276
Taking Liberties with Neoliberalism: Compliance and Refusal....Pages 277-318
Conclusion: ‘Rebellious Histories: Decolonizing and Feminizing Freedom’....Pages 319-349
Back Matter....Pages 351-365

✦ Subjects


Feminist Anthropology;Gender Studies;Migration;Ethnicity Studies;Self and Identity;Social History


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