feminist publishing

"Queer Freedom : Black Sovereignty" Book Cover

Queer Freedom : Black Sovereignty

"Theoretically wide-ranging and deeply personal and poetic, Queer Freedom : Black Sovereignty is based on more than three years of fieldwork in the Dominican Republic. Ana-Maurine Lara draws on her engagement in traditional ceremonies, observations of national Catholic celebrations, and interviews with activists from peasant, feminist, and LGBT communities to reframe contemporary conversations about queerness and blackness. The result is a rich ethnography of the ways criollo spiritual practices challenge gender and racial binaries and manifest what Lara characterizes as a shared desire for decolonization."
Author
Ana-Maurine Lara
Publication
2020
Streetwalking: LGBTQ Lives and Protest in the Dominican Republic Book Cover

Streetwalking: LGBTQ Lives and Protest in the Dominican Republic

"This book is an exploration of the ways that lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans and queer persons exercise power in a Catholic Hispanic heteropatriarchal nation-state, namely the Dominican Republic. Lara presents the specific strategies employed by LGBTQ community leaders in the Dominican Republic in their struggle for subjectivity, recognition, and rights. Drawing on ethnographic encounters, film and video, and interviews, LGBTQ community leaders teach readers about streetwalking, confrontación, flipping the script, cuentos, and the use of strategic universalisms in the exercise of power and agency."
Author
Ana-Maurine Lara
Publication
2020
"Beauty Diplomacy: Embodying an Emerging Nation" Book Cover

Beauty Diplomacy: Embodying an Emerging Nation

This project was funded in part by a CSWS grant.
"Even as beauty pageants have been critiqued as misogynistic and dated cultural vestiges of the past in the US and elsewhere, the pageant industry is growing in popularity across the Global South, and Nigeria is one of the countries at the forefront of this trend. In a country with over 1,000 reported pageants, these events are more than superficial forms of entertainment. Beauty Diplomacy takes us inside the world of Nigerian beauty contests to see how they are transformed into contested vehicles for promoting complex ideas about gender and power, ethnicity and belonging, and a rapidly changing articulation of Nigerian nationhood."
Author
Oluwakemi M. Balogun
Publication
2020
Earth Matters on Stage: Ecology and Environment in American Theater

Earth Matters on Stage: Ecology and Environment in American Theater

This project was funded in part by a CSWS grant.
"The book tells the story of how American theater has shaped popular understandings of the environment throughout the 20th century as it argues for theater’s potential power in the age of climate change. Using cultural and environmental history, seven chapters illuminate key moments in American theater and American environmentalism over the course of the 20th century in the US. It focuses in particular on how drama has represented environmental injustice, and how inequality has become part of the American environmental landscape."
Author
Theresa May
Publication
2020
Gaming Sexism: Gender and Identity in the Era of Casual Video Games Book Cover

Gaming Sexism: Gender and Identity in the Era of Casual Video Games

"When the Nintendo Wii was released in 2006, it ushered forward a new era of casual gaming in which video games appealed to not just the stereotypical hardcore male gamer, but also to a much broader, more diverse audience. However, the GamerGate controversy six years later, and other similar public incidents since, laid bare the internalized misogyny and gender stereotypes in the gaming community. Today, even as women make up nearly half of all gamers, sexist assumptions about the what and how of women’s gaming are more actively enforced."
Author
Amanda Cote
Publication
2020
Mahjong: A Chinese Game  and the Making of Modern American Culture Book Cover

Mahjong: A Chinese Game and the Making of Modern American Culture

"How has a game brought together Americans and defined separate ethnic communities? This book tells the first history of mahjong and its meaning in American culture. Click-click-click. The sound of mahjong tiles connects American expatriates in Shanghai, Jazz Age white Americans, urban Chinese Americans in the 1930s, incarcerated Japanese Americans in wartime, Jewish American suburban mothers, and Air Force officers’ wives in the postwar era. Mahjong: A Chinese Game and the Making of Modern American Culture illustrates how the spaces between tiles and the moments between games have fostered distinct social cultures in the United States."
Author
Annelise Heinz
Publication
2021
The White Devil Book Cover

The White Devil

"This fully re-edited, modernised play text is accompanied by insightful commentary notes, while its lively introduction explains why Webster’s interests in complex female lead characters and questions of social tension related to sexuality, gender, race, and law and equity—unusual for the play’s time—have led to its increasing relevance for modern audiences and readers. Exploring the challenges of staging this highly melodramatic play, Lara Bovilsky guides you through the most interesting points of its rich performance history, and explores the onslaught of recent productions with race-conscious and regendered casts."
Author
John Webster
Laura Bovilsky
Publication
2021
Japan on American TV: Screaming Samurai Form Anime Clubs in the Land of the Lost Book Cover

Japan on American TV: Screaming Samurai Form Anime Clubs in the Land of the Lost

This project was funded in part by a CSWS grant.
"Japan on American TV explores political, economic, and cultural issues underlying depictions of Japan on U.S. television comedies and the programs they inspired. Since the 1950s, U.S. television programs have taken the role of “curators” of Japan, displaying and explaining selected aspects for viewers. Beliefs in U.S. hegemony over Japan underpin this curation process. Japan on American TV takes a historical perspective to understand the diversity of Japan parodies and examines six main categories of television portrayals representing different genres and comedic forms..."
Author
Alisa Freedman
Publication
2021
Indigenous Women and Violence Book cover

Indigenous Women and Violence

"Indigenous Women and Violence offers an intimate view of how settler colonialism and other structural forms of power and inequality created accumulated violences in the lives of Indigenous women. This volume uncovers how these Indigenous women resist violence in Mexico, Central America, and the United States, centering on the topics of femicide, immigration, human rights violations, the criminal justice system, and Indigenous justice. Taking on the issues of our times, Indigenous Women and Violence calls for the deepening of collaborative ethnographies through community engagement and performing research as an embodied experience."
Author
Lynn Stephen
Shannon Speed
Publication
2021
Stories That Make History: Mexico through Elena Poniatowska’s Crónicas Book Cover

Stories That Make History: Mexico through Elena Poniatowska’s Crónicas

"From covering the massacre of students at Tlatelolco in 1968 and the 1985 earthquake to the Zapatista rebellion in 1994 and the disappearance of forty-three students in 2014, Elena Poniatowska has been one of the most important chroniclers of Mexican social, cultural, and political life. In Stories That Make History, Lynn Stephen examines Poniatowska’s writing, activism, and political participation, using them as a lens through which to understand critical moments in contemporary Mexican history."
Author
Lynn Stephen
Publication
2021