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Journal Article
TSQ (2022) 9 (3): 334–364.
Published: 01 August 2022
...C. Heike Schotten Abstract This article traces the emergence of what the author calls predation TERFism to the development of US Jewish-identified feminism and, in particular, Zionist lesbian separatism. This historical connection is reflected in the rhetorical and ideological similarities between...
Journal Article
TSQ (2018) 5 (1): 9–29.
Published: 01 February 2018
... that compel us to consider processes of exclusion past and present. Yet it seems that historians had barely begun to scratch the surface of 1970s feminist history before an ever-evolving set of binary characterizations started to eclipse feminisms' multivocal and multivalent complexities. How did “1970s...
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Journal Article
TSQ (2016) 3 (1-2): 150–157.
Published: 01 May 2016
...Cael M. Keegan Abstract The 2014 National Women's Studies Association (NWSA) conference specifically solicited trans-feminist academic work through a call for proposals subtheme entitled “Trans-Feminisms.” This subtheme called for work exploring how “trans-feminist analyses help us redefine...
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Journal Article
TSQ (2022) 9 (2): 266–288.
Published: 01 May 2022
... geography, and urban planning that demonstrates how black transfeminist worldmaking invites us to “revitalize” or replace traditional urban planning projects and challenge gendered racial capitalism. [email protected] Copyright © 2022 by Duke University Press 2022 black trans feminism...
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Journal Article
TSQ (2016) 3 (1-2): 235–245.
Published: 01 May 2016
...Stefania Voli Abstract In the late 1970s to the early 1980s, the Italian transsexual movement began gaining visibility in the public sphere, also making use of the feminist political lexicon. This contamination emerged in the life stories of some trans pioneers, who consider feminism a fundamental...
Journal Article
TSQ (2016) 3 (1-2): 65–73.
Published: 01 May 2016
...Pedro Javier DiPietro Abstract Trans, transing, queer, and queering are typically represented as sharing in the antinormalizing labor that concerns material bodies. In the vein of decolonial feminism, this essay looks at three renderings of transing methodologies for what they teach us about...
Journal Article
TSQ (2016) 3 (1-2): 165–174.
Published: 01 May 2016
..., or even hostile. How did theoretical or ideological positions on transgenderism begin to appear in Russian feminism? Were they imported from the West or homemade? While Russian transfeminist perspectives indeed borrowed directly from US transgender theorists, it is less clear where Russian feminist...
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Journal Article
TSQ (2022) 9 (3): 311–333.
Published: 01 August 2022
...: if feminism is understood to have one unified character that is broadly if imperfectly beneficent, any indictment of feminism for the many elaborate harms perpetrated in its name becomes an attack on feminism as a whole, rather than an attack on what feminism is used to announce or enact. A careful accounting...
Journal Article
TSQ (2016) 3 (1-2): 15–21.
Published: 01 May 2016
... ; Rubin 1998 ; Ziegler 2012 ) and other writers ( Doubek 2014 ; Young 2014 ) in which trans-masculine people use first-person narrative to address both the tensions and necessities of integrating trans masculinities and feminisms in their lives. This article builds on this effort by drawing from...
Journal Article
TSQ (2022) 9 (3): 463–479.
Published: 01 August 2022
... reproductive capacity even where lesbianism itself often precludes women from conceiving children biologically? SL : I think naming the erotic frisson in fascist and fascisant feminisms is useful because it tells the truth about that “commitment to misery” these actors vaunt, right...
Journal Article
TSQ (2016) 3 (1-2): 254–258.
Published: 01 May 2016
... popularized TERF as a way of making a distinction between these two types of feminism. While this lexical distinction is useful, online TERF activists sometimes assert this term to be a slur, since some Internet users have used it in derogatory ways. Internet conflicts aside, I use this term in a manner...
Journal Article
TSQ (2016) 3 (1-2): 146–149.
Published: 01 May 2016
..., sometimes translating texts from foreign transfeminists because of the lack of domestic material. We faced a lot of resistance, and soon enough, pages denouncing our “appropriation” of feminism appeared in the worst ways, often insinuating that arguments and theories rooted in US or anglophone histories...
Journal Article
TSQ (2016) 3 (1-2): 84–94.
Published: 01 May 2016
... the homogeneity of the white, straight, and abstract subject of feminism. As did lesbian feminists, feminists of color, queer feminists, and cyber feminists before us, trans people are fighting feminism's exclusionary tendencies ( Dorvil 2007 ). Since no definition of “oppression applies to all women any time...
Journal Article
TSQ (2016) 3 (1-2): 5–14.
Published: 01 May 2016
... of transfeminist activism. We hope as well to foster even more radical visions of a social order that makes room for all of us regardless of race, class, sex, gender, sexuality, ability, language, nation, or any other status that now renders us vulnerable to violence and injustice. Transfeminism is a part...
Journal Article
TSQ (2023) 10 (3-4): 508–526.
Published: 01 November 2023
... trans rage and, second, by the failure of feminism to achieve a robust form of trans inclusion characterized by a collective praxis of care.” While Ahmed highlights a possibility to use hammering as a tool to create affinities between trans and cis feminists, and Awkward-Rich explores reading like...
Journal Article
TSQ (2016) 3 (1-2): 40–47.
Published: 01 May 2016
... is invited to propose a paper, seminar, or special session. The text of the call for proposals is feminized because the vast majority of individuals interested in our activities are women. For us, the use of the feminine includes the masculine” ( CIRFF 2015a ). 4 Although the FAQ section provided me...
Journal Article
TSQ (2016) 3 (1-2): 137–145.
Published: 01 May 2016
... are trying to escape, but they also affirm the feminine as the condition that constitutes “woman” as a political collectivity. This herstory and hirstory of trans misogyny and trans feminism has left us with two significant trans-feminist perspectives that (like many feminists of the 1970s) neither...
Journal Article
TSQ (2023) 10 (2): 189–194.
Published: 01 May 2023
...), and signed the Manifeste des 343 (Manifesto of the 343) declaring that she had had an abortion. These commitments and others—to working through feminism's collusion with the oppression of sex workers, to facilitating exchanges with the radical arm of the US women's movement—collide in Feminism or Death...
Journal Article
TSQ (2022) 9 (3): 387–406.
Published: 01 August 2022
.... In this article I use the term transfeminist to broadly refer to the political and philosophical affiliation with trans-inclusive feminism. 4. “Fais un effort pour te souvenir. Ou, à défaut, invente” (Wittig 1969 : 127). 5. Wittig is the only French reference in their list of feminist influences...
Journal Article
TSQ (2016) 3 (1-2): 259–265.
Published: 01 May 2016
... regardless, I want to embrace words such as ‘slut’ and ‘bitch’ thus reclaiming them. . . . I want to use my ‘ridiculousness’ to ridicule this sick world” ( Piggy Kitty 2014 ). As this quote makes plain, Piggy Kitty's gender work should be understood in terms of feminist political action, rather than...
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