Academic literature on the topic 'Feminist geography'

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Journal articles on the topic "Feminist geography"

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Conway, Janet M. "Popular Feminism: Considering a Concept in Feminist Politics and Theory." Latin American Perspectives 48, no. 4 (June 28, 2021): 25–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0094582x211013008.

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An analysis of popular feminism as a category in Latin American feminist studies from its origins in the 1980s and its disappearance in the 1990s to its resurgence in the present through the protagonism of the World March of Women, asks what is at stake in this contemporary claim to popular feminism in relation to the multiplication of feminisms. The contemporary use of the concept specifies a feminist praxis that is contentious, materialist, and counterhegemonic in permanently unsettled relations both with other feminisms and mixed-gender movements on the left. Despite converging agendas for redistribution, it also remains in considerable tension with black and indigenous feminisms. As a racially unmarked category, contemporary popular feminism continues to reproduce an elision of race and colonialism common to mestiza feminism and the political left. Un análisis del feminismo popular como categoría en los estudios feministas latinoamericanos, desde sus orígenes en la década de 1980 y su desaparición en la década de 1990 hasta su actual resurgimiento a través del protagonismo de la Marcha Mundial de la Mujer nos lleva a preguntarnos qué está en juego en esta reivindicación contemporánea del feminismo popular cuando lo consideramos en relación a la actual multiplicación de feminismos. El uso contemporáneo del concepto especifica una praxis feminista que es polémica, materialista y contrahegemónica dentro del marco de relaciones permanentemente inestables, tanto con otros feminismos como con movimientos izquierdistas de género mixto. A pesar de las agendas convergentes de redistribución, también mantiene una tensión considerable con los feminismos negros e indígenas. Como categoría racialmente inespecífica, el feminismo popular contemporáneo mantiene sus elisiones de raza y colonialismo, asunto característico del feminismo mestizo, así como de la izquierda política.
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McDowell, Linda. "Women/gender/feminisms: Doing feminist geography." Journal of Geography in Higher Education 21, no. 3 (November 1997): 381–400. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03098269708725444.

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Pratt, Geraldine. "FEMINIST GEOGRAPHY." Urban Geography 13, no. 4 (July 1992): 385–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.2747/0272-3638.13.4.385.

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Elledge, Annie M. "Insights from feminist geography: positionality, knowledge production, and difference." Journal of the Bulgarian Geographical Society 46 (July 11, 2022): 25–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/jbgs.e87749.

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Feminist geographers investigate the messy, power-laden, and embodied relationships humans and non-humans have with their environment. This review examines foundational texts in feminist geography in the United States, Canada, and the United Kingdom and more recent work that engages with Black geographies, Indigenous geographies, and disability geographies. I discuss three important considerations in feminist geography: knowledge production, the formation of difference, and critical reflexivity. To do this, I trace the historical development of feminist geography as a subdiscipline to identify the numerous ways that feminists intervene within Geography.
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Domosh, M. "Sexing feminist geography." Progress in Human Geography 23, no. 3 (September 1, 1999): 429–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.1191/030913299667060658.

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Domosh, Mona. "Sexing feminist geography." Progress in Human Geography 23, no. 3 (September 1999): 429–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/030913259902300306.

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Hiner, Hillary. "Finding Feminism through Faith: Casa Yela, Popular Feminism, and the Women-Church Movement in Chile." Latin American Perspectives 48, no. 5 (June 11, 2021): 59–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0094582x211013009.

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Among the popular feminist projects of the dictatorship period in Chile was the Yela group in Talca, made up of pobladoras (women shantytown residents) and two Maryknoll sisters. Of particular interest is the manner in which this group’s popular feminism and antiviolence work during the 1980s was shaped by the women-church movement and feminist theology related to patriarchy, violence against women, and women’s collective resistance strategies. Over the long term, religious elements were gradually excluded from Casa Yela’s antiviolence work in favor of more secular feminist interpretations. Entre los proyectos feministas populares durante la época de la dictadura en Chile se encuentra la presencia del grupo Yela de Talca, formado por pobladoras (mujeres residentes de poblaciones) y dos hermanas Maryknoll. De particular interés es la forma en que el feminismo popular y antiviolencia de este grupo durante la década de 1980 se moldeó a partir del movimiento mujer-iglesia y la teología feminista relacionada con el patriarcado, la violencia contra las mujeres y las estrategias de resistencia colectiva de mujeres. A largo plazo, los elementos religiosos fueron gradualmente excluidos del trabajo antiviolencia de Casa Yela en favor de interpretaciones feministas más seculares.
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Hanson, Susan. "Is Feminist geography relevant?" Scottish Geographical Journal 115, no. 2 (January 1999): 133–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14702549908553822.

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Zaragocin, Sofia. "Feminist geography in Ecuador." Gender, Place & Culture 26, no. 7-9 (May 22, 2019): 1032–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/0966369x.2018.1561426.

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Silvia, Joseli Maria, Marcio Jose Ornat, and Alides Baptista Chimin Junior. "‘NÃO ME CHAME DE SENHORA, EU SOU FEMINISTA’! POSICIONALIDADE E REFLEXIBILIDADE NA PRODUÇÃO GEOGRÁFICA DE DOREEN MASSEY." GEOgraphia 19, no. 40 (October 5, 2017): 11. http://dx.doi.org/10.22409/geographia.v19i40.1190.

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Resumo: Este texto tem por objetivo evidenciar as influências da teoria feminista na produção geográfica de Doreen Massey. Para dar conta deste objetivo trago registros guardados em minha memória de nossa curta relação em finais de 2015 e início de 2016, bem como os elementos feministas que marcam suas mais notáveis contribuições científicas na geografia. Retomo as suas críticas em relação à compressão espaço-tempo no processo de globalização, suas proposições para superar a oposição entre espaço e lugar mostrando que a reflexão em torno de sua posicionalidade como mulher e feminista lhe possibilitaram a produzir uma imaginação geográfica que, sem dúvida, trouxe avanços conceituais nesse campo disciplinar.Palavras Chave: Geografia Feminista; Posicionalidade; Espaço; Lugar. Abstract: This text aims to evidence the feminist theory influences on Doreen Massey’s geographic production. To achieve this goal, I bring memories of our short relationship in late 2015 and early 2016, as well as the feminist elements that mark her most remarkable scientific contributions to geography. I take up her criticisms of space-time compression in the process of globalization, her propositions to overcome the opposition between space and place, showing that the reflection around her positionality as a woman and feminist allowed her to produce a geographical imagination that, undoubtedly, has brought conceptual advances in this disciplinary field.Keywords: Feminist Geography; Positionality; Space; Place. Resumen: Este texto tiene por objetivo evidenciar las influencias de la teoría feminista en la producción geográfica de Doreen Massey. Para llevar a cabo este objetivo son expostos registros guardados en mi memoria de nuestra corta relación a finales de 2015 e inicio de 2016, así como los elementos feministas que marcan sus más notables contribuciones científicas en la geografía. Retomo sus críticas en relación a la compresión espacio-tiempo en el proceso de globalización, sus proposiciones para superar la oposición entre espacio y lugar mostrando que la reflexión en torno a su posicionalidad como mujer y feminista le otorgan la capacidad de producir una imaginación geográfica que, sin duda, ha traído avances conceptuales en ese campo académico.Palabras clave: Geografía Feminista; Posicionalidad; Espacio; Lugar.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Feminist geography"

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Fournier, Diane Lucie Carleton University Dissertation Geography. "Defining feminist geography : an examination of how Canadian women geographers perceive feminist geography." Ottawa, 1990.

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McNiven, Abigail. "(Re)collections : engaging feminist geography with embodied and relational experiences of pregnancy losses." Thesis, Durham University, 2014. http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/10786/.

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With empirically-grounded and theoretically-inferred consideration in this thesis, I bring into focus a vast ‘collection’ of components entailed in lived experiences of pregnancy losses and, in particular, foreground the ways in which spaces and places are intimately involved. This includes, for example, attending to medical settings such as hospitals, workplaces, homes and gardens, online support communities, cemeteries and other memorial locations in addition to bodies which are simultaneously material and emotional. Since pregnancy losses are inter-personal, I also discuss social relations between women, their embryos, foetuses, babies and/or children, medical staff, partners, family members, friends, work colleagues, online group users and ‘wider society’. The multiplicity of components within, and across, participants’ experiences serves to simultaneously break apart and reassemble the label I selected for the research of ‘pregnancy losses’. I utilise several sub-disciplines across the thesis, finding a particularly significant and tricky tension between two particular areas I wish to engage: feminist geographies and the geographies of death and dying. My research weaves together feminist, embodied, emotional geographies through which I seek to understand experiences of pregnancy losses. In doing so, I foreground the richness, depth and complexity of lived experiences by developing understandings of pregnancy losses which embrace, rather than sanitise or marginalise, bodily materiality and social relations as well as emotional dynamics. My thesis serves to bring together and explore the recollections of pregnancy loss experiences, organised around a number of spatial contexts and activities. These are reflected in the focus of each chapter in terms of interior bodies, social relations, bodily fluids, online sites, external skins and practices of memorialisation. My discussions work to ‘collect’ together understandings about the somewhat paradoxical fullness and variety of accumulated meanings that can be held about pregnancy loss experiences.
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Ostgaard, Gayra. "For "women only" understanding the cultural space of a women's gym through feminist geography /." Connect to this title online, 2006. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc%5Fnum=bgsu1155218461.

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Ostgaard, Gayra Dee. "FOR “WOMEN ONLY”: UNDERSTANDING THE CULTURAL SPACE OF A WOMEN’S GYM THROUGH FEMINIST GEOGRAPHY." Bowling Green State University / OhioLINK, 2006. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=bgsu1155218461.

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Nash, Catherine. "Landscape, body and nation : cultural geographies of Irish identities." Thesis, University of Nottingham, 1995. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.261470.

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Smith, Sara Hollingsworth. "A Geopolitics of Intimacy and Anxiety: Religion, Territory, and Fertility in Leh District, Jammu and Kashmir, India." Diss., The University of Arizona, 2009. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/194792.

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What happens when bodies are the territory through which geopolitical strategies play out? In the Leh district of India's contested Jammu and Kashmir State, religious identity has become politicized and Buddhist/Muslim conflict is being articulated at the site of the body. This dissertation contributes to political geography by exploring intimacy and fertility as geopolitical practice. In Leh, political conflict between Buddhists and Muslims is being enacted through women's bodies. Activist members of the Buddhist majority are encouraging Buddhist women to maximize fertility and avoid marrying Muslim men in order to maintain Buddhist electoral control. When women's bodies are instrumentalized and geopolitical strategy seeks to control desire, how do women cope with or resist these pressures? Can the body be an effective site of resistance against the politicization of religion and intimacy? My dissertation research consists of over 200 interviews and surveys of Buddhist and Muslim women in Leh district, as well as a participatory oral history project that engaged students in Leh with these difficult questions. The research explores how the politicization of marriage and fertility is affecting decision-making, how women negotiate religious and political pressures to participate in pro-natal territorial struggles, and how emergent geopolitical religious identities shape visions of the future.
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Weinert, Julie Marie. "The Construction and Influence of Local Gender Roles on Practice in a Global Industry: Ecotourism In Ecuador." Columbus, Ohio : Ohio State University, 2008. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc%5Fnum=osu1211550789.

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Iceton, Jennifer. "Media Representations of Abortion Politics in Florida: Feminist Geographic Analysis of Newspaper Articles, 2011-2013." Scholar Commons, 2016. http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/6263.

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Feminist geographers argue that gendered bodies and power are deeply entwined (McDowell 1992; Rose 1993). However, few geographers have investigated how gender and power interact in relation to the politics of abortion access. This thesis seeks to fill this gap by conducting a feminist content analysis of six newspapers from Florida’s three largest metropolitan areas to determine how articles featuring abortion are framed. Analysis of the dataset concludes that the politicization of the abortion debate results in the erasure of women from the conversation, the identification of a pregnant women trope which homogenizes all women into one category, and Planned Parenthood’s classification as a health care provider being ignored subsumed under a recognition of its role in providing abortion services. Overall this study argues that patriarchal institutions regulate women into compulsory motherhood, thereby constraining their agency and ability to fully participate in society participate in political democracy.
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Moraes, Meriene Santos de. "A prática de aborto voluntário e as múltiplas escalas de poder e resistência: entre o corpo feminino e o território nacional." reponame:Biblioteca Digital de Teses e Dissertações da UFRGS, 2016. http://hdl.handle.net/10183/156619.

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Essa pesquisa trata das múltiplas relações de poder entre corpo e espaço, em diferentes escalas, envolvidas na prática de interrupção voluntária da gravidez. A criminalização do aborto provocado não impede que milhares de procedimentos clandestinos sejam realizados anualmente no Brasil. A ilegalidade contribui para a insegurança da prática, constituindo um problema de saúde pública porque coloca em risco a vida das mulheres. Contra essa situação, movimentos feministas vêm lutando pelo aborto legal e seguro em nome da saúde, dos direitos sexuais e (não) reprodutivos e da autonomia corporal das mulheres. Nesse contexto, o estudo buscou compreender como as práticas de aborto provocado envolvem múltiplas escalas territoriais de poder e resistência, procurando responder três questões centrais: No que consiste a prática de aborto provocado? Como as relações entre corpo e espaço podem ser evidenciadas a partir de uma perspectiva escalar dessa prática? E, nesse sentido, como o corpo pode constituir uma escala de resistência? Para dar conta da proposta, o referencial teórico-metodológico apoiou-se, sobretudo, nas correntes feministas da Geografia que entendem que o espaço não é neutro do ponto de vista das relações hierárquicas de gênero e em abordagens territoriais multiescalares. ( Continua) As estratégias de investigação incluíram coleta de dados realizada por meio de uma ampla pesquisa bibliográfica e documental, além de nove entrevistas semi-estruturadas, com mulheres brasileiras, entre 24 e 38 anos de idade, que tiveram pelo menos uma experiência de aborto clandestino. O tratamento dos dados consistiu na transcrição das entrevistas, categorização e análise de conteúdo. O estudo mostrou que a prática de aborto provocado consiste em um tema complexo, que envolve aspectos jurídicos, médicos, religiosos, econômicos e emocionais. Além disso, com a restrição do aborto seguro, feito em ambiente hospitalar, a apenas três situações previstas em lei (estupro, risco de vida para a mulher e anencefalia do feto), as mulheres acabam recorrendo às clínicas clandestinas ou ainda ao aborto caseiro, provocado com medicamentos adquiridos no mercado ilegal. Assim, as práticas clandestinas e as lutas pela descriminalização do aborto analisadas ao longo do estudo são exemplos de resistência e subversão às normas estabelecidas, reforçando a afirmação de que o corpo pode constituir espaços de resistência.
This research deals with the multiple relations of power between body and space, at different scales, involving the practice of voluntary termination of pregnancy. The criminalization of induced abortion does not prevent thousands of clandestine procedures from being performed annually in Brazil. Illegality contributes to insecurity in the practice and constitutes a public health problem. Against this situation, feminist movements have been fighting for legal and safe abortion in the name of the health, the sexual and (non) reproductive rights and the women's bodily autonomy. In this context, the study looked at how abortion practices involve multiple territorial scales of power and resistance, trying to answer three main questions: What is the practice of induced abortion? How can the relations between body and space be evidenced from a scalar perspective of this practice? And, in that sense, how can the body constitute a scale of resistance? In order to achieve this proposition, the theoretical-methodological reference was based, above all, on the feminist currents of Geography, which understand that space is not neutral from the point of view of hierarchical gender relations, and in multi scalar territorial approaches Research strategies included data collection carried out through an extensive bibliographical and documentary research, in addition to semi-structured interviews with nine Brazilian women, between 24 and 38 years of age, who has, at least, one experience of clandestine abortion. Data processing consisted in transcription of the interviews, categorization and content analysis. The study showed that the practice of induced abortion consists of a complex matter that involves legal, medical, religious, economic and emotional aspects. In addition, with the safe abortion (made in a hospital environment) legal restrictions to only three situations (rape, risks to the woman’s life and anencephaly), women resort to clandestine clinics and/or to drugs purchased in the illegal market. Thus, both clandestine practices and struggles for the decriminalization of abortion analyzed throughout the study are examples of resistance and subversion to established norms, reinforcing our statement that the body can constitute spaces of resistance.
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Hoven-Iganski, Bettina van. "Made in the GDR : the changing geographies of women in the post-socialist rural society in Mecklenburg-Westpommerania." Thesis, University of Plymouth, 1999. http://hdl.handle.net/10026.1/365.

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This thesis explores women's experiences in rural areas under state socialism in the GDR and in the New Germany since 1989. The study is located within feminist geographical thinking and draws on a variety of qualitative and quantitative sources. Data for the research were collated through various research methods both qualitative and quantitative including correspondence, focus group interviews, key informant interviews, and the consultation of documentary evidence and statistical sources. The thesis employs a modified grounded theory approach. Data were processed and analysed using the computer-assisted analysis programme NUD.IST Version 4.0. The thesis focuses on questions that emerge from a critical analysis of social transformation. A key concern is to evaluate how dominant patriarchal power structures have impacted upon women's everyday lives under socialism and capitalism. Three main themes are foci of this thesis: the changes in social dynamics in rural villages, the impact of economic rationalisations on women, and the nature and extent of women's participation in new political structures. With reference to the former GDR the research showed that many rural women found comfort in social relations they established within the village and the workplace. Such social networks became important elements for women's self-identification and helped counteract suppression through the patriarchal socialist State. German unification overthrew previous values and daily routines of many rural women through vast economic and political changes. The unfamiliarity with a new, sometimes undesirable framework of reference for everyday life and society caused many rural women to withdraw to the private sphere and question their previous identities as rural GDR citizens. Positive opportunities for women's futures have not outweighed negative experiences with transition. Instead, conflicts have prevented women's equal integration into the political and economic structures of the New Germany. Further areas of research are proposed that may add depth to insights gained from this thesis as well as offering possible areas for gender-sensitive policy development in rural Mecklenburg-Westpommerania.
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Books on the topic "Feminist geography"

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Nelson, Lise, and Joni Seager, eds. A Companion to Feminist Geography. Oxford, UK: Blackwell Publishing Ltd, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/9780470996898.

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Lise, Nelson, and Seager Joni, eds. A companion to feminist geography. Malden, MA: Blackwell Pub., 2005.

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1949-, McDowell Linda, and Sharp Joanne P, eds. A feminist glossary of human geography. London: Arnold, 1999.

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1960-, Moss Pamela, ed. Feminist geography in practice: Research and methods. Oxford, UK: Blackwell Publishers, 2002.

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J, Nast Heidi, Roberts Susan M, and Jones John Paul, eds. Thresholds in feminist geography: Difference, methodology, representation. Lanham, Md: Rowman & Littlefield, 1997.

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C, Johnson Louise. Placebound: Australian feminist geographies. Melbourne: Oxford University Press, 2000.

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1955-, Jones John Paul, Nast Heidi J, and Roberts Susan M, eds. Thresholds in feminist geography: Difference, methodology, and representation. Lanham, Md: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 1997.

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McDowell, Linda. Gender, identity, and place: Understanding feminist geographies. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1999.

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Fleischmann, Katharina. Stadt Land Gender: Einführung in Feministische Geographien. Königstein/Taunus: U. Helmer, 2005.

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A, Staeheli Lynn, Kofman Eleonore, and Peake Linda 1956-, eds. Mapping women, making politics: Feminist perspectives on political geography. New York: Routledge, 2004.

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Book chapters on the topic "Feminist geography"

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McDowell, Linda. "Feminist economic geographies." In Economic Geography, 34–46. London: Routledge, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203020258-5.

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Fluri, Jennifer L. "Feminist Political Geography." In The Wiley Blackwell Companion to Political Geography, 235–47. Chichester, UK: John Wiley & Sons, Ltd, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/9781118725771.ch18.

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Fortuijn, Joos Droogleever. "Teaching Feminist Geography." In Routledge Handbook of Gender and Feminist Geographies, 501–10. Names: Datta, Anindita, 1968- editor. Title: Routledge handbook of gender and feminist geographies/ edited by Anindita Datta, [and four others]. Description: Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon; New York, NY: Routledge, [2020]: Routledge, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315164748-50.

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Boyer, Kate. "Motherhood in Feminist Geography." In Routledge Handbook of Gender and Feminist Geographies, 318–25. Names: Datta, Anindita, 1968- editor. Title: Routledge handbook of gender and feminist geographies/ edited by Anindita Datta, [and four others]. Description: Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon; New York, NY: Routledge, [2020]: Routledge, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315164748-32.

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Fortuijn, Joos Droogleever. "Women in Geography." In Bridging Worlds – Building Feminist Geographies, 48–59. London: Routledge, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781032275611-7.

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Kofman, Eleonore. "Feminist Political Geographies." In A Companion to Feminist Geography, 519–33. Oxford, UK: Blackwell Publishing Ltd, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/9780470996898.ch34.

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Thomas, Mary E., and Patricia Ehrkamp. "Feminist Theory." In The Wiley-Blackwell Companion to Cultural Geography, 29–31. Chichester, UK: John Wiley & Sons, Ltd, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/9781118384466.ch4.

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Bosworth, Kai. "Feminist Geography in the Anthropocene." In Routledge Handbook of Gender and Feminist Geographies, 445–54. Names: Datta, Anindita, 1968- editor. Title: Routledge handbook of gender and feminist geographies/ edited by Anindita Datta, [and four others]. Description: Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon; New York, NY: Routledge, [2020]: Routledge, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315164748-45.

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Kelly, Meghan. "Feminist geography and geospatial technologies." In The Routledge Handbook of Geospatial Technologies and Society, 98–108. London: Routledge, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780367855765-10.

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Pini, Barbara, Robyn Mayes, and Laura Rodriguez Castro. "Rurality, Geography and Feminism." In Routledge Handbook of Gender and Feminist Geographies, 202–11. Names: Datta, Anindita, 1968- editor. Title: Routledge handbook of gender and feminist geographies/ edited by Anindita Datta, [and four others]. Description: Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon; New York, NY: Routledge, [2020]: Routledge, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315164748-21.

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Conference papers on the topic "Feminist geography"

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French, Anda, and Jenny French. "Constructing Commonality: Autoethnography in Architectural Pedagogy and Practice." In 112th ACSA Annual Meeting. ACSA Press, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.35483/acsa.am.112.60.

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Autoethnography challenges positivistic research methodologies and assumptions of researcher neutrality. It embraces uncertainty, messiness, and emotion, and has the potential to acknowledge the interconnectedness of architecture with social, economic, and political realities. Drawing from Elizabeth Ettorre’s Autoethnography as Feminist Practice: Sensitizing the Feminist “I”, this paper suggests that through autoethnographic processes, architects can resist the urge to quantify and categorize, and instead embrace the narrative- building potential of personal revelations and vulnerability.The paper acknowledges the safety and familiarity that static roles provide but argues that these roles hinder progress. It emphasizes the importance of dismantling the myth of the singular genius and instead advocates for an understanding of architecture as a collaborative endeavor. By being reflexive about their shifting status and relational positions, architects and architectural educators can create space for diverse voices and expertise to contribute to the design and production process.Drawing on examples from contemporary architectural practices, and adjacent fields, such as product design and cultural geography, the paper demonstrates the potential power of autoethnography. It emphasizes the importance of situated perspectives, connecting personal experiences to larger social contexts. Prompted by Etorre, by occupying the space of the “in-between” and acknowledging the “personal is political,” architects can foster connection, empathy, and collective meaning-making.Autoethnography serves as a device for architects to occupy the space of an “inside-outsider,” enabling the exploration of alternative practice and pedagogical models. By engaging in self-reflection, architects can cultivate mutual empathy and construct shared narratives, ultimately redefining the role of the architect in collaborative processes, unlocking new possibilities for collaboration, and transforming the understanding of authorship.
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Justin, Jyothi, and Nirmala Menon. "Digital Cartography and Feminist Geocriticism in Literary Studies." In SIGSPATIAL '21: 29th International Conference on Advances in Geographic Information Systems. New York, NY, USA: ACM, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/3486187.3490201.

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