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ID089478
Title ProperFeminist international relations and women militants
Other Title Informationcase studies from Sri Lanka and Kashmir
LanguageENG
AuthorParashar, Swati
Publication2009.
Summary / Abstract (Note)This paper presents women's militant activities outside the binary framework of 'victimhood' and 'agency' and invokes postmodern feminist international relations analyses to engage with women's material and ideological contribution to militant activities and political violence. Women who support and indulge in both discriminate and indiscriminate violence against institutions of the state and unarmed civilians not only redefine notions of nationalism, gender and religious identity, but also highlight their complex and problematic relationship with feminism. To what extent does participating in militant activities and armed combat provide women with opportunities to transcend conventional gender roles? In other words, do they remain the 'other' within 'the other'? How are militant women influenced by these political movements and how do they influence these movements? What happens when the 'protected' and 'upheld' become the 'protectors' and 'upholders'? How does/should feminist international relations approach these militant women? I attempt to address these questions through a study of women militants and their constructions as gendered political subjects in Kashmir and Sri Lanka.
`In' analytical NoteCambridge Review of International Affairs Vol. 22, No. 2; Jun 2009: p235-256
Journal SourceCambridge Review of International Affairs Vol. 22, No. 2; Jun 2009: p235-256
Key WordsFeminist International Relation ;  Women - Militants ;  Militants - Women ;  Sri Lanka - Women Militants ;  Kashmir - Women Militants


 
 
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