Gender, Generations, and Communism in Central and Eastern Europe and Beyond
portes grátis
Gender, Generations, and Communism in Central and Eastern Europe and Beyond
Mrozik, Agnieszka; Artwinska, Anna
Taylor & Francis Ltd
08/2022
352
Mole
Inglês
9780367522216
15 a 20 dias
458
Descrição não disponível.
Introduction; Part I: The Logic of Gender and Generation(s): Theoretical Approaches; 1. Generational and Gendered Memory of Communism in Central and Eastern Europe: Methodological Perspectives and Political Challenges; 2. Acting and Memory, Hope and Guilt: The Bond of Generations in Arendt, Benjamin, Heine, and Freud; Part II: Generations and Gender in Historical Contexts: Comparative Case Studies; 3 Communism, Left Feminism, and Generations in the 1930s: The Case of Yugoslavia; 4. Communisms, Generations, and Waves: The Cases of Italy, Yugoslavia, and Cuba; 5. Generations of Italian Communist Women and the Making of a Women's Rights Agenda in the Cold War (1945-68): Historiography, Memory, and New Archival Evidence; 6. The Making of Turkish Migrant Left Feminism and Political Generations in the Ruhr, West Germany (1975-90); Part III: Women's Biographical Experiences and Communism; 7. "Old" Women and "Old" Revolution: The Role of Gender and Generation in Postwar Polish Communist Women's Political Biographies; 8. Biographical Experience and Knowledge Production: Women Sociologists and Gender Issues in Communist Poland; 9. Without Tradition and Without Female Generation? The Case of Czech Artist Ester Krumbachova; Part IV: Aesthetic Representations of Gendered Generations in Communism and Beyond; 10. Girls from the Polish Youth Union: (Dis)remembrance of the Generation; 11. "We're Easy to Spot": Soviet Generation(s) After Soviet Era and the Invention of the Self in Svetlana Alexievich's Secondhand Time: The Last of the Soviets; 12. Entering Gray Zones: Questions of Female Identity, Political Commitment, and Personal Choices in Jirina Siklova's Memoir of Life Under Socialism and Beyond; 13. Gender, Generational Conflict, and Communism: Tonia Lechtman's Story; Conclusion: From "Communism as Male Generational History" to a More Inclusive Narrative
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.
West Germany;Turkish communities;Young Men;generational-gender interpretations;Guest Worker Regime;totalitarian movement and/or regime;Unione Donne Italiane;Community Feminism;WIDF;Vice Versa;Turkish Migrant Women;Turkish Migrant Community;Polish People's Republic;Communist Women;Left Feminism;Turkish Migrant;Women's Mass Organizations;Cold War Italy;Confederazione Generale Italiana Del Lavoro;Youth Section;Svetlana Alexievich;Women's Rights Agenda;Women's Labor Rights;Women's Equality Rights;Left Wing Women;Transnational Migrant Politics;Gendered Imaginaries;Polish Public School
Introduction; Part I: The Logic of Gender and Generation(s): Theoretical Approaches; 1. Generational and Gendered Memory of Communism in Central and Eastern Europe: Methodological Perspectives and Political Challenges; 2. Acting and Memory, Hope and Guilt: The Bond of Generations in Arendt, Benjamin, Heine, and Freud; Part II: Generations and Gender in Historical Contexts: Comparative Case Studies; 3 Communism, Left Feminism, and Generations in the 1930s: The Case of Yugoslavia; 4. Communisms, Generations, and Waves: The Cases of Italy, Yugoslavia, and Cuba; 5. Generations of Italian Communist Women and the Making of a Women's Rights Agenda in the Cold War (1945-68): Historiography, Memory, and New Archival Evidence; 6. The Making of Turkish Migrant Left Feminism and Political Generations in the Ruhr, West Germany (1975-90); Part III: Women's Biographical Experiences and Communism; 7. "Old" Women and "Old" Revolution: The Role of Gender and Generation in Postwar Polish Communist Women's Political Biographies; 8. Biographical Experience and Knowledge Production: Women Sociologists and Gender Issues in Communist Poland; 9. Without Tradition and Without Female Generation? The Case of Czech Artist Ester Krumbachova; Part IV: Aesthetic Representations of Gendered Generations in Communism and Beyond; 10. Girls from the Polish Youth Union: (Dis)remembrance of the Generation; 11. "We're Easy to Spot": Soviet Generation(s) After Soviet Era and the Invention of the Self in Svetlana Alexievich's Secondhand Time: The Last of the Soviets; 12. Entering Gray Zones: Questions of Female Identity, Political Commitment, and Personal Choices in Jirina Siklova's Memoir of Life Under Socialism and Beyond; 13. Gender, Generational Conflict, and Communism: Tonia Lechtman's Story; Conclusion: From "Communism as Male Generational History" to a More Inclusive Narrative
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.
West Germany;Turkish communities;Young Men;generational-gender interpretations;Guest Worker Regime;totalitarian movement and/or regime;Unione Donne Italiane;Community Feminism;WIDF;Vice Versa;Turkish Migrant Women;Turkish Migrant Community;Polish People's Republic;Communist Women;Left Feminism;Turkish Migrant;Women's Mass Organizations;Cold War Italy;Confederazione Generale Italiana Del Lavoro;Youth Section;Svetlana Alexievich;Women's Rights Agenda;Women's Labor Rights;Women's Equality Rights;Left Wing Women;Transnational Migrant Politics;Gendered Imaginaries;Polish Public School