MYRA MARX FERREE
Intersectional Inequalities
Race, Class and Gender as Policy Frameworks and Movement Frames
Monday, February 25
Barrows 402
Race, Class and Gender as Policy
Frameworks and Movement Frames
Feminism, like any globally dispersed and historically long-lived social
movement, is intricately intertwined with local specificities of
opportunity in how it develops and where and how it succeeds. By
looking at both the discursive opportunities institutionally imbedded in
texts with power and the movement's discursive strategies to frame its
claims effectively, Ferree explores differences in how "gender" becomes
politically meaningful in three different contexts: Germany, the US and
the European Union. She argues that rather than a "master frame" there are
competing "webs of meaning" about inequality that have different and
changing resonances across contexts.
Myra Marx Ferree is the Alice H. Cook Professor of Sociology and
Director of the European Union Center of Excellence at the University of
Wisconsin-Madison. In addition to her recent book Varieties of
Feminism: German Gender Politics in Global Perspective (Stanford
University Press 2012) on which this talk is based, she has recently
edited Global Feminism: Women's Transnational Activism, Organizations
and Human Rights (2006) and Gender, Violence and Human Security:
Feminist Perspectives (forthcoming) and co-authored Shaping Abortion
Discourse: Democracy and the Public Sphere in Germany and the US (2002). Two of her articles on theorizing intersectionality have won
Race, Class and Gender section awards from ASA.
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