Results for ' women’s bodies'

974 found
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  1.  35
    Women's Bodies: Cultural Representations and Identity.Jane Arthurs & Jean Grimshaw - 1999 - Continuum.
    This enlightening book presents new perspectives on how women's bodies are viewed and absorbed in popular culture, and considers some of the ways in which the body is central to questions of women's sexual and other identities.
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  2.  36
    Thin Media Images Decrease Women’s Body Satisfaction: Comparisons Between Veiled Muslim Women, Christian Women and Atheist Women Regarding Trait and State Body Image.Leonie Wilhelm, Andrea S. Hartmann, Julia C. Becker, Melahat Kisi, Manuel Waldorf & Silja Vocks - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10.
    Research in diverse populations has often found that thin media images negatively affect women’s state body image, with many women reporting lower body satisfaction after exposure to pictures of thin models than before exposure. However, there is evidence that theistic affirmations might buffer against the negative effect of media on body image. Furthermore, based on cross-sectional and correlation analyses, religiosity and the Islamic body covering are discussed as protective factors against a negative trait body image. However, there is no (...)
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  3.  13
    Liberating Women's Bodies.Kara Kennedy - 2022-10-17 - In Kevin S. Decker (ed.), Dune and Philosophy. Wiley. pp. 1–13.
    Women are everywhere in Dune, especially the members of the Bene Gesserit Sisterhood. In the Dune universe, the Bene Gesserit give girls so much practice in honing their skills that it almost guarantees they will grow into supremely confident women who trust their bodies to follow through on any action they desire. The Bene Gesserit in Dune represent a fulfillment of the ideal of the liberated women Beauvoir and Young describe. If women were “given the opportunity to use their (...)
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  4.  19
    Women's Bodies, Women's Selves: Illness Narratives and the `Andean' Body.Ann Miles - 1998 - Body and Society 4 (3):1-19.
    Using the phenomenological perspective provided by the concept of embodiment, this article shows that in Cuenca, Ecuador, knowledge about the body is fluid and during illness women can seek reassurance and explanations from multiple knowledge systems, including locally understood subordinate ones. Employing the concept of `character', as described by Ricoeur, as an explanation for why some women are more vulnerable to illness than others, the author argues that gender ideologies and notions of self-identity intersect in Ecuadorian conceptions of weakness and (...)
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  5. Women's Bodies in Classical Greek Science.Lesley Dean-Jones - 1996 - Oxford University Press UK.
    This study presents scientific theories about the female body in Greece of the 5th and 4th centuries BC. It demonstrates the influence of cultural preconceptions on such theories, and of scientific theories on cultural attitudes.
     
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  6.  30
    Women's Bodies in Classical Greek ScienceLesley Dean-Jones.Thomas Laqueur - 1995 - Isis 86 (3):468-469.
  7.  54
    Women's Bodies Giving Time for Hospitality.Rosalyn Diprose - 2009 - Hypatia 24 (2):142 - 163.
    This paper explores the gendered and temporal dimensions of the political ontology of hospitality that Derrida has developed from Levinas's philosophy. The claim is that, while hospitality per se takes time, the more that hospitality becomes conditional under conservative political forces, the more that the time it takes is given by women without acknowledgment or support. The analysis revisits Hannah Arendt's claim that central to the human condition and democratic plurality is disclosure of "natality" (innovation or the birth of the (...)
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  8.  11
    Black women’s bodies as sacrificial lambs at the altar.Sandisele L. Xhinti & Hundzukani P. Khosa-Nkatini - 2023 - HTS Theological Studies 79 (1):7.
    The youth in South Africa are subject to unemployment and the pressure to fit into society. The unemployment rate in South Africa is high; therefore, some find themselves desperate for employment and often find themselves hoping and praying for a miracle; hence, the number of churches in South Africa is increasing. People go to church to be prayed for by ministers in a hope to better their lives and that of their families. Some of these young South Africans became victims (...)
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  9. Embodied Subjects and Fragmented Objects: Women’s Bodies, Assisted Reproduction Technologies and the Right to Self-Determination.Jyotsna Agnihotri Gupta & Annemiek Richters - 2008 - Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 5 (4):239-249.
    This article focuses on the transformation of the female reproductive body with the use of assisted reproduction technologies under neo-liberal economic globalisation, wherein the ideology of trade without borders is central, as well as under liberal feminist ideals, wherein the right to self-determination is central. Two aspects of the body in western medicine—the fragmented body and the commodified body, and the integral relation between these two—are highlighted. This is done in order to analyse the implications of local and global transactions (...)
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  10.  26
    Women's Bodies Between National Hospitality and Domestic Biopolitics.Rosalyn Diprose - 2009 - Paragraph 32 (1):69-86.
    This paper develops a political ontology of hospitality from the philosophies of Arendt, Derrida and Levinas, paying particular attention to the gendered, temporal, and corporeal dimensions of hospitality. Arendt's claim, that central to the human condition and democratic plurality is the welcome of ‘natality’, is used to argue that the more that this hospitality becomes conditional under conservative political forces, the more that the time that it takes is given by women without acknowledgement or support. Women's bodies are thus (...)
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  11.  15
    Articulating women's bodies: Montesquieu, Diderot, and the imperial and settler-colonial politics of gender and sexuality.Janice Feng - 2021 - History of European Ideas 47 (8):1262-1277.
    ABSTRACT In this essay I develop a feminist anti-colonial critique by reading two eighteenth-century literary texts that discuss Middle Eastern and Indigenous gender and sexual practices at length: Montesquieu's Lettres Persanes (1721) and Diderot's Supplément au Voyage de Bougainville (1772). While Montesquieu and Diderot are often heralded as anti-imperial European Enlightenment thinkers, the specific ways in which Montesquieu and Diderot use gender and non-European women's bodies to construct their political-theoretical arguments show us two distinct colonial logics, one imperial and (...)
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  12.  37
    Reconstructing feminist perspectives of women’s bodies using a globalized view: The changing surrogacy market in Japan.Yoshie Yanagihara - 2020 - Bioethics 34 (6):570-577.
    This paper aims to evoke an alternative viewpoint on surrogacy, moving beyond popular Western feminist beliefs on the practice, by introducing the history and current context of East Asian surrogacy. To elaborate a different cultural perspective on surrogacy, this paper first introduces the East Asian history of contract pregnancy systems, prior to the emergence of the American invention of ‘modern’ surrogacy practice. Then, it examines Japanese mass media portrayals of cross‐border surrogacy in which white women have become ‘convenient’ entities. The (...)
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  13.  22
    Final Fantasies: Virtual Women's Bodies.Laura Fantone - 2003 - Feminist Theory 4 (1):51-72.
    In the last decades videogames have become very popular. In this article I argue that they establish a new relationship between bodies and identities. In videogames, the storylines are based on a mixture of other types of media fiction, where women's bodies are overrepresented and stereotypical, because of the market logic underlying these new media productions, which target a wide audience. Nevertheless, videogames' interactivity shapes new experiences of acting through other bodies. The erotic gaze on virtual (...) is shaped by the elements of exoticism and the grotesque. The virtual spaces and actions are characterized by exoticism (the recurrent presence of death, fear, surprise, thrills) and the realism necessary to involve the user's senses. I also argue that interaction in games is a process of imagination and action. The game user acts through another body, which he/she controls. This process opens possibilities for a resisting oppositional gaze and subversive practices, beyond the commercial aims of the games' designers. Of course, there are oppressive aspects of the virtual bodies; a female body becomes a mathematical series of polygons, out of space and time, and, only as such, the object of desire of invisible cyberteenagers. Nevertheless, as gendered subjects, to have a virtual body to play with is a liberating appropriation of a space not designed for us. (shrink)
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  14. Feminism After 9/11: Women’s Bodies as Cultural and Political Threat.[author unknown] - 2017
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  15.  21
    Black women’s bodies as reformers from the dungeons: The Reformation and womanism.Fundiswa A. Kobo - 2018 - HTS Theological Studies 74 (3):9.
    While it cannot be denied that the 16th-century Reformation, which challenged papal authority and questioned the Catholic Church’s ability to define Christian moral practice in a just manner, indeed came with deep and lasting political changes, it remained a male-dominated discourse. The Reformation was arguably patriarchal and points to a patriarchal culture of subordination and oppression of women that prevailed then and is still pertinent in the church and all spheres of society today. The absence of Elmina and the silenced (...)
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  16.  21
    (1 other version)Women's Bodies and Global Poverty Eradication.Peter Balint, Eszter Kollar, Patti Lenard & Tiziana Torresi - 2015 - Global Justice: Theory Practice Rhetoric 8 (1).
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  17. A History of Women's Bodies.Edward Shorter - 1983
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  18.  31
    The Objectification of Women’s Bodies.Zoë Cunliffe - 2022 - The Philosophers' Magazine 98:89-95.
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  19.  27
    From Genocide to Justice: Women's Bodies as a Legal Writing Pad.Debra B. Bergoffen - 2006 - Feminist Studies 32 (1):11.
  20.  80
    Women's Bodies - L. A. Dean-Jones: Women's Bodies in Classical Greek Science. Pp. ix+293. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1994. Cased, £30. [REVIEW]Helen King - 1995 - The Classical Review 45 (01):137-139.
  21.  30
    Women’s Bodies and the Evolution of Anti-rape Technologies: From the Hoop Skirt to the Smart Frock.Robyn Lincoln, Alex Bevan & Caroline Wilson-Barnao - 2021 - Body and Society 27 (4):30-54.
    In this article, we explore smart deterrents and their historical precedents marketed to women and girls for the purpose of preventing harassment, sexual abuse and violence. Rape deterrents, as we define them, encompass customs, architectures, fashions, surveillant infrastructures, apps and devices conceived to manage and protect the body. Online searches reveal an array of technologies, and we engage with their prevention narratives and cultural construction discourses of the gendered body. Our critical analysis places recent rape deterrents in conversation with earlier (...)
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  22.  10
    “Stop the War on Women’s Bodies”: Facilitating a Girl-Led March Against Sexual Violence in a Rural Community in South Africa.Relebohile Moletsane - 2018 - Studies in Social Justice 12 (2):235-250.
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  23.  23
    Buddhist Attitudes toward Women's Bodies.Diana Y. Paul - 1981 - Buddhist-Christian Studies 1:63.
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  24. Ownership, property and women's bodies.Donna Dickenson - 2006 - In Heather Widdows, Aitsiber Emaldi Cirion & Itziar Alkorta Idiakez (eds.), Women's Reproductive Rights. Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 188-198.
    Does advocating women's reproductive rights require us to believe that women own property in their bodies? In this chapter I conclude that it does not. Although the concept of owning our own bodies — ‘whose body is it anyway?’ — has polemical and political utility, it is incoherent in philosophy and law. Rather than conflate the entirely plausible concept of women’s reproductive rights and the implausible notion of property in the body, we should keep them separate, so (...)
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  25. Neo-Confucian Body Techniques: Women's Bodies in Korea's Consumer Society.Taeyon Kim - 2003 - Body and Society 9 (2):97-113.
    This article examines women's bodies in South Korea and the modes of Neo-Confucian governmentality at work within this consumer society. The concealed woman's body under Neo-Confucianism appears to have been supplanted by a liberated consumer body. This seems to represent a major shift in what the body means today. Nonetheless, the techniques of governmentality that controlled women's bodies under strict Neo-Confucian codes remain active in Korea's consumer society, so that despite the appearance of a striking shift in body (...)
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  26.  21
    Fleshing out Gender: Crafting Gender Identity on Women's Bodies.Valérie Fournier - 2002 - Body and Society 8 (2):55-77.
    The aim of this article is to flesh out gender by drawing connections between the experience of pain and the experience of womanhood. The article builds upon two themes in feminist work (the constitution of woman through her effacement, and the inscription of gender on the body) and proposes to analyse `effacement' in terms of an embodied sense of being `gutted out', or made `immaterial'. I use this imagery of `gutting out' to suggest that effacement is experienced through the body, (...)
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  27.  38
    Documenting Women’s Postoperative Bodies: Knowing Stephanie and “Remembering Stephanie” as Collaborative Cancer Narratives.Mary K. DeShazer - 2014 - Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 11 (4):445-454.
    Photographic representations of women living with or beyond breast cancer have gained prominence in recent decades. Postmillennial visual narratives are both documentary projects and dialogic sites of self-construction and reader-viewer witness. After a brief overview of 30 years of breast cancer photography, this essay analyzes a collaborative photo-documentary by Stephanie Byram and Charlee Brodsky, Knowing Stephanie , and a memorial photographic essay by Brodsky written ten years after Byram’s death, “Remembering Stephanie” . The ethics of representing women’s postsurgical (...) and opportunities for reader-viewers to engage in “productive looking” are the focal issues under consideration. (shrink)
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  28. Women and the Knife: Cosmetic Surgery and the Colonization of Women's Bodies.Kathryn Pauly Morgan - 1991 - Hypatia 6 (3):25 - 53.
    The paper identifies the phenomenal rise of increasingly invasive forms of elective cosmetic surgery targeted primarily at women and explores its significance in the context of contemporary biotechnology. A Foucauldian analysis of the significance of the normalization of technologized women's bodies is argued for. Three "Paradoxes of Choice" affecting women who "elect" cosmetic surgery are examined. Finally, two utopian feminist political responses are discussed: a Response of Refusal and a Response of Appropriation.
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  29. Neo-Confucian Body Techniques: Women's Bodies in Korea's Consumer Culture.K. I. M. Taeyon - 2003 - Body and Society 9:97-113.
  30.  28
    Opening Up Women’s Bodies: New Thoughts on the Old Practice of Dissection. [REVIEW]Lisa Featherstone - 2008 - Metascience 17 (2):311-313.
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  31. The commodification of women’s bodies in trafficking for prostitution and egg donation.Liliana Acero - 2009 - International Journal of Feminist Approaches to Bioethics 2 (1):25-32.
  32.  14
    Book Reviews : Bricolaging (Women's) Bodies: Kathy Davis Reshaping the Female Body: The Dilemma of Cosmetic Surgery New York and London: Routledge, 1995, 211 pp., ISBN 0-415-90632-6. Nelly Oudshoorn Beyond the Natural Body: An Archeology of Sex Hormones New York and London: Routledge, 1994, 195 pp., ISBN 0-415-09191-8. José Van Dyck Manufacturing Babies and Public Consent: Debating the New Reproductive Technologies. London: Macmillan, 1995, 238 pp., ISBN 0-333-62965-5. [REVIEW]Anna M. Lovell - 1996 - European Journal of Women's Studies 3 (3):319-323.
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  33.  20
    Perceptual Not Attitudinal Factors Predict the Accuracy of Estimating Other Women’s Bodies in Both Women With Anorexia Nervosa and Controls.Lucinda J. Gledhill, Hannah R. George & Martin J. Tovée - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10.
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  34.  27
    Redeeming Beauty? Christa and the Displacement of Women’s Bodies in Theological Aesthetic Discourses.Elisabeth Vasko - 2013 - Feminist Theology 21 (2):195-208.
    This article adopts Edwina Sandys’ Christa as a hermeneutical lens through which to expose new dimensions about the interplay between aesthetics and redemption in the Christian tradition. Contemporary theological aesthetic discourses have ignored ugliness and its causes, especially the patriarchal ways in which Christian tradition has been used to sanctify violence against women. The issue of gender injustice takes on a heightened significance in light of recent claims surrounding the beauty of the cross. As a subversive aesthetic feminist representation, Christa (...)
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  35.  17
    Embodied Motherhood: Women’s Feelings about Their Postpartum Bodies.Elena Neiterman & Bonnie Fox - 2015 - Gender and Society 29 (5):670-693.
    Based on in-depth interviews, this article examines a sample of 48 Canadian women’s feelings about their changed postpartum bodies, their sense of self, and the factors that affect both. Our findings suggest that understanding women’s postpartum feelings requires contextualizing them in the work of infant care and women’s life circumstances, as well as ideologies about mothering and feminine appearance. Motherhood afforded the women in this study a new appreciation of their bodies, and a positive embodied (...)
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  36.  55
    The Placental Microbiome: A New Site for Policing Women's Bodies.Saray Ayala & Lauren Freeman - 2016 - International Journal of Feminist Approaches to Bioethics 9 (1):121-148.
    This paper brings feminist public health ethics and feminist analytic tools to bear on mainstream medical research. Specifically, it uses these approaches to call attention to several problems associated with “The Placenta Harbors a Unique Microbiome,” a recent study published in Science Translational Medicine. We point out the potential negative consequences these problems have for both women’s health and their autonomy.Our paper has two parts. We begin by discussing the study, which examines the composition of the placental microbiome, that (...)
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  37.  10
    Re-imaginations of women’s theology for female bodies: A panacea for a future with hope among teen girls selling sex at Epworth Booster, Harare.Martin Mujinga - 2022 - HTS Theological Studies 78 (2):9.
    The perpetual decline of Zimbabwe’s socio-economic situation can be found in the country legalising prostitution, which it used to regard as an act of criminality. This legalisation promoted the trade from being an offense to a lifestyle and from being an act of immorality to a profession. Prostitutes were also advanced from being social outcasts to commercial sex workers. Although the law appeared to financially empower prostitutes, its negative impact is seen in the level it dehumanises teen girls as they (...)
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  38.  29
    “Diets Suck!” and Other Tales of Women's Bodies on the Web.Lisa Gerrard - 2000 - Kairos: A Journal of Rhetoric, Technology, and Pedagogy 5 (2).
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  39.  38
    Nietzsche and the Problem of Women’s Bodies.Jacqueline R. Scott - 1999 - International Studies in Philosophy 31 (3):65-75.
  40.  20
    A Genealogy of Women’s Ethical Bodies.Gail Weiss - 2018 - In Clara Fischer & Luna Dolezal (eds.), New Feminist Perspectives on Embodiment. London, New York: Palgrave MacMillan. pp. 17-35.
    This chapter offers a brief historical overview of the gendered mind/body dualism associated with the rationalist tradition, according to which women’s bodies have been viewed as a threat to reason and to ethics. Taking up critiques of this model offered by Beauvoir and Fanon, I maintain that the body of the Other makes an ethical claim upon us in the form of “bodily imperatives.” I conclude with a critical analysis of contemporary feminist ethics that seeks to move beyond (...)
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  41.  30
    Dreaded “Otherness”: Heteronormative Patrolling in Women’s Body Hair Rebellions.Breanne Fahs - 2011 - Gender and Society 25 (4):451-472.
    Research on bodies and sexualities has long debated ideas about choice, agency, and power, particularly as women conform to, or rebel against, traditional social scripts about femininity and heterosexuality. In this study, I have used responses from 34 college women who completed an extra credit assignment in a women’s studies class that asked them to reject social norms and grow out their leg and underarm hair for a period of 10 weeks. Responses reveal that women confronted direct and (...)
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  42.  41
    Women's birthing bodies and the law: unauthorised intimate examinations, power, and vulnerability.Camilla Pickles & Jonathan Herring (eds.) - 2020 - New York, NY: Hart Publishing, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing.
    This is the first book to unpack the legal and ethical issues surrounding unauthorised intimate examinations during labour. The book uses feminist, socio-legal and philosophical tools to explore the issues of power, vulnerability and autonomy. The collection challenges the perception that the law adequately addresses different manifestations of unauthorised medical touch through the lens of women's experiences of unauthorised vaginal examinations during labour. The book unearths several broader themes that are of huge significance to lawyers and healthcare professionals such as (...)
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  43.  70
    The Joy of Suffering: Nietzsche, Theodicy and women’s bodies.Lisa Brown - 2007 - South African Journal of Philosophy 26 (1):28-40.
    I use Nietzsche's work on theodicy to explore gendered valuation systems around women's bodies. The notion of theodicy provides a different entry point to questions of ideology, as it begins with an account of people's attempts to find meaning in their lives. Nietzsche traced humans' propensity to look for and create stories that give meaning to their lives, even when this meaning is one that may ultimately oppress them or celebrate something negative, such as suffering. For him it is (...)
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  44.  25
    Politics of the body, fear and ubuntu: Proposing an African women’s theology of disability.Sinenhlanhla S. Chisale - 2020 - HTS Theological Studies 76 (3).
    There is increasing research on the inclusion and exclusion of people with disabilities in African spaces, which are perpetuated by religious and cultural fear. Decision to shun or embrace people is defined by the politics of the body and influenced by the religion and culture of fear. In politics of the body, women are discriminated against because their bodies are often controlled and put under surveillance. Women with disabilities experience this discrimination more than their able-bodied counterparts and men with (...)
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  45.  19
    Chikako Takeshita, The Global Biopolitics of the IUD. How Science Constructs Contraceptive Users and Women’s Bodies.Cinzia Greco - 2013 - Clio 37:259-262.
    Cette étude de Chikako Takeshita détaille les différents usages du DIU (dispositif intra-utérin ou stérilet) depuis sa création dans les années 1960 jusqu’à nos jours. L’analyse s’appuie sur plusieurs sources : la littérature scientifique médicale, la recherche d’archives et l’examen des outils de communication utilisés par les firmes pharmaceutiques. Le livre se compose de six chapitres au fil desquels la chercheuse analyse l’histoire du DIU en tant que dispositif de biopouvoir pour le « Sud...
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  46.  21
    Book Reviews: The Politics of Women's Bodies: Sexuality, Appearance, and Behavior. Weitz, Rose (Ed.). (1998). USA: Oxford University Press. [REVIEW]Kathleen Welch - 2000 - Journal of Medical Humanities 21 (4):249-251.
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  47.  11
    Sex Trafficking, Reproductive Rights, and Sovereign Borders: A Transnational Struggle over Women’s Bodies.Diana Tietjens Meyers - 2018 - In Clara Fischer & Luna Dolezal (eds.), New Feminist Perspectives on Embodiment. London, New York: Palgrave MacMillan. pp. 167-182.
    The aim of this chapter is to draw attention to an overlooked dimension of sex trafficking—namely, its abuse of women’s reproductive rights; to diagnose a tension between international anti-trafficking and refugee law and US anti-trafficking and immigration law; and to show that US anti-trafficking and immigration law is enforcing a misguided conception of victims that denies recognition to agentic victims of human rights abuse. Although women who have been trafficked into sex work should be prime candidates for legal protection, (...)
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  48.  7
    The global biopolitics of the IUD: How science constructs contraceptive users and women’s bodies Chikako Takeshita. [REVIEW]Margaret Boulos - 2015 - Feminist Theory 16 (1):113-116.
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  49.  86
    Book review: Barbara Brook. The body at century's end: A review of feminist perspectives on the body London and new York: Longman, 1999; Gail Weiss and Honi Fern Haber. Perspectives on embodiment: The intersection of nature and culture and Jane arthurs and Jean Grimshaw. Women's bodies: Discipline and transgression. [REVIEW]Martina Reuter - 2004 - Hypatia 19 (2):160-169.
  50.  23
    Women’s Perceptions of Childbirth “Choices”: Competing Discourses of Motherhood, Sexuality, and Selflessness.Tiffany Boulton & Claudia Malacrida - 2012 - Gender and Society 26 (5):748-772.
    Women in North America have many childbirth options. However, they must make these choices within a complex culture of birthing discourse characterized by competing knowledges and claims regarding the “ideal birth” as medicalized, natural, or woman centered. We interviewed 21 childless women and 22 new mothers to explore their perceptions of choice and birthing. The women’s interviews indicated that their birthing choices are reflective of tensions embedded in normative femininity; conflicting ideas relating to purity, dignity, and the messiness of (...)
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