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- Volume 27, Issue 1, 2024
Tijdschrift voor Genderstudies - Volume 27, Issue 1, 2024
Volume 27, Issue 1, 2024
- Editorial
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- Articles
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Feminist tactics and methods in practice
More LessAbstractThe Second Feminist Wave in the Netherlands is often written about in terms of two large feminist groups, while from the 1980s onwards, the feminist movement was fragmented into various smaller, specialized groups. One of these small, specialized groups was Utrechtse Vrouwen voor Economische Zelfstandigheid (UVEZ). UVEZ focused on economic independence for women from the 1980s to the early 1990s, fitting within the development in the 1980s of the women’s movement paying attention to the financial position of women. In line with Chris Beasley’s assertion that feminist groups often pick and choose strategies from different strands of feminism, this article argues that UVEZ can be characterized neither as a liberal nor a radical feminist group, by investigating their internal organization and campaigning tactics.
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Rethinking sexualities in heritage spaces
More LessAbstractThis article discusses the potential of heritage spaces to interrogate sexualities in the context of emerging scholarly debates about, and professional practices of queerness and heritage. The discussion is theoretically contextualized at the intersection between heritage studies and activism, sexuality studies and queer theory. It revolves around the Dutch Pavilion at the 2022 Venice Biennale, showcasing melanie bonajo’s installation When the body says Yes, commissioned by the Mondriaan Fund. I discuss the artist’s work through the lenses of post-porn, eco-sexuality, and pleasure activism as conceptual frames and postures that complement ongoing discussions on queering heritage by providing broader representations of different sexualities in terms of modes of desire and pleasure. I will also highlight how these frames incorporate an anti-capitalist lens that speaks to contemporary pressing challenges, such as isolation and exclusionary models of intimacy. bonajo’s approach will emerge as providing renewed perspectives in relation to the debate surrounding identity labels and their limitations; a discussion that causes division even within LGBTQIA+ groups. I will reflect on my own interpretation of bonajo’s installation to present a critical analysis of the exhibition and its potential effects. As the exhibition clearly emphasizes a focus on embodiment as learning modality, my discussion concludes by highlighting some limitations of institutional heritage spaces, as they remain normative environments in relation to the potential to explore the erotic in sensorial ways.
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Burn-outcultuur, diversiteit en inclusie
By Sarah De MulAbstractThe term ‘burnout pandemic’ has increasingly been deployed in mainstream media and the public debate. If we read the newspapers, it seems that we are collectively tired. We all yearn for the pause button, and together desire our lives to be more peaceful and quiet. To what extent could burnout indeed be seen, not as a matter of individual mental vulnerability, but rather as an exhausted cultural condition we share? To what extent does an intersectional perspective on burnout narratives help us to understand the role of social differences within contemporary burnout culture? And to what extent could the narratives about burnout we tell ourselves potentially hold critical and creative possibilities and act as a catalyser for social change? These questions are addressed in the inaugural lecture I delivered on Friday 31 March 2023 at the Open Universiteit, of which this text is an edited and shortened version.
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Emancipation on thin ice
Authors: Michiel De Proost & Gily Coene
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Editorial
Authors: Sara de Jong, Rosalba Icaza, Rolando Vázquez & Sophie Withaeckx
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