Imperial Leather Race, Gender, and Sexuality in the Colonial Contest
Auteur : Mcclintock Anne
Imperial Leather chronicles the dangerous liaisons between gender, race and class that shaped British imperialism and its bloody dismantling. Spanning the century between Victorian Britain and the current struggle for power in South Africa, the book takes up the complex relationships between race and sexuality, fetishism and money, gender and violence, domesticity and the imperial market, and the gendering of nationalism within the zones of imperial and anti-imperial power.
I. Empire of the Home 1. The Lay of the Land 2. "Massa and Maids 3. Imperial Leather 4. Psychoanalysis, Race and Female Fetish II. Double Crossings 5. Soft-Soaping Empire 6. The White Family of Man 7. Olive Schreiner III. Dismantling the Master's House 8. The Scandal of Hybridity 9. "Azikwelwa" (We Will Not Ride) 10. No Longer in a Future Heading
Anne McClintock is an Associate Professor of English at Columbia University, and a SSRC-MacArthur Fellow. She is the author of monographs on Simone DeBeauvoir and Olive Schreiner, and has written for a number of publications on issues of gender and sexuality, including CriticalInquiry, Boundary 11, The Village Voice, and The New YorkTimes Book Review.
Date de parution : 09-1995
15.2x22.9 cm
Date de parution : 07-2015
15.2x22.9 cm
Disponible chez l'éditeur (délai d'approvisionnement : 14 jours).
Prix indicatif 223,58 €
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Mots-clés :
Lam Berts Bay; Soweto Poetry; black; Poppie Nongena; poetry; Soweto Poets; afrikaner; Charles Brockden Brown; nationalism; Om En; poets; Colonial Administration; poppie; Ali Accounts; nongena; Working Class Nurse; algerian; Enlightenm Ent; woman; Oral Memory; afrikaans; Lam Berts; Panoptical Time; Anachronistic Space; King Solomon’s Mines; Fetish Rituals; Imperial Leather; South African Domestic Worker; Fata Morgana; East Timor; Vice Versa; Female Fetishism; Black Poetry; Tem Porary; Oral History