'I've grown fearful of any rustle behind me': defining anticipating discriminatory violence as violence [0.03%]
"'我一听到背后有风吹草动就会害怕": 将预期的歧视性暴力定义为一种暴力形式
Celeste E Orr,Alessia Mastrorillo,Nicholas Hrynyk
Celeste E Orr
Marginalised people fear and expect violence, often daily. This prompts us to ask, is anticipating violence a violence in and of itself? Asking and answering this question extends the feminist, critical race, violence and trauma studies pro...
Medicalisation, depoliticisation and reproductive stratification: lessons from Canada's Muskoka Initiative [0.03%]
医学化、非政治化与生殖式微:加拿大穆斯科卡倡议的教训
Jacqueline Potvin
Jacqueline Potvin
Based on critical discourse analysis of Canada's Muskoka Initiative (2010-15), this article outlines how medicalisation contributes to the depoliticisation and technocratisation of global maternal health, while reinforcing patterns of repro...
Transreal tracing: Queer-feminist speculations on disabled technologies [0.03%]
超越现实的痕迹:对残障技术的酷儿-女性主义猜想
Katta Spiel
Katta Spiel
In a world where technologies often serve to amplify the persistent rendering of disability as an undesired deficit, what we need are empowering utopias concerning bodies, disabilities and assistive technologies. Specifically, I use Barad's...
Charlotte Jones
Charlotte Jones
This article develops loneliness as a political and social justice issue by illustrating the harmful personal and social consequences of the medical jurisdiction over and constitution of variations in sex characteristics. Whilst connections...
More-than-human kinship against proximal loneliness: practising emergent multispecies care with a dog in a pandemic and beyond [0.03%]
超越人类的亲缘关系对抗近处的孤独:在大流行病及之后与狗实践新兴的跨物种关怀
Maythe Seung-Won Han
Maythe Seung-Won Han
Dogs are here to live with, not just to think with. In this autoethnographic essay, I share my experience of loneliness and more-than-human kinship while being in lockdown with my dog, Frank, in our small flat in Edinburgh due to the COVID-...
Hornstein, G. A.
Hornstein