Gender and Sexuality in 1968: Transformative Politics in the Cultural Imagination (Palgrave, October 2009) locates sixties movements in a broad arena marked by global connections.. The collection attempts to de-center privileged movements at metropoles (such as Paris, Chicago, and Berkeley) by mapping out the ideological and discursive ties between these celebrated movements and ones in the Czech Republic, Mexico, and Cuba in addressing race, imperialism, colonialism, labor, sexuality, and militarism. Bringing together literary and film critics, historians, and anthropologists working on sites in Europe, Africa, and the Americas, the volume’s focus on gender and sexuality offers new understandings of a thoroughly transnational 1968.

 

 

" /> Gender and Sexuality in 1968: Transformative Politics in the Cultural Imagination (Palgrave, October 2009) locates sixties movements in a broad arena marked by global connections.. The collection attempts to de-center privileged movements at metropoles (such as Paris, Chicago, and Berkeley) by mapping out the ideological and discursive ties between these celebrated movements and ones in the Czech Republic, Mexico, and Cuba in addressing race, imperialism, colonialism, labor, sexuality, and militarism. Bringing together literary and film critics, historians, and anthropologists working on sites in Europe, Africa, and the Americas, the volume’s focus on gender and sexuality offers new understandings of a thoroughly transnational 1968.

 

 

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The Nation Magazine – The Nation 2010 Online Auction
Auction Ends: Dec 10, 2010 11:59 PM EST

Books

Autographed Copy of Gender and Sexuality in 1968

Item Number
245
Estimated Value
60 USD
Sold
55 USD to RCLadendorf
Number of Bids
6  -  Bid History

Item Description

Gender and Sexuality in 1968: Transformative Politics in the Cultural Imagination (Palgrave, October 2009) locates sixties movements in a broad arena marked by global connections.. The collection attempts to de-center privileged movements at metropoles (such as Paris, Chicago, and Berkeley) by mapping out the ideological and discursive ties between these celebrated movements and ones in the Czech Republic, Mexico, and Cuba in addressing race, imperialism, colonialism, labor, sexuality, and militarism. Bringing together literary and film critics, historians, and anthropologists working on sites in Europe, Africa, and the Americas, the volume’s focus on gender and sexuality offers new understandings of a thoroughly transnational 1968.

 

 

Item Special Note

This is a signed copy by the two editors.

Donated By:

Deborah Cohen