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Shattering Silence
A01=Begona Aretxaga
Activism
Ambivalence
Assassination
Author_Begona Aretxaga
Blanket protest
Bobby Sands
British Empire
Category=JBSF11
Category=JHM
Category=JPFN
Category=JPWG
Colonialism
Comrade
Counter-insurgency
Criminalization
Dirty protest
Disgust
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Exclusion
Femininity
Feminism
Feminism (international relations)
Feminist movement
Gender identity
Gender inequality
Gender role
Gerry Adams
Grief
Harassment
Household
Hunger strike
Ideology
Imprisonment
Indiana University Press
Internment
Intimidation
Irish nationalism
Irish republicanism
Legislation
Lower Falls (District Electoral Area)
Militarization
Mohanty
Mother
Narrative
Northern Ireland Civil Rights Association
Oppression
Penal Laws (Ireland)
Pluto Press
Political culture
Political party
Political prisoner
Political violence
Politician
Politics
Prison cell
Prostitution
Protestantism
Radicalization
Republicanism
Seamus Heaney
Sexism
Sexual harassment
Shipbuilding
Social Practice
Social reality
Social transformation
Subjectivity
Terrorism
The Troubles
Unemployment
University of Minnesota Press
Violence
Violence against women
War
Working class
Writing
Product details
- ISBN 9780691037547
- Weight: 340g
- Dimensions: 197 x 254mm
- Publication Date: 05 Oct 1997
- Publisher: Princeton University Press
- Publication City/Country: US
- Product Form: Paperback
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This book, the first feminist ethnography of the violence in Northern Ireland, is an analysis of a political conflict through the lens of gender. The case in point is the working-class Catholic resistance to British rule in Northern Ireland. During the 1970s women in Catholic/nationalist districts of Belfast organized themselves into street committees and led popular forms of resistance against the policies of the government of Northern Ireland and, after its demise, against those of the British. In the abundant literature on the conflict, however, the political tactics of nationalist women have passed virtually unnoticed. Begona Aretxaga argues here that these hitherto invisible practices were an integral part of the social dynamic of the conflict and had important implications for the broader organization of nationalist forms of resistance and gender relationships. Combining interpretative anthropology and poststructuralist feminist theory, Aretxaga contributes not only to anthropology and feminist studies but also to research on ethnic and social conflict by showing the gendered constitution of political violence.
She goes further than asserting that violence affects men and women differently by arguing that the manners in which violence is gendered are not fixed but constantly shifting, depending on the contingencies of history, social class, and ethnic identity. Thus any attempt at subverting gender inequality is necessarily colored by other dimensions of political experience.
Begoña Aretxaga is Assistant Professor of Anthropology at Harvard University.
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