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[ecrea] New Book: Gender and Violence in Spanish Culture
Thu Jan 25 21:58:57 GMT 2018
New Book:/.Gender and Violence in Spanish Culture./ /From Vulnerability
to Accountability /(Peter Lang). Editors María José Gámez Fuentes
(Universitat Jaume I, Spain) and Rebeca Maseda García (University of
Alaska Anchorage) –https://www.peterlang.com/view/product/79959?format=EPDF
We are delighted to share with you the first comprehensive study in
English language on the politics of configuration of gender violence in
Spain. The chapters analyse the complex intersections between cultural
representations (in media, art, film, press, internet, etc.), civil
society, activism, state discourse and theory. Thus, the volume, on the
one hand, enables to trace the chiaroscuros of how the issue has been
framed (by the media and the state) in a country such as Spain (praised
in the 2010 UN Handbook for Legislation on Violence Against Women for
its advanced approach), and, on the other, offers a nuanced panorama of
representational initiatives that subvert the normative framework of
recognition of victims. As a result, the reader can find perspectives
that re-signify vulnerability and frame accountability within the
representational tradition, the community, and the state.
*Contents:*
The Configuration of Gender Violence: A Matrix to Be Re-Loaded, María
José Gámez Fuentes and Rebeca Maseda García
Part One: THEORY AND POLITICS
Chapter 1: To Conceptualize Is to Politicize: Why Spain Has Acted as
Pioneer Regarding “Gender Violence”, Ana de Miguel Álvarez
Chapter 2: In the Wake of Ana Orantes. For an Ethical Representation of
Violence Against Women, Juana Gallego
Chapter 3: Silenced Voices: Prostitutes, Lesbians and “Bad Women” in
Spanish Public Policies on Gender Violence, Emma Gómez Nicolau
Part Two: ACTIVISM AND ASSOCIATIONS
Chapter 4: Tactical Media and Activism Against Gender-Based Violence:
Fetishization and Counterhegemonic Frameworks of Recognition, Sonia
Núñez Puente
Chapter 5: Feminist Activism and the Role of Memory in Revisiting the
Discourse on Gender Violence in Spain, Laura Castillo Mateu
Chapter 6: Dialogues Among Diverse Women: Transforming Established
Hegemonic Narratives in Associative Initiatives, Lídia Puigvert and
Cristina Pulido
Part Three: CULTURAL PRODUCTION
Chapter 7: Narrative Representations of Gendered Violence and Women’s
Resistance in Francoist Spain: Dulce Chacón’s /La voz dormida/ (2002)
and Almudena Grandes’s/Inés y la alegría/ (2010), Sarah Leggott
Chapter 8: From the /Rape of Europa/ to Art Against Gender Violence in
Spanish Culture, Marián López Fernández Cao and Juan Carlos Gauli Pérez
Chapter 9: Homophobia, Ethical Witnessing and the Matrix of Gendered
Violence: Issues of Intersectionality in Luppi/Hornos’s /Pasos/, Alfredo
Martinez-Expósito
Chapter 10: /Ella(s)/: Resisting Victimhood, Unveiling Institutional
Violence in Docufiction, Vera Burgos-Hernández
Chapter 11: /Carmina o revienta/and /Carmina y amen/: Female
Transgressions of Victimhood in Spanish Popular Cinema, María Castejón
Leorza and Rebeca Maseda García
No more Victims: Changing the Script, Rebeca Maseda García and María
José Gámez Fuentes
*Advance praise for **/Gender and Violence in Spanish Culture/*
<https://www.peterlang.com/view/product/79959>
—Athena Athanasiou, Professor of Social Anthropology and Gender Studies,
Panteion University, Greece; Co-author with Judith Butler of
/Dispossession: The Performative in the Political/
“This multivocal collection offers a nuanced account of the social
rituals of normalization that set the conditions of gender violence and
make it possible, ‘ordinary,’ and ultimately silenced. In delving into
the intricacies of normative gender violence, the book interrogates the
discursive matrices of gender and violence, as well as of the entrenched
construction of gender-and-violence, including female victimhood and the
paternalistic snares of recognition. Locally grounded and
self-consciously situated, it powerfully reconsiders the current
critical field of gender violence/power and its epistemological premises
by suggesting new feminist conceptions (at once theoretical and
political) of transformative critique and responsibility.”
—Chris Perriam, Professor of Hispanic Studies, University of Manchester,
United Kingdom; Member of the Editorial Collective of the Journal of
Spanish Cultural Studies and of the Editorial Boards of the Bulletin of
Hispanic Studies, Studies in Spanish & Latin American
Cinemas and Contemporary Hispanic and Lusophone Cultures
“This collection builds an arresting account of the configuration of
gender violence in modern Spanish contexts, but it also proposes a
conceptual reconfiguration. Gender violence and reactions to it are
opened up from a series of disciplinary perspectives, acutely drawn
together by the editors in an exemplary introduction. Activism,
creativity, genuinely critical theory, and a progressive, often queered
feminist politics traverse the collection. With the majority of the
research originally conducted through the medium of Spanish and focusing
on crucial case studies and sites of resistance in Spain, the collection
brings to the English-speaking scholarly world new and exceptionally
significant material that would otherwise be less well known.”
Thank you.
**
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