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Recognition Struggles and Social Movements: Contested Identities, Agency and Power

Recognition Struggles and Social Movements: Contested Identities, Agency and Power

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Cambridge University Press
Edition: Illustrated, 11/27/2003
EAN 9780521829229, ISBN10: 0521829224

Hardcover, 352 pages, 22.9 x 15.2 x 2.4 cm
Language: English
Originally published in English

Recognition Struggles and Social Movements was the first book to look comparatively and cross-nationally at the dynamic interplay between those fighting for a fairer division of economic resources and those struggling for recognition and respect of group differences. Combining theory and empirical research, it decodes the moral grammar of recognition into real struggles of collective actors who contest social hierarchies in arenas of power - from the Roma in Hungary to the Travesti prostitutes in Brazil, from abortion discourse in the US and Germany to the translation of feminist texts from East and West. Looking through multiple mirrors of gender, race/ethnic and sexual identities, the authors dramatize the competition and conflicts among groups vying for recognition. Written by prominent scholars across disciplinary and geographical borders, this book broke ground in social movement studies confronting issues of power and governance, authenticity, and boundary making.

Preface
Notes on contributors
Introduction Barbara Hobson
Part I. Shifting Paradigms? Recognition and Redistribution
1. Rethinking recognition
overcoming displacement and reification in cultural politics Nancy Fraser
Part II. Frames and Claims
Authority and Voice
2. The gendering of governance and the governance of gender
abortion politics in Germany and the United States Myra Marx Ferree and William A. Gamson
3. Recognition struggles in universalistic and gender distinctive frames
Sweden and Ireland Barbara Hobson
4. Movements of feminism
the circulation of discourses about women Susan Gal
Part III. Competing Claims
Struggles in Dialogue
5. Contesting 'race' and gender in the European Union
a multi-layered recognition struggle for voice and visibility Fiona Williams
6. Woman, black, indigenous
recognition struggles in dialogue Marilyn Lake
7. U.S. women's suffrage through a multicultural lens
intersecting struggles of recognition Diane Sainsbury
8. Conflicting struggles for recognition
the Roma struggle in the face of women's recognition Júlia Szalai
Part IV. Authenticity
Who Speaks for Whom?
9. Scandalous acts
the politics of shame among Brazilian travesti prostitutes Don Kulick and Charles H. Klein
10. Mobilizing for recognition and redistribution on behalf of others? The case of mothers against drugs in Spain Celia Valiente
Part V. Epilogues
Recognition and the struggle for political voice Anna Phillips
'Reconstruction struggles' and process theories of social movements Carol Mueller
Notes
References
Index.