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The Family in Political Thought

University of Massachusetts Press, 1982 (1982)

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  1. The Public/private – The Imagined Boundary in the Imagined Nation/state/community: The Lebanese case.Suad Joseph - 1997 - Feminist Review 57 (1):73-92.
    The nation/state as an imaginative enterprise encompasses multiple imagined subnational boundaries. The ‘public/private’, I suggest, is a ‘purposeful fiction’ constitutive of the will to statehood. As such, its configurations are impacted upon by the institutions and forces competing with and within state-building enterprises. Proposing the terms government, non-government and domestic as analytical tools to demarcate discursive and material domains, I argue that, in Lebanon, the fluidity of boundaries among these spheres is constitutive of patriarchal connectivity, a form of patriarchal kinship (...)
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  • Care Work: Invisible Civic Engagement.Madonna Harrington Meyer & Pamela Herd - 2002 - Gender and Society 16 (5):665-688.
    Scholars who debate the cause of and solutions for the decline in civic engagement have suggested that Americans have increasingly withdrawn from community organizations, reducing their political activity such as voting and interest in the political world, and generally failing to place the common good over individual self-interest. Their analyses are steeped in a tradition that is largely gender blind and consequently ignores care work. We infuse feminist analyses of paid labor and citizenship, which emphasize the merits and burdens of (...)
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  • Black Women, Sexism and Racism: Black or Antiracist Feminism?Gemma Tang Nain - 1991 - Feminist Review 37 (1):1-22.
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