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  1. Re-Framing Europe: En-gendered Racisms, Ethnicities and Nationalisms in Contemporary Western Europe.Avtar Brah - 1993 - Feminist Review 45 (1):9-29.
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  • Activism, Imagination and Writing: Avtar Brah Reflects on her Life and Work with Les Back.Avtar Brah & Les Back - 2012 - Feminist Review 100 (1):39-51.
    Avtar Brah (AB) was interviewed by Les Back (LB) on 3 July 2009 at a colloquium held to mark her retirement where, inter alia, her work was discussed. The interview is a reflection on her politics, activism and scholarship. It touches on some key moments of her life.
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  • The Scent of Memory: Strangers, Our Own, and Others.Avtar Brah - 1999 - Feminist Review 61 (1):4-26.
    Using, as a point of departure, Tim Lott's recent autobiography where he attempts to make sense of his mother's suicide of 1988 through a reconstruction of his family genealogy, this article tries to map the production of gendered, classed, and racialized subjects and subjectivity in west London. It addresses the tension between Lott's discourse of his own white working-class boyhood during the 1970s where questions of ‘race’ are all but absent, and the racialized ‘commonsense’ that pervades the interviews with other (...)
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  • English Girls and the International Dimensions of British Citizenship in the 1940s.Penny Tinkler - 2001 - European Journal of Women's Studies 8 (1):103-126.
    Citizenship has traditionally been equated with borders and boundaries and, in particular, membership of a nation-state. Motivated by recent interest in the crossing of boundaries and processes of inclusion which operate across a common basis such as the nation-state, this article explores the ways in which international relations were implicitly and explicitly embedded in constructions of British citizenship in the 1940s. Focusing on representations of English girls in literature relating to the education and leisure of girls, this article identifies and (...)
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  • Home and Away: Maps of Territorial and Personal Expansion 1860–97.Caroline Knowles - 2000 - European Journal of Women's Studies 7 (3):263-280.
    This article conceptualizes the British Empire as a spatial arrangement created and sustained in the everyday activities of women. Focusing on the work of Jane Waterston – a missionary and doctor working in South Africa – and Mary Kingsley – a traveller and political lobbyist – it argues that women played an important part in fabricating the social relationships and practical activities of empire in their daily lives. Women also contributed to the spatial configuration of empire in their journeys back (...)
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  • Uning legacies: White matters of memory in portraits of ‘our princess’.Ruby C. Tapia - 2001 - Cultural Values 5 (2):261-287.
    This article analyzes ‘commemorative’ images of Diana Spencer for how they invoke tropes of charity and sympathy to produce racialized mediations of history, memory, motherhood and US national identity. Drawing from cultural theory that establishes technologies of memory and forgetting as material forces, this discussion illumines how images of Diana appearing in such popular US magazines as People and Life incorporate visual scripts of race and sentiment that have historically demarcated the relative social value(s) of maternity and reproduction. Understanding visual (...)
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  • Affective Dynamics of Colonial Reform and Modernisation in Antigua, 1815–1835.Sue Thomas - 2013 - Feminist Review 104 (1):24-41.
    In 1815, two benevolent organizations commenced operation in Antigua, the Female Refuge Society based in English Harbour and the Distressed Females’ Friend Society based in St John's. The driving force behind the establishment of the Female Refuge Society, on which the Distressed Females’ Friend Society was modelled, was Anne Hart Gilbert (1768–1834), the earliest known published African-Caribbean woman writer, the agent of the Female Refuge Society. The organizations were run on principle by women and the executive committees were multi-racial. They (...)
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  • Citizens of their World: Australian Feminism and Indigenous Rights in the International Context, 1920s and 1930s.Fiona Paisley - 1998 - Feminist Review 58 (1):66-84.
    Inter-war Australia saw the emergence of a feminist campaign for indigenous rights. Led by women activists who were members of various key Australian women's organizations affiliated with the British Commonwealth League, this campaign proposed a revitalized White Australia as a progressive force towards improving ‘world’ race relations. Drawing upon League of Nations conventions and the increasing role for the Dominions within the British Commonwealth, these women claimed to speak on behalf of Australian Aborigines in asserting their right to reparation as (...)
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  • Gendering Markets, Gendering Food: Women, Law and Markets in the New York City Food System, 1800–1840.Jeremy Fisher - 2017 - Feminist Review 117 (1):97-112.
    The history of market regulations provides an important perspective on the gendering of systems of food within the evolution of urban economies. This article addresses an important and distinctive period in this process, when New York shifted away from colonial and English-derived institutions in the first four decades of the nineteenth century. The legal status of women was unsettled during this time, introducing uncertainty into women's economic activities. New York City's public marketplaces were carefully regulated through a network of ancient (...)
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  • Social Justice and Modern Capitalism: Historiographical Problems, Theoretical Perspectives.Mark Bevir & Frank Trentmann - 2001 - The European Legacy 6 (2):141-158.
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