
Intersectionality Theory Has Emerged Over The Past Thirty Years As A Way To Think About The Avenues By Which Inequalities (most Often Dealing With, But Not Limited To, Race, Gender, Class And Sexuality) Are Produced. Rather Than Seeing Such Categories As Signaling Distinct Identities That Can Be Adopted, Imposed Or Rejected, Intersectionality Theory Considers The Logic By Which Each Of These Categories Is Socially Constructed As Well As How They Operate Within The Diffusion Of Power Relations. In Other Words, Social And Political Power Are Conferred Through Categories Of Identity, And These Identities Bear Vastly Material Effects. Rather Than Look At Inequalities As A Relationship Between Those At The Center And Those On The Margins, Intersectionality Maps The Relative Ways In Which Identity Politics Create Power. Though Intersectionality Theory Has Emerged As A Highly Influential School Of Thought In Ethnic Studies, Gender Studies, Law, Political Science, Sociology And Psychology, No Scholarship To Date Exists On The Evolution Of The Theory. In The Absence Of A Comprehensive Intellectual History Of The Theory, It Is Often Discussed In Vague, Ahistorical Terms. And While Scholars Have Called For Greater Specificity And Attention To The Historical Foundations Of Intersectionality Theory, Their Idea Of The History To Be Included Is Generally Limited To The Particular Currents In The United States. This Book Seeks To Remedy The Vagueness And Murkiness Attributed To Intersectionality By Attending To The Historical, Geographical, And Cross-disciplinary Myopia Afflicting Current Intersectionality Scholarship. This Comprehensive Intellectual History Is An Agenda-setting Work For The Theory.
This book investigates the intellectual history and theoretical evolution of intersectionality to remedy the vague and ahistorical interpretations currently prevalent in academic discourse. Ange-Marie Hancock, a scholar in political science and gender studies, utilizes a cross-disciplinary framework to examine how categories of identity—such as race, gender, class, and sexuality—function as mechanisms for the distribution of social and political power. By moving beyond the binary of center versus margin, the author provides a rigorous analysis of how these power relations are constructed and maintained across different geographical and historical contexts.
What You Will Find
Experts recognize this work as a critical intervention in the field, providing much-needed clarity to a frequently misunderstood theoretical framework. Scholars and students alike value the text for its ability to synthesize complex power dynamics into a coherent historical narrative.
Page Count:
272
Publication Date:
2015-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0199370389
ISBN-13:
9780199370382
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