Citations:femonationalism

English citations of femonationalism

Noun

edit
2012 2017 2018 2020 2021
ME « 15th c. 16th c. 17th c. 18th c. 19th c. 20th c. 21st c.
  • 2012, Sara R. Farris, "Femonationalism and the 'Regular' Army of Labor Called Migrant Women", History of the Present, Volume 2, Number 2, Fall 2012, page 187:
    In similar ways, femonationalism describes the attempts of European right-wing parties, among others, to co-opt feminist ideals into anti-immigrant and anti-Islam campaigns.
  • 2017, Sara R. Farris, In the Name of Women's Rights: The Rise of Femonationalism, unnumbered page:
    The convergence producing femonationalism thus can be seen as the result of (and as producing) a fundamental tension and contradiction: that between the nonemancipatory forces of Islamophobia and racism on one side, and the emancipatory struggle against sexism and patriarchy, on the other.
  • 2017, Edna Bonhomme, "The Disturbing Rise of ‘Femonationalism", The Nation, 7 May 2019:
    Femonationalism thus operates from a place of cynicism, presenting itself as liberating Muslim women while doing the exact opposite.
  • 2018, Maja Sager & Diana Mulinari, "Safety for whom? Exploring femonationalism and care-racism in Sweden", Women's Studies International Forum, Volume 68, May-June 2018:
    As we understand it in the specific context of Swedish debates, we see femonationalism expressed in two different but interlinked forms: firstly, the appropriation of feminism by actors with a racist or fascist agenda, and secondly the lenience shown towards anti-immigration or racist sentiments by some feminists identified with narrow gender equality agendas.
  • 2020, Dina Bader & Véronique Mottier, "Femonationalism and populist politics: The case of the Swiss ban on female genital mutilation", Nations and Nationalism, Volume 26, Issue 3, July 2020:
    The case of Switzerland is of particular interest to furthering the understanding of femonationalism, we argue, because contrary to the case studies presented by these other authors, Switzerland was never a colonial state.
  • 2021, Chris Hancock, "‘Seeing like a city’, or ‘seeing like a state’ in a city? Paris, capital of femonationalism", Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space
  • 2021, Ladan Rahbari, "When gender turns right: racializing Islam and femonationalism in online political discourses in Belgium", Contemporary Politics, Volume 27, Issue 1 (2021):
    This study’s contribution to the studies on femonationalism is in showing how individuals who are members of the diasporic elite subscribe to multiple discourses of nationalism; in this case, Safai adheres as much to Flemish nationalism as she does to Persian-centric nationalism.