Key Features:
- Demonstrates how understandings of politics change when the experiences of men and women of diverse classes, races, and ethnicities are placed at the center of analysis.
- Explains why race-neutral and gender-neutral policies fail to eliminate entrenched inequalities.
- Shows how accredited methods in political science (and the social sciences more generally) mask state practices that create and sustain racial and gender inequality.
- Traces how mistaken notions of biological determinism have diverted attention from political processes of racialization, gendering, and sexualization.
- Argues that the intersecting categories of race, class, gender, and sexuality are essential to all subfields of political science if contemporary power is to be studied systematically.
Dieser Download kann aus rechtlichen Gründen nur mit Rechnungsadresse in A, B, BG, CY, CZ, D, DK, EW, E, FIN, F, GR, HR, H, IRL, I, LT, L, LR, M, NL, PL, P, R, S, SLO, SK ausgeliefert werden.
-- J. Ann Tickner, American University
This book is a manifesto for intersectionality as a process-based form of analysis and way of seeing the world. Hawkesworth disposes of the mystifications that constitute the 'standard' methodologies of political science, but goes well beyond mere critique. Her work sets in place a practical alternative to all-too-familiar methodological individualisms and raced-gendered nationalisms.
-- Terrell Carver, University of Bristol
Once again, Mary Hawkesworth has crafted a lucid and compelling account of racing-gendering processes and the material occlusions and power relations they produce in the United States. Embodied Power belongs in the canon of political science and should be required reading for all political scientists. It certainly will be for all of my future students.
-- Ange-Marie Hancock, University of Southern California








