
Contents
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Introduction Introduction
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Deploying and Resisting Dominant Notions of Womanhood Deploying and Resisting Dominant Notions of Womanhood
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(Re) Conceptualizing Women’s Approaches to Gender and Sexual Violence (Re) Conceptualizing Women’s Approaches to Gender and Sexual Violence
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Resisting Heteronormativity Resisting Heteronormativity
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Trans Inclusion and Exclusion: Marking the Boundaries of Womanhood Trans Inclusion and Exclusion: Marking the Boundaries of Womanhood
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What Is Gender Performance, and How Does Performance Influence Gender? What Is Gender Performance, and How Does Performance Influence Gender?
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Fluidity, Queerness, and the Move Away from “Woman”-Centered Politics Fluidity, Queerness, and the Move Away from “Woman”-Centered Politics
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Conclusion Conclusion
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Notes Notes
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References References
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21 Sexuality, Gender Identity, Fluidity, and Embodiment
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Published:10 May 2017
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Abstract
Social movement activists have frequently used a variety of embodied tactics to negotiate cultural conceptions of gender and sexuality, which are in constant flux. This chapter attends to the ways that new social formations of gender and sexuality—including the recent emphases on gender and sexual fluidity—have impacted the politics, goals, tactics, and identities of contemporary women’s movements. Incorporating queer, transgender, critical race, and disability studies, this chapter emphasizes the ways that women seeking to attain gender and sexual justice have used the body both as a site of everyday resistance against repressive gender and sexual norms and as a tool for performing overt political protests. It illustrates how gender and sexual fluidity have gained new traction within social movements and discusses the implications for conceptualizing women’s activism.
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