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Gender, Citizenships and Subjectivities

ISBN: 978-1-405-10026-7

July 2002

Wiley-Blackwell

248 pages

Description
This volume explores the relationship of citizenship and gender across a range of regions, nations and historical time periods. At the heart of each case study is an exploration of how gender shaped citizenship as a claims-making activity, and how women, often aligned with immigrants and minorities, took a leading role in articulating these claims.
About the Author
Kathleen Canning is associate professor of History and Women's Studies at the University of Michigan. She is the author of Languages of Labor and Gender: Female Factory Work in Germany 1850-1914 (Cornell University Press, 1996) and is currently working on a new book, Embodied Citizenships: Gender and the Crisis of Nation in Weimar Germany. Sonya O. Rose is Professor of History, Sociology and Women's Studies at the University of Michigan. She is the author of Limited Livelihoods: Gender and Class in Nineteenth Century England (University of California Press, 1992) and co-editor with Laura L. Frader, of Gender and Class in Modern Europe (Cornell University Press, 1996). She has recently completed work on a new book, Which People's War? National Identity and Citizenship in World War II Britain (forthcoming).
Features

  • Explores the relationship of citizenship and gender across a range of regions, nations and historical time periods.



Acknowledges the accomplishments of feminist scholarship in explicating the gendered exclusions that were inherent in notions of citizenship and civil society at their inception.

8 case studies explore how gender shaped claims-making activity in the name of citizenship; and how women, often aligned with immigrants and minorities, took a leading role in articulating these claims.