Foreword by Inderpal Grewal
Acknowledgments
Introduction by Wendy S. Hesford and Wendy Kozol
Part One: Human Rights, Trans/Nationalisms, and Cultures of
Security
1. Claiming Afghan Women: The Challenge of Human Rights Discourse
for Transnational Feminism by Amy Farrell and Patrice McDermott
2. The Boundaries of Terror: Feminism, Human Rights, and the
Politics of Global Crisis by Leela Fernandes
3. The Campaign for Fair Trials Abroad: Long-Distance Nationalism
and Post-Imperial Anxiety by Susan Koshy
Part Two: Human Rights and the Evidence of Experience
4. Autobiography's Wounds by Leigh Gilmore
5. Belated Narrating: "Grandmothers" Telling Stores of Forced
Sexual Servitude during World War II by Sidonie Smith
6. Kairos and the Geopolitical Rhetorics of Global Sex
Work and Video Advocacy by Wendy S. Hesford
7. Misrepresentations of Missing Women in the U.S. Press: The
Rhetorical Uses of Disgust, Pity, and Compassion by Arabella
Lyon
Part Three: Correspondences: Activist and "Official" Networks
8. Intensifications: Representing Gender and Sexuality at the UN
General Assembly Special Session on HIV/AIDS by Meredith
Raimondo
9. Human Rights, Feminism, and Transnational Labor Solidarity by
Mary Margaret Fonow
10. Feminist Strategic Rethinking of Human Rights Discourses in
Education by Jill Blackmore
11. Piercing the Veil by Mahavi Sunder
List of Contributors
Index
Wendy S. Hesford is an associate professor of English at Ohio State University where she teaches feminist rhetoric, autobiography, human-rights literature, and composition theory. Wendy Kozol is an associate professor of gender and women's studies at Oberlin College, where she teaches courses on feminist cultural studies.
Interdisciplinary in design and transnational in scope, this book
brings together some of the best new work in feminist scholarship
on human rights.
*professor and director of the Center for International Education
at the Universi*
Not a moment too soon, Just Advocacy? arrives to guide us in our
thinking about international human rights and the gender politics
of representation. Presenting a timely critique of the ways in
which global feminism constructs gendered subjects of aid, the
editors and contributors to this volume challenge us to recognize
the legacies of colonialism in the workings of governmental and
non-governmental organizations.
*associate professor of women & gender studies at the University of
California at*
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