¿Una historia de solidaridad? Explorando las redes sino-nórdicas en los Estudios de Género

Autores/as

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1344/jnmr.v10i.49356

Palabras clave:

Red de Estudios de Género sino-nórdicos, Solidaridad, Feminismo Transnacional

Resumen

Aquest article presenta la Xarxa Sinó-Nòrdica d'Estudis de Gènere, fundada en 2002 i que, des de llavors, ha exercit un paper important en la configuració de la recerca feminista i la confluència d'activismes entre la Xina i els països nòrdics. No obstant això, la història i les pràctiques d'aquesta xarxa han rebut poca atenció en els estudis entorn de les xarxes transnacionals de solidaritat feminista. L'objectiu d'aquest article és doble. En primer lloc, analitzem la xarxa utilitzant enfocaments històrics i autoetnográficos, i tracem una genealogia de la producció de coneixement feminista que se situa en la intersecció dels contextos xinès i nòrdic. En segon lloc, llegim la xarxa a través de la solidaritat, al mateix temps que ens comprometem críticament amb els paràmetres que la defineixen. Com mostrarem, encara que la solidaritat s'ha associat cada vegada més a les orientacions polítiques i ètiques del feminisme transnacional, el cas de la xarxa sinó-nòrdica d'estudis de gènere obliga a repensar com i per què s'utilitza i es critica el terme. La complexa relació entre les relacions interpersonals i el desequilibri de poder entre les diferents institucions i sistemes de finançament posa en dubte l'estricta divisió entre el col·lectiu e l'individual que és part del teixit de gran part del debat sobre la solidaritat feminista. Més enllà de resultar en una bona pràctica de solidaritat feminista, aquest article sosté que la Xarxa Sinó-Nòrdica d'Estudis de Gènere ofereix importants perspectives sobre la pràctica de la solidaritat fins i tot en la seva aparent absència.

Descargas

Los datos de descargas todavía no están disponibles.

Biografía del autor/a

Xin Liu, Turku Institute for Advanced Studies, Finland; Karlstad University, Sweden

Liu Xin is a Collegium Fellow at the Turku Institute for Advanced Studies and a Senior Lecturer in Gender Studies at Karlstad University. She is the co-author (with Adi Kuntsman) of the forthcoming monograph, Digital Technologies, Smart Cities and The Environment: In the Ruins of Broken Promises, published by Bristol University Press.  She has co-edited books and peer-reviewed special issues on a range of topics, including digital politics, technology and the environment, sexualities and critiques of capital. She serves as the co-editor of the Digital Materialities and Sustainable Futures book series, published by Emerald Press, alongside Adi Kuntsman and Erinma Ochu.

Dušica Ristivojević, University of Helsinki, Finland

Dušica Ristivojević is a senior researcher affiliated with the University of Helsinki since 2016. Her research focuses on a longue durée China’s global interactions and international politics, media, and social organizing in and out of China. She is finalizing her book manuscript on transnational connections of Chinese socio-political movements and follows China’s presence in Europe’s Eastern peripheries, especially its investments in dirty industries and digital technologies.

 

Yan Zhao, Faculty of Social Science, Nord University, Norway

Yan Zhao is professor of sociology at Nord University, Norway. Zhao’s research area includes migration, health and welfare, aging and care, transnational adoption, sociology of family. She has also theoretical interests in feminist theories, transnationalism, and postcolonial theories. Her recent publications include one book chapter and one article on migration of Chinese older parents in relation to the family-based welfare regime in China, two articles and one book chapter on transnational/transcontextual learning in international social work education, and one book chapter on “health party” as a method to improve health literacy of migrant women in Norway.

Citas

“Evaluations by Participants.” (2005). Internal document.

Allen, Amy (1999). The Power of Feminist Theory: Domination, Resistance, Solidarity. Westview Press.

Andsersen, Nina T. (2015). “I Don’t Do Theory – I Do Concept-Work”, An Interview with Aihwa Ong. Kvinder, Køn & Forskning, 24(1). https://doi.org/10.7146/kkf.v24i1.28509

Bartky, Sandra L. (2002). Sympathy and Solidarity and Other Essays. Rowman & Littlefield.

Berg, Anne-Jorunn (2008). Silence and Articulation – Whiteness, Racialization and Feminist Memory Work, NORA – Nordic Journal of Feminist and Gender Research, 16(4), 213–227. https://doi.org/10.1080/08038740802446492

Deshpande, Satish (2009). The Practice of Social Theory and the Politics of Location, Economic and Political Weekly, 44(10), 40–46.

Milwertz, Cecilia (2005). “Oplysninger til Database Vedr. Projekt 91230,” Internal document. February 25. P.2.

Milwertz, Cecilia (2019). “Nordic China Studies Researchers: Archive of Oral History Interviews,” pp. 33–34. https://blogs.helsinki.fi/chinanordic/denmark/.

Dean, Jodi (1996). Solidarity of Strangers: Feminism After Identity Politics. University of California Press.

Elomäki, Anna (2012). Feminist Political Togetherness: Rethinking the Collective Dimension of Feminist Politics. Academic Dissertation. University of Helsinki.

Fraser, Heather, and Michell, Dee (2015). Feminist memory work in action: Method and practicalities, Qualitative Social Work, 14(3), 321–337. https://doi.org/10.1177/1473325014539374

Hemmings, Clare (2012). Affective solidarity: Feminist reflexivity and political transformation. Feminist Theory, 13(2), 147–161.

hooks, bell (1986). Sisterhood: Political Solidarity Between Women, Feminist Review, 23(2), 125–138. https://doi.org/10.1057/fr.1986.25

Kerner, Ina (2018) Solidarity across Difference Lines, Social Politics: International Studies in Gender, State & Society, 25(1), 44–49. https://doi.org/10.1093/sp/jxy004

Littler, Jo, and Catherine Rottenberg (2021). Feminist solidarities: Theoretical and practical complexities, Gender, Work and Organization, 28(3), 864–877.

Martinsson, Lena, and Diana Mulinari (2018). “Introduction – Transnational Feminism: A Working Agenda.” In Dreaming Global Change, Doing Local Feminisms. Visions of Feminism, Global North/South Encounters, Conversations and Disagreements, edited by Lena Martinsson and Diana Mulinari. Routledge.

Mohanty, Chandra T. (2003a). Feminism without Borders: Decolonizing Theory, Practicing Solidarity. Duke University Press.

Mohanty, Chandra T. (2003b). “Under Western Eyes” Revisited: Feminist Solidarity through Anticapitalist Struggles, Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society, 28(2): 499–535.

Ong, Aihwa (2011). Gender Justice In Southeast Asia: Situated Ethics, NGOs, and Bio-welfare, HAWWA – Journal of women of the Middle East and the Islamic World 9, 26–48.

Rai, Shirin M. (2018). The Good Life and the Bad: Dialectics of Solidarity. Social Politics: International Studies, Gender, State & Society, 25(1), 1–19.

Stoltz, Pauline, Mulinari, Diana, Keskinen, Suvi. (2021). “Contextualising Feminisms in the Nordic Region: Neoliberalism, Nationalism, and Decolonial Critique.” In Feminisms in the Nordic Region: Neoliberalism, Nationalism and Decolonial Critique, edited by Suvi Keskinen, Pauline Stoltz and Diana Mulinari. Palgrave Macmillan.

The First Nordic-China Women & Gender Studies Conference: Re-Negotiating the Politics of the Public and the Private – Gender and Politics in China and the Nordic Countries. (2002). Report for NIAS. Internal document.

Wickström, Alice, Rebecca W. B. Lund, Susan Meriläinen, Siri Ø. Sørensen, Sheena J. Vachhani, Alison Pullen (2021). Feminist Solidarity: Practices, Politics and Possibilities, Gender, Work & Organization 28(3), 857–863.

Yoken, Hannah K. (2022). “Women Against the EEC!”: Limits of Transnational Feminist Solidarity, NORA – Nordic Journal of Feminist and Gender Research 30(1), 35–47.

Zerilli, Linda (2005). Feminism and the Abyss of Freedom. The University of Chicago Press.

Descargas

Publicado

2025-02-05

Número

Sección

Matters of Solidarity