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 The Politics of EverybodyFeminism, Queer Theory and Marxism at the Intersection
Lewis, HollyPublisher:  Zed Books Year Published:  2015
 Pages:  272pp   Price:  38.82   ISBN:  978-1783602872
 Resource Type:  Book
 
 Holly explores the concepts of 'man', 'woman', and 'other' in the present political context. The book also attempts to reconcile queer theory and Marxist analysis.
 
 Abstract:
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 From the Publisher:
 
 Its commonly understood within the academy that the terms man, woman, and other are socially constructed, and that their meanings are maintained by the current political order. But few thinkers have attempted to reconcile that knowledge -- which is rooted in Marxism -- with queer theory. The few who have, meanwhile, usually attempt to do so through issues of libidinal desire and sexual expression.
 
 In The Politics of Everybody, Holly Lewis argues powerfully that the emphasis on desire, though seemingly innocuous, is actually symptomatic of neoliberal habits of thought, and consequently, is responsible for a continued focus on the limited politics of identity. Instead, Lewis shows, we should look to the arena of body production, categorization, and exclusion; only through such a reorientation can we create a politics of liberation that is truly inclusive and grounded in lived experience.
 
 
 Table of Contents
 
 Introduction
 I. The Politics of Everybody
 II. Communitarian Ideals and Culture Wars
 III. How is Every Body Sorted?
 
 Chapter 1: Terms of the Debate
 I. Debates in Western Gender Politics
 II. What is Capitalism?
 III. Philosophy and the Marxian Roots of Queer Political Thought
 IV. Conclusion to Chapter One
 
 Chapter 2: Marxism and Gender
 I. Don't be vulgar...
 II. From the Woman Question to the Gender Question
 II. Marxism at the Center and the Periphery IV. Marx on Women
 V. Marx on Gender and Labor
 VI. The Major Works: Marx's 'Ethnological Notebooks' and Engels' 'Origin of the Family, Private Property, and the State'.
 VII. Early Marxist and Socialist Feminism
 III. Theories of Social Reproduction
 IX. Race and Social Reproduction
 X. Sexism, Marxism, and The Second Wave
 
 Chapter 3: Queer Politics and the Possibilities of a Queer/Trans Marxism
 I. Beyond Idealist Models of Oppression
 II. Ideology and Repetition: Race
 III. Ideology and Repetition: Gender
 IV. Why Class is Not a Moral Category
 V. The Rise of Queer Politics in the Mid to Late 20th Century
 VI. Marxist Critiques of Queer Theory
 VII. Beyond Homonormativity and Homonationalism
 VIII. The Spinning Compass of American Queer Politics
 IX. Towards an Internationalist Queer Marxism part one: Local and Global Knowledges
 X. Towards an Internationalist Queer Marxism, part two: the Marxist Critique of the Postcolonialism
 
 Conclusions
 I. Solidarity is not Community
 II. Ten Axioms Towards a Queer Marxist Future
 
 
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