2000
DOI: 10.5565/rev/papers/v60n0.1037
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Political participation of Luso-African youth in Portugal: some hypothesis for the study of gender

Abstract: Dealing with cultural action and associative intervention of Luso-African youth in Portugal, I will draw some hypothesis about young women participation within the associative movement. I first describe the social and political framework that set the emergence of the immigrants' associative movement in order to focus on the ethnic mobilisation of Luso-African youth, linking cultural identity to their strategies of political participation (a concept used in a broader sense).

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Cited by 4 publications
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“…On this matter, the foundational work of Butler (1993) interrogated performativity practices, exploring the dualism between sex and gender, body materialisation as a dynamic of power, a social appropriation produced throughout the disidentification with regulatory norms, particularly on gender refusal, irony and mimicry (drag queens). The same discussion around gendered norms and artistic expression can be seen in the representation of queer and transgender bodies, to discuss, highlight and criticise gender binarism, particularly in contemporary arts, showing ambiguous, hybrid, collage and ambivalent bodies (Halberstam, 2005; Albuquerque, 2000).…”
Section: The Body Identity and Political Agencymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…On this matter, the foundational work of Butler (1993) interrogated performativity practices, exploring the dualism between sex and gender, body materialisation as a dynamic of power, a social appropriation produced throughout the disidentification with regulatory norms, particularly on gender refusal, irony and mimicry (drag queens). The same discussion around gendered norms and artistic expression can be seen in the representation of queer and transgender bodies, to discuss, highlight and criticise gender binarism, particularly in contemporary arts, showing ambiguous, hybrid, collage and ambivalent bodies (Halberstam, 2005; Albuquerque, 2000).…”
Section: The Body Identity and Political Agencymentioning
confidence: 99%