2022
DOI: 10.1080/00130095.2022.2030215
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Sequined Styles, Intersectional Moves: Economic Geography, Let’s Dress Up!

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Cited by 2 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…Where there are attempts in these departments to transnationalise intersectionality, this work falls on the multiply marginalised bodies of Black women from the Global South; both intersectionality and transnationalism become ‘minoritised’ together in analogic ways, within institutions that interpret both intersectionality and transnationalism as work by and about the marginal. This logic works similarly in Geography, where transnationalised versions of intersectionality do the work of adding Black Feminist Geographies into the margins of existing sub-disciplines that are centred elsewhere (see, for example, Faria et al, 2022, in relation to Economic Geography). Such interventions can be immensely valuable analytically: Christian and Namaganda (2018), for example, draw strongly on geographical and Black Feminist approaches to construct an elegant structural analysis of how aid regimes and other structural instruments of global capital produce intersectional gendered or intersectional raced domestic workers in Uganda.…”
Section: In/secure Intersectionalitiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Where there are attempts in these departments to transnationalise intersectionality, this work falls on the multiply marginalised bodies of Black women from the Global South; both intersectionality and transnationalism become ‘minoritised’ together in analogic ways, within institutions that interpret both intersectionality and transnationalism as work by and about the marginal. This logic works similarly in Geography, where transnationalised versions of intersectionality do the work of adding Black Feminist Geographies into the margins of existing sub-disciplines that are centred elsewhere (see, for example, Faria et al, 2022, in relation to Economic Geography). Such interventions can be immensely valuable analytically: Christian and Namaganda (2018), for example, draw strongly on geographical and Black Feminist approaches to construct an elegant structural analysis of how aid regimes and other structural instruments of global capital produce intersectional gendered or intersectional raced domestic workers in Uganda.…”
Section: In/secure Intersectionalitiesmentioning
confidence: 99%