GenderTalks
06/04/2022
Next Monday we will be welcoming Dr. Hilkje Hänel and Prof. Dr. Kristina Lepold to a Panel on recognition theory and epistemic justice.
11.04, 18h (CEST)
All welcome!
Registration & more info links in the bio!
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09/12/2021
That’s today! Join us for this Panel, in which Moira Pérez and Sophie Grace Chappell will discuss on the idea of “safe spaces”.
All welcome!
+ more info & registration links in the bio!
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03/12/2021
Join us for this Panel, in which Moira Pérez and Sophie Grace Chappell will discuss on the idea of “safe spaces”. All welcome!
+ more info & registration links in the bio!
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18/10/2021
The term TERF (Trans-Exclusionary Radical Feminists) was coined in the mid-1980s to denote support (or lack of) for tr*******al women. But it is only more recently that this label - but more importantly what it stands for - has gained new life on social networks, in particular, due to the rise of those who refer to themselves as "gender-critical feminists".
In the latest essay published by Pikara Magazine and translated by GenderTalks, Gracia Trujillo and Moira Pérez draw attention to this movement that is leaning on feminism to emerge with increasing power worldwide.
Among other extremely relevant issues for the current debate on gender issues, they discuss the ideology behind the oppressive belief systems of which exclusionary feminist movements take part.
Read the full essay at gendertalks.com (link in bio > last entries)!
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01/07/2021
Today Prof. Dr. Anne Pollok will be at WIP talking about Jewish women and the Salon. At 6 pm (CEST) via ZOOM, all welcome!
Free attendance!
Registration: https://forms.gle/qNvkKRiZQFYymMTu9
More info and other events at: www.womeninphilosophy.com/
Today at 6pm (CEST) via ZOOM, all welcome!
Registrations: https://forms.gle/qNvkKRiZQFYymMTu9
16/04/2021
New entry:
Black Brazilian Women, Care Work and Covid-19, Larissa Margarido
One of the main effects of the pandemic caused by the New Coronavirus (Covid-19) worldwide was the disclosure and worsening of multiple dimensions of pre-existing inequalities. In Brazil, asymmetries of race, gender, and class – among many others – have been reinforced by old and new forms of social production and reproduction, affecting mainly Black women. In addition to social markers of difference affecting the position of these female professionals in the capitalist market, they also influence vulnerability factors for the infection and coping with Covid-19.
In this essay, Larissa Margarido seeks to outline the effects of the pandemic on the lives of Black Brazilian women who work in the care labor market.
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Read the complete essay at:
www.gendertalks.com/blackbrwomen-carework-cov19/
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