Feminism and Hospitality
Gender in the Host/Guest Relationship
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Product details:
- Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing (UK)
- Date of Publication 14 August 2010
- Number of Volumes Hardback
- ISBN 9780739136270
- Binding Hardback
- No. of pages340 pages
- Size 240.54x162.31x27.686 mm
- Weight 669 g
- Language English 0
Categories
Long description:
Hospitality is something of a modern paradox. On the one hand, hospitality connotes a nicety or pleasantry easily undervalued as a ritual or formality devoid of epistemological or ethical content. On the other hand, the rise in international conflict and violence, the decline of civil speech, and the increased hostility toward immigrants points to the dire need for hospitable responses to mitigate tensions.
Hospitality represents a further paradox for feminism. Historically, women have been saddled with disproportionate responsibility for hospitality and have also been treated as unwelcome guests in so many arenas. For these reasons, feminists have good reason to be wary of addressing hospitality. Yet, feminist theory has taken the lead on developing ontological, epistemological, and ethical approaches to connectedness and relationality such that addressing hospitality appears to be an appropriate extrapolation. Feminism and Hospitality is a collection that negotiates amidst these intriguing paradoxes.
Feminism and Hospitality: Gender in the Host/Guest Relationship is the first collection of original works to bring a feminist analysis to issues and theories of personal, political, economic, and artistic hospitality. Furthermore, because feminist theorists have brought so much attention to the nature of human relationships, this volume employs a fresh analysis beyond the tradition in political theory.
Table of Contents:
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Part I: Theories of Feminism and Hospitality
Chapter 1: Hospitableness: A Neglected Virtue
Chapter 2:Su Casa es Mi Casa? Hospitality, Feminist Care Ethics, and Reciprocity
Chapter 3: Hospitality: Agency, Ethics, and Gender
Part II: Gender and Domestic Hospitality
Chapter 4: Shame in Feminine Hospitality
Chapter 5: Domestic Hospitality: Self, Other, and Community
Chapter 6: From Martha to Katrina, From Fear to Openness: Prospects for a Feminist Ethic of Hospitality
Part III: International Explorations of Feminism and Hospitality
Chapter 7: Welcoming Courtyards: Hospitality, Spirituality, and Gender
Chapter 8: Feminism, Hospitality, and Women in Exile
Chapter 9: Hospitality and European Muslims
Chapter 10: Caring Hospitality and Mexican 'Illegal' Immigrants
Part IV: Gender, Hospitality, and Commerce
Chapter 11: The Home/Work Interface in Family Hospitality Businesses: Gendered Dimensions and Constructions
Chapter 12: Hospitality in the Doctor's Office
Chapter 13: Providing Hospitality in Mid-Nineteenth Century West Virginia Cities
Part V: Feminism and Hospitality in Film and Literature
Chapter 14: Reading Levinas inThe Apartment
Chapter 15: Reading Feminist Hospitality in Plato's Timaeus: Possibilities for Education
Bibliography
Index
Contributor Biographies
Grandfather Tales
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