The Scholar and Feminist Online 20.1
Fall 2024

Rage, Struggle, Freedom

Margo Okazawa-Rey and Elif Sarican

Contributions by Nagihan Akarsel (Jineolojî Academy), Electra B., Azza Basarudin, Loren Cahill. Chinese Artists and Organizers (CAO) Collective 离离草, Livia de Souza Vidal, J. D. Harlock, The International Women's Network Against Militarism (IWNAM), Iida Käyhkö, Bramsh Khan, Youree Kim, Arianne Napier-White, Şervîn Nûdem (Jineolojî Academy), Ximena Keogh Serrano, Loan Tran, Fadwa Tuqan, Helena Wacko, and the YVE Collective.

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The Scholar and Feminist Online 19.2
Fall 2023

Reproductive Injustice

The Editorial Board

Guest edited by the Editorial Board with contributors Dána-Ain Davis, Virginia R. Dominguez, Ugo F. Edu, Nessette Falu, Sarah Haley, Frances M. Howell, Janet Jakobsen, Kelly Marshall, Devika Maulik, Premilla Nadasen, Miriam Neptune, Cara Page, and Hakima Payne

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The Scholar and Feminist Online 19.1
Summer 2023

To Make Visible Everywhere: Our Bold, Beautiful, Aging Bodies

Gabri Christa and Sheril Antonio

In this special issue "To Make Visible," guest editors Gabri Christa and Sheril Antonio have curated a selection of essays, videos, interviews, and visual art by women of color on race, performance, embodiment, and aging.

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Book edited by Elizabeth Bernstein and Janet Jakobsen
2022

Paradoxes of Neoliberalism: Sex, Gender, and Possibilities for Justice

Edited by Elizabeth Bernstein and Janet Jakobsen

From the rise of far-right regimes to the tumult of the COVID-19 pandemic, recent years have brought global upheaval as well as the sedimentation of longstanding social inequalities. Analyzing the complexities of the current political moment in different geographic regions, this book addresses the paradoxical persistence of neoliberal policies and practices, in order to ground the pursuit of a more just world.

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The Scholar and Feminist Online 18.1
Fall/Winter 2022

Race-ing Queens

Mira Assaf Kafantaris, Treva B. Lindsey, and Sonja Drimmer

In this special issue, “Race-ing Queens,” Guest Editors Mira Assaf Kafantaris, Treva B. Lindsey, and Sonja Drimmer have curated a selection of essays looking transhistorically at queens, queenship, and queendom from the margins.

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Annual Report
2021-2022

Annual Report 2021-2022

Report on BCRW activities and accomplishments from 2021-2022.

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Annual Report
2020-2021

Annual Report 2020-2021

Report on BCRW accomplishments from 2020-2021.

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annual report

Scholar and Feminist Online 17.1
Summer 2021

Transnational Feminisms: Contexts, Topics, Forms

Attiya Ahmad and Catherine Sameh

This new issue of The Scholar and Feminist Online co-edited by Attiya Ahmad and Catherine Sameh emerged out of a 2014 conference held at Barnard College to mark the twentieth anniversary of Inderpal Grewal and Caren Kaplan’s seminal work, Scattered Hegemonies: Postmodernity and Transnational Feminist Practice.

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Archival exhibit curated by Eve Marie Kausch and Alex Volgyesi
2020

BCRW @ 50

Eve Marie Kausch and Alex Volgyesi

Documenting BCRW’s history in the context of Barnard College, the emergence of women's studies and ethnic studies as disciplines and women's resource centers as institutions, and in broader social movements for gender and sexual liberation, anti-racism and labor and working-class movements.

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Scholar and Feminist Online 16.2
Fall 2020

Undiminished Blackness: Zora Neale Hurston as Theory and Practice

Monica L. Miller and Tami Navarro

Edited by Monica L. Miller and Tami Navarro, this issue celebrates the work of Zora Neale Hurston and engages with scholarship made possible by her innovations in theory, method, and practice.

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Black Studies, Scholar and Feminist Online, Zora Neale Hurston

September 2020

Annual Report 2019-2020

Report on BCRW accomplishments from 2019-2020.

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2019-2020 annual report

Scholar and Feminist Online 16.1
Spring 2020

Caribbean Feminisms: Interventions in Scholarship, Art, and Activism across the Region

Tonya Haynes and Tami Navarro

Edited by Tonya Haynes and Tami Navarro, this issue offers multiple ways to engage with feminist thought and action in the Caribbean through prose, poetry, and personal reflection by artists, academics, and activists.

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Caribbean feminisms