"Miglena Todorova's book deserves the attention of both scholars and political activists at a time of extraordinary violence against women's, queer, and racialized bodies in former socialist states and beyond." - Raia Apostolova, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences (<em>Aspasia</em>)

Unequal under Socialism examines the formation of racial, gender, and national identities and relations in the socialist state. With a specific focus on Bulgaria, a former socialist country in the Balkans, Miglena S. Todorova traces the intertwined local and global forces driving racialization, socialist state policies, and Eurocentric Marxist and Leninist ideologies, all of which led to valued and devalued categories of women. Roma women, Muslim women, ethnic Bulgarian women, sex workers, and female factory and office workers were among those marked by socialist authorities for prosperity, accommodation, violent reformation, or erasure.

Covering the period from the 1930s to the present and drawing upon original archival sources as well as a constellation of critical theories, Unequal under Socialism focuses on the lives of different women to articulate deep doubt about the capacity of socialism to sustain societies where all women prosper. Such doubt, the book suggests, is an under-recognized but important force shaping how women in former socialist countries have related to one another and to other women in the global North and South.

Les mer
Unequal under Socialism examines how and why different groups of women were not considered equal in so-called "good societies" revolving around socialist and communist principles and ideologies.

List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments

Introduction: Epistemology of Doubt

1. Race, Women, and Nation-Building

2. Socialist Racialism: Desired and Undesired Genres of Women and the Paradoxes of Socialism

3. Women’s Work: Gendered and Racialized Socialist State Governmentality

4. Second-Third World Women: Socialist State Feminisms and Internationalisms

5. Challenging the Modern-Postmodern Duality: Race, Socialist Masculinity, and Global American Culture

Conclusion: Postsocialism, Anti-Racism, and Transnational Feminisms

Notes
Bibliography
Index

Les mer
"Disguised as a compact historical survey of the Bulgarian intersections of race and gender in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, Miglena S. Todorova’s book is in fact a powerful, long-needed critical investigation into the current notions of state socialism and postsocialism, race and Eurocentrism, modernity and its forgotten gendered others, problematizing transnational, local, and diasporic optics in a powerful strive to capture the still unaddressed colonial side of the socialist modernity."
Les mer

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781487528416
Publisert
2021-09-06
Utgiver
University of Toronto Press
Vekt
320 gr
Høyde
229 mm
Bredde
152 mm
Dybde
13 mm
Aldersnivå
U, P, 05, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
218

Biografisk notat

Miglena S. Todorova is an associate professor in the Department of Social Justice Education and Director of the Centre for Media, Culture, and Education at the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education, University of Toronto.