This collection brings together leading feminist thinkers who examine the struggles for interpretive power which underlies international development. <ul> <li>Questions why the insights from years of feminist gender and development research are so often turned into ‘gender myths’ and ‘feminist fables’: women are more likely to care for the environment; are better at working together; are less corrupt; have a seemingly infinite capacity to survive</li> <li>Explores how bowdlerized and impoverished representations of gender relations have simultaneously come to be embedded in development policy and practice</li> <li>Traces the ways in which language and images of development are related to practice and provides a nuanced account of the politics of knowledge production</li> <li>Argues that struggles for interpretive power are not only important for our own sake, but also for the implications they have for women’s lives worldwide</li> <li>An informed analysis of how ‘gender’ has been transformed in its transfer into development policy and how many authors are now revisiting and reflecting on their earlier work</li> </ul>
Gender Myths and Feminist Fables
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The Struggle for Interpretive Power in Gender and Development
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