Rewriting the Victim: Dramatization as Research in Thailand's Anti-Trafficking Movement: Oxford Studies in Gender and International Relations
Autor Erin M. Kamleren Limba Engleză Hardback – 11 apr 2019
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780190840099
ISBN-10: 0190840099
Pagini: 304
Dimensiuni: 236 x 157 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.54 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Seria Oxford Studies in Gender and International Relations
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0190840099
Pagini: 304
Dimensiuni: 236 x 157 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.54 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Seria Oxford Studies in Gender and International Relations
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
Her book exudes innovative interdisciplinarity, brilliantly deconstructing the chimerical binaries that engulf trafficking discourse while prodding policymakers to abandon 'ideologically based policies' (p. 99) in favour of holistic, evidence-based solutions
Erin Kamler has truly earned her stripes as a human rights researcher. Here she brings her other hat-as a writer, producer, and performer of theater-to challenging us, empathetically but insistently, to do our work differently and do it better. Her unpeeling of the narrative of the poor trafficking victim in need of rescue by white saviours provides an invaluable antidote to the paternalism and moralizing behind too many anti-trafficking efforts.
Erin Kamler has written an ambitious path-breaking book that builds bridges between the humanities and social sciences, migrant women's embodiments and subjectivities, abolitionist and pro-sex work approaches, theory and policy/practice. Rewriting the Victim will make you reconsider what you think you already know of anti -trafficking research, policies, advocacies, and their ramifications.
Erin Kamler has given us a detailed road map for joining up participatory research, musical theater performance, and dialogues of reconciliation in polarized communities-a much needed process for challenging coloniality, NGO savior complexes, and Western-modernist fantasies of superiority. This beautifully written book is a primer for the work of decoloniality and liberation from the frontlines of international conflict.
Critique conventional understandings of sex trafficking in Southeast Asia-and the global policy agenda meant to address it. Turn your critique into a musical, stage it in Chiang Mai, and analyse the audience reactions. Erin Kamler's remarkable book is a compelling piece of research that shares the stage with an extraordinary theatrical performance, breaking down the barriers between academia, development practice, and the arts. It will change the way you think and feel about what you do.
Erin Kamler is remarkably creative-not only in the art she produces, but in how she synthesizes activism, research, scholarship, and art. This book presents an exciting new paradigm of collective research methodology that challenges our existing, confining categories of refugees and aid workers, victims and traffickers, 'good guys' and 'bad guys,' with the potential to dislodge accepted narratives that too often silence the nuanced voices of communities we study and engage with.
Erin Kamler has truly earned her stripes as a human rights researcher. Here she brings her other hat-as a writer, producer, and performer of theater-to challenging us, empathetically but insistently, to do our work differently and do it better. Her unpeeling of the narrative of the poor trafficking victim in need of rescue by white saviours provides an invaluable antidote to the paternalism and moralizing behind too many anti-trafficking efforts.
Erin Kamler has written an ambitious path-breaking book that builds bridges between the humanities and social sciences, migrant women's embodiments and subjectivities, abolitionist and pro-sex work approaches, theory and policy/practice. Rewriting the Victim will make you reconsider what you think you already know of anti -trafficking research, policies, advocacies, and their ramifications.
Erin Kamler has given us a detailed road map for joining up participatory research, musical theater performance, and dialogues of reconciliation in polarized communities-a much needed process for challenging coloniality, NGO savior complexes, and Western-modernist fantasies of superiority. This beautifully written book is a primer for the work of decoloniality and liberation from the frontlines of international conflict.
Critique conventional understandings of sex trafficking in Southeast Asia-and the global policy agenda meant to address it. Turn your critique into a musical, stage it in Chiang Mai, and analyse the audience reactions. Erin Kamler's remarkable book is a compelling piece of research that shares the stage with an extraordinary theatrical performance, breaking down the barriers between academia, development practice, and the arts. It will change the way you think and feel about what you do.
Erin Kamler is remarkably creative-not only in the art she produces, but in how she synthesizes activism, research, scholarship, and art. This book presents an exciting new paradigm of collective research methodology that challenges our existing, confining categories of refugees and aid workers, victims and traffickers, 'good guys' and 'bad guys,' with the potential to dislodge accepted narratives that too often silence the nuanced voices of communities we study and engage with.
Notă biografică
Erin M. Kamler is Assistant Professor at Minerva Schools at KGI and Affiliated Researcher at Chiang Mai University. She is an American writer, composer, and academic researcher who works at the intersection of feminist social justice and the arts.