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gendeRomania

2024-03-01 04:33:59

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Mihaela Mudure - Zeugmatic Space: Eastern / Central European Feminist Elaine Susan Weiner - Incomplete Vision: Female 's "difference" in Central and Eastern Europe fails to be seen Anca Gheaus - Limited correlation. The feminist can learn what comes from the eastern experience VeronikaWöhrer - Border Crossers. Gender discourse between Elena and Heitlinger of "Oriental" and "Western" - The role of immigrants in the national feminist movement: Case study of the Czech Republic in the 1990s

Mihaela Frunza - Equal opportunity? Ambiguity in Romanian free feminist discourse Madgalena Dabrowska - what are their interests? Polish Feminist Movement Question Dorottya Redai - Democratic Hungarian Women and Politics - American "Feminism" Experience in Lithuania Maria Diaconescu - A Study of "Artist" - Romanian Feminist Project

Shannon Woodcock - Globalization of LGBT identity: suppression of camouflaging as relief or why lesbians are not interested so much - modern Russian lesbians: subjective or Soviet "hypocritical" behavior

Andrea Virginas - Strange signature of the latest Hungarian and Romanian publications: random Theodora-Eliza Vacarescu advertisement from Frankenstein monster to Haraway robot: monster sex, robot and (post) humanity George Hari Popescu - video Women in the game: From Barbie to Xena Silvia Branea - Private and public attitudes towards gender themes. Case study of Romanian students

Bogdan Popa - Political Liberalism and Comprehensive Liberalism: Reasonable Bogdan Popoveniuc Limits for Gender Equality Problem and (Re) New (Edit) Voice. Epistemic exterior about feminism Maria Pantea - modernity of secularism Today's French school: gender aspect - the minority dilemma of Muslims

In this paper, we focus on the feminism of Romania and analyze the special cultural status of feminism in the East / Central Europe. The author uses images of rhetoric, zeugma to support the specialty and commonality of feminism in the post communist region compared to world hegemonic feminism and the third world feminism. Zeugma (meaning "bridge" from ancient Greek) is a well-balanced and accepted language that depends on grammatical differences. Eastern Europe / Central Europe is a nearly perfect cultural space changer that constitutes the feminist discourse in the world feminist world concerto that constitutes grammar space.

People born and promoted to feminists are still an important part of feminism.

Always make new discourse space, rewrite cultural stories, and try to define terms.

(Teresa de Lauretis, Gender Technology) I would like to provide space for CEIBS feminism, especially Romanian feminism, from this "other place", but I know better because it belongs to Romanian culture I think. The space that I claim to argue in this article is one of the other feminists in the world and it is also inspired by the increasingly complex evolution of East / Central European feminism. It closely resembles the evolution of contradictory space argued by the Third World Feminism since 1981. My back This is the way Audroree continues eloquently in her series of essays "Sisters Outsiders". All of these views on the issue of women are based on the fact that there is tension between the third world feminism in the global movement and the various forms and ranges present in such movement, the public and / or specific hegemony Indicated contradictory space. Or political experience, some of the abundant resources feminism is benefiting from. Therefore, the article on Eastern European / Central European feminism is called "my return home". When I talk about the wide range of Continental Europe, I fully recognize the dangerous, almost inevitable, essentialistic trap. Even if I limit myself to my own culture, ie Romanian feminism, this danger still exists. However, just like "I", it actually means "me", having "me" represents a strategy or humility, so in reality it means "me."

1 Contradictory rhetoric is a rhetorical image that can show unity and similarity while maintaining dissociation and opposition of related concepts. The most famous examples of inconsistency are as follows. Eloquent silence