What has happened in recent decades with the feminist movement? Has it mutated? It has disappeared? What are the new feminisms? With what and with whom do they dialogue? What do they contribute to thinking about politics today?
This book takes place where most histories of the Spanish feminist movement stop: the 1990s.
Using a broad graphic and documentary base and straddling three major narrative threads (autonomy, genealogy of differences and maps of globalization), Silvia L. Gil unravels questions such as the end of the single subject of feminism, the transforming possibilities of autonomy and difference in a capitalism that feeds on them and, above all, the possibility of wondering about the common, when the experience of what is shared seems to have been stolen, and when the discomfort and vulnerability of bodies are felt skin flower. In short, she points out one of t...read more