9 found
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  1.  23
    The times we’re in: Queer feminist criticism and the reparative ‘turn’.Robyn Wiegman - 2014 - Feminist Theory 15 (1):4-25.
    This article examines the reparative turn in current queer feminist scholarship by tracking its twin interest in the study of affect and time. By foregrounding Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick’s influential critique of what she called paranoid reading, I am interested in the ways that various critics – Ann Cvetkovich, Heather Love, and Elizabeth Freeman in particular – take up the call for reparative reading by using the temporal frameworks of the everyday, backward feeling, and queer time to reparative ends. In the (...)
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  2.  15
    What Ails Feminist Criticism? A Second Opinion.Robyn Wiegman - 1999 - Critical Inquiry 25 (2):362-379.
  3.  8
    Interchanges: Heteronormativity and the desire for gender.Robyn Wiegman - 2006 - Feminist Theory 7 (1):89-103.
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  4.  3
    The intimacy of critique: Ruminations on feminism as a living thing.Robyn Wiegman - 2010 - Feminist Theory 11 (1):79-84.
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  5.  15
    Object Lessons at 10: a conversation.Jennifer C. Nash & Robyn Wiegman - 2023 - Feminist Theory 24 (2):262-276.
    This conversation returns to Robyn Wiegman's field-defining Object Lessons, reflecting on the book's travels, resonances, and continued importance a decade after its publication.
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  6.  7
    The Futures of American Studies.Robyn Wiegman & Donald E. Pease (eds.) - 2002 - Duke University Press.
    Originating as a proponent of U.S. exceptionalism during the Cold War, American Studies has now reinvented itself, vigorously critiquing various kinds of critical hegemony and launching innovative interdisciplinary endeavors. _The Futures of American Studies_ considers the field today and provides important deliberations on what it might yet become. Essays by both prominent and emerging scholars provide theoretically engaging analyses of the postnational impulse of current scholarship, the field's historical relationship to social movements, the status of theory, the state of higher (...)
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  7. Difference and Disciplinarity.Robyn Wiegman - 2002 - In Emory Elliott, Louis Freitas Caton & Jeffrey Rhyne (eds.), Aesthetics in a Multicultural Age. Oxford University Press. pp. 135--56.
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  8.  12
    In the margins with the argonauts.Robyn Wiegman - 2018 - Angelaki 23 (1):209-213.
    Readers in love with Maggie Nelson’s The Argonauts have often praised her ability to use the analytic capacities and citational resources of critical theory to advance her personal narrative about queer sex and kinship. This essay takes stock of Nelson’s genre-bending conventions by reading the visual organization of the printed book against its digital copy in order to deliberate on questions of materiality, authorship, and identity.
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  9.  25
    Statement: Women's Studies: Interdisciplinary Imperatives, Again.Robyn Wiegman - 2001 - Feminist Studies 27 (2):514.