ABSTRACT

This book takes an explicitly feminist approach to studying gender and social inequalities in island settings while deliberating on ‘islandness’ as part of the intersectional analysis.

Though there is a wealth of recent literature on islands and island studies, most of this literature focuses on islands as objects of study rather than as contexts for exploring gender relations and local gendered developments. Taking Karides’ ‘Island feminism’ as a starting point and drawing from the wider literature on island studies as well as gender and place, this book bridges this gap by exploring gender, gender relations, affect and politics in various island settings spanning a great variety of global locations, from the Faroe Islands and Greenland in the north to Tasmania in south. Insights on recent developments and gendered contestations in these locations provide rich food for thought on the intricate links between gender and place in a local/global world. 

This text will be of key interest to students and scholars of gender and feminist studies, cultural studies, Island studies, anthropology, and more broadly to sociology, geography, diversity and social justice studies, global democracy, and international relations.

chapter 3|18 pages

Being (un)stuck in Qaqortoq

Attachment, ambivalence, and affect in contemporary Greenland

chapter 4|18 pages

Gender on the Rock

Gender, identity, and militarism in Okinawa

chapter 6|19 pages

Parenting and islands

Constructing gender and work in the Faroe Islands

chapter 8|17 pages

Island intersections

A correspondence about educational research in Tasmania

chapter |6 pages

Epilogue

Writing from somewhere