ABSTRACT

Taking recent German debates of diversity terminology as a case example for scrutinizing enactments of genealogy that assume a linear image of progressive generation, this book engages with performative effects of genealogical stories in academic texts that negotiate conceptual belonging.

While supporters of the developing Diversity Studies in Germany cherish diversity’s potential for multi-category investigations, Gender and Women’s Studies critics reject the term for its neoliberal, managerial rationale, allegedly holding profit above social justice. Genealogies and Conceptual Belonging intervenes in this oppositional debate by turning one’s attention to narrations of the origins of "gender" and "diversity" that suggest their proper place in the present.

Presenting a story about dis/continuous genealogies and highlighting complicated interferences between gender and diversity, Marten forges novel future connections between questions of gender, sexual difference, and diversity. This pioneering volume will be of particular interest to undergraduates, postgraduates and postdoctoral researchers interested in the fields of genealogy, Gender Studies, feminist theory, feminist science studies and critical race / diversity / intersectionality studies.

chapter |34 pages

Introduction

part I|73 pages

Stories at work

chapter |8 pages

Methodological interlude I

Telling genealogy and/as conceptual belonging

chapter 1|34 pages

Diversity stories

chapter 2|26 pages

A (feminist 1 ) counter-narrative

The figure of appropriation as a story-teller

chapter |3 pages

Summary

Commonalities

part II|96 pages

An/other story

chapter |11 pages

Methodological interlude II

How to tell an/other story?

chapter 3|37 pages

Judith Butler

The question of gender and sexual difference

chapter 4|28 pages

Audre Lorde

Toward relating across differences

chapter 5|13 pages

Futures and fusions

Seeking beyond history

chapter |5 pages

Conclusion

Questioning beginnings and beginning to question