ABSTRACT
Bringing together a diverse chorus of voices and experiences in the pursuit of collective bodily, emotional, and spiritual liberation, Practicing Yoga as Resistance examines yoga as it is experienced across the Western cultural landscape through an intersectional, feminist lens.
Naming the systems of oppression that permeate our lived experiences, this collection and its contributors shine a light on the ways yoga practice is intertwined with these systems while offering insight into how people challenge and creatively subvert, mitigate, and reframe them through their efforts.
From the disciplines of yoga studies, embodiment studies, women’s and gender studies, performance studies, educational studies, social sciences, and social justice, the self-identified women, queer, BIPOC, and White allies represented in this book present an interdisciplinary tapestry of scholarship that serves to add depth to a growing assemblage of yoga literature for the 21st century.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part Part I|24 pages
Invitations
part Part II|176 pages
Yoga, Self, and Community
chapter Chapter 3|11 pages
Embodied radical healing through the collective
chapter Chapter 4|11 pages
Reclaiming spaces, reshaping practices
chapter Chapter 5|17 pages
The city of radical love
chapter Chapter 6|16 pages
Body science of survivorship
chapter Chapter 7|27 pages
Pedagogy of movement
chapter Chapter 9|15 pages
Incomplete
chapter Chapter 10|24 pages
Hozho Yoga
chapter Chapter 12|26 pages
Embodying liminality through yoga
part Part III|104 pages
Yoga in Educational Spaces