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Feminist Review

Feminist Review


eISSN: 14664380 | ISSN: 01417789 | Current volume: 137 | Current issue: 1 Frequency: 3 Times/Year

Feminist Review’s purpose is to hold space for conversations that rethink and reimagine feminist scholarship and praxis: the modes and contexts in which it operates, the questions it takes up, and with whom feminisms are in conversation.

Feminist Review aims to publish accessible knowledge and timely interventions that build on the work of Black, Indigenous, decolonial, and transnational feminist struggle. We proceed with and advance an intersectional feminist understanding that inequalities within social categories and organising mechanisms of gender, race, class, sexuality, ableism, ethnicity, coloniality, capitalism, and sanism, among others, are co-constitutive.

Feminist Review is committed to inspiring exchanges of ideas and explorations of praxis that address, disrupt, and break through structural violence to make and nurture communities, connections, and ways of sharing knowledge founded on mutual respect, kindness, and care.

Who is Feminist Review for?

Feminist Review is for the creative and critical thinker and doer. It is for those committed to finding and sharing ways to challenge, resist, and break free from discriminatory and oppressive practices and regimes, and to live other forms of existence. It is for those seeking community and to work together with others in solidarity with this aim.

What are Feminist Review’s values?

At Feminist Review, we are committed to building, living, and extending a space of radical feminist practice that places care at its heart.

We are thinking with, and working through, the following questions:

  • How do we practise feminist care that extends beyond theorising, to act with care and responsibility to one another, in a manner that prioritises kindness, generosity, understanding?
  • How do we create space for alternative and marginalised voices and groups?
  • How can we develop non-exploitative practices in the production of intersectional feminist scholarship?
  • What are the ‘feminist futures’ we are seeking to collectively build, and what strategies, activisms, methodologies and epistemologies might guide us there?


Endorsements

"Feminist Review has been the home of sophisticated, passionate feminist writing for nearly thirty years, and is still the journal I would turn to first when looking for debate and enlightenment on a whole range of issues. Its commitment to untangling the complexities of political and cultural theory and practice remains undimmed, and unrivalled."
- Sarah Waters

"For the last twenty years I've read every issue of Feminist Review. It's the journal that first opened my eyes to what it meant to investigate the world with a feminist curiosity. And today it still is as fresh in its insights as ever".
- Cynthia Enloe, Professor of Government, Clark University, USA

"Feminist Review, at the cutting edge of contemporary debates, is a lively and informative resource for students and academics in higher education across a range of disciplines. I strongly recommend it."
- June Purvis, Times Higher Education Supplement

This journal is a member of the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE).


Submit your manuscript today at https://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/feministreview

Feminist Review’s purpose is to hold space for conversations that rethink and reimagine feminist scholarship and praxis: the modes and contexts in which it operates, the questions it takes up, and with whom feminisms are in conversation.

Feminist Review aims to publish accessible knowledge and timely interventions that build on the work of Black, Indigenous, decolonial, and transnational feminist struggle. We proceed with and advance an intersectional feminist understanding that inequalities within social categories and organising mechanisms of gender, race, class, sexuality, ableism, ethnicity, coloniality, capitalism, and sanism, among others, are co-constitutive.

Feminist Review is committed to inspiring exchanges of ideas and explorations of praxis that address, disrupt, and break through structural violence to make and nurture communities, connections, and ways of sharing knowledge founded on mutual respect, kindness, and care.

Who is Feminist Review for?

Feminist Review is for the creative and critical thinker and doer. It is for those committed to finding and sharing ways to challenge, resist, and break free from discriminatory and oppressive practices and regimes, and to live other forms of existence. It is for those seeking community and to work together with others in solidarity with this aim.

What are Feminist Review’s values?

At Feminist Review, we are committed to building, living, and extending a space of radical feminist practice that places care at its heart.

We are thinking with, and working through, the following questions:

  • How do we practise feminist care that extends beyond theorising, to act with care and responsibility to one another, in a manner that prioritises kindness, generosity, understanding?
  • How do we create space for alternative and marginalised voices and groups?
  • How can we develop non-exploitative practices in the production of intersectional feminist scholarship?
  • What are the ‘feminist futures’ we are seeking to collectively build, and what strategies, activisms, methodologies and epistemologies might guide us there?

Feminist Review welcomes submissions to the annual Currents issue and themed issues in response to Calls for Papers. Submit now!

 

The Collective
Yassin Brunger Queen's University Belfast, UK
Parise Carmichael-Murphy Arden University, UK
Annie Goh University of Arts London, UK
Asiya Islam University of Cambridge, UK
Kyoung Kim Independent Scholar, UK
Amber Lascelles University of Bristol, UK
Po-Han Lee National Taiwan University, Taiwan
Kavita Maya Royal Holloway, University of London, UK
Akanksha Mehta Goldsmiths, University of London, UK
Halina Rauber-Baio Independent Scholar, Brazil
Madhulika Sonkar Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Delhi, India
Nydia A. Swaby Independent Scholar, UK
Jennifer Ung Loh Independent Scholar, UK
Jamie Wang The Education University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
  • CNKI
  • Clarivate Analytics: Current Contents - Social & Behavioral Sciences
  • Clarivate Analytics: Social Science Citation Index
  • EBSCO
  • ProQuest
  • Scopus
  • Manuscript submission guidelines can be accessed on Sage Journals.

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