How has feminist thinking shaped what we know? Emerging from the lecture series “Feminist Knowledge Reconsidered: Feminism and the Academy,” held at York University in 2009, Reconsidering Knowledge examines current ideas about feminism in relation to knowledge, education and society, and the future potential for feminist research and teaching in the university context. Connecting early stories of women who defied their exclusion from knowledge creation to contemporary challenges for feminism in universities, this collection assesses how feminist knowledge has influenced domi- nant thinking and transformed teaching and learning. It also focuses on the challenges for feminism as corporatization redefines the role of universities in a global w...
This article builds upon the methodological and intellectual approach taken in our co-authored book ...
This study seeks to destabilise and thus expand understandings and applications of feminist pedagogy...
Reconsidering Knowledge: Feminism and the Academy, by Meg Luxton and Mary Jane Mossma
How has feminist thinking shaped what we know? Emerging from the lecture series “Feminist Knowledge ...
How has feminist thinking shaped what we know? Emerging from the lecture series “Feminist Knowledge ...
Engaging with the fiftieth anniversary theme of "Knowledge Reconsidered: Feminism in the Academy at ...
The university campus has dramatically changed with the increased enrolment and visibility of women...
The university campus has dramatically changed with the increased enrolment and visibility of women...
What counts as knowledge? Who are valid, legitimate ‘knowers’? In this chapter we revisit work that ...
What counts as knowledge? Who are valid, legitimate ‘knowers’? In this chapter we revisit work that ...
Questions concerning the relationship between knowledge and other factors in the social world are am...
In 2009, a group of feminist academics at York University partici-pated in a lecture series revisiti...
This article examines feminist academics ’ work in its social and political context, with the purpos...
Feminist scholarship is sometimes dismissed as not quite ‘proper’ knowledge – it’s too political or ...
Feminism is of itself an educational project.When feminist activists in the early 1970s questioned t...
This article builds upon the methodological and intellectual approach taken in our co-authored book ...
This study seeks to destabilise and thus expand understandings and applications of feminist pedagogy...
Reconsidering Knowledge: Feminism and the Academy, by Meg Luxton and Mary Jane Mossma
How has feminist thinking shaped what we know? Emerging from the lecture series “Feminist Knowledge ...
How has feminist thinking shaped what we know? Emerging from the lecture series “Feminist Knowledge ...
Engaging with the fiftieth anniversary theme of "Knowledge Reconsidered: Feminism in the Academy at ...
The university campus has dramatically changed with the increased enrolment and visibility of women...
The university campus has dramatically changed with the increased enrolment and visibility of women...
What counts as knowledge? Who are valid, legitimate ‘knowers’? In this chapter we revisit work that ...
What counts as knowledge? Who are valid, legitimate ‘knowers’? In this chapter we revisit work that ...
Questions concerning the relationship between knowledge and other factors in the social world are am...
In 2009, a group of feminist academics at York University partici-pated in a lecture series revisiti...
This article examines feminist academics ’ work in its social and political context, with the purpos...
Feminist scholarship is sometimes dismissed as not quite ‘proper’ knowledge – it’s too political or ...
Feminism is of itself an educational project.When feminist activists in the early 1970s questioned t...
This article builds upon the methodological and intellectual approach taken in our co-authored book ...
This study seeks to destabilise and thus expand understandings and applications of feminist pedagogy...
Reconsidering Knowledge: Feminism and the Academy, by Meg Luxton and Mary Jane Mossma