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Naming security - constructing identity

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Based on the voices of Mayan women, this book re-considers the connections between security and political identity and critically challenges stereotypical views of what might constitute ‘security’ ...
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  • 08 September 2005
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How do people seek security in relation to their sense of ‘who they are’? How can one make sense of insecurity at the intersection of competing identity claims? Based on the voices of Mayan women, Stern critically re-considers the connections between security, subjectivity and identity. By engaging in a careful reading of how Mayan women ‘speak’ security in relation to the different contexts that inform their lives, she explores the multiplicity of both identity and security, and questions the main story of security imbedded in the modern ‘paradox of sovereignty.’ Her provocative analysis thus raises vital questions about what might constitute ‘security’, and the ‘insecurity’ that is its inevitable supplement. Her study also offers an innovative methodology that bridges many different disciplines and substantively develops the method of ‘reading’ politics as a ‘textual practice’. It will be essential reading for students of security, identity politics, feminism, and Latin American studies.
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Price: £85.00
Pages: 232
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Imprint: Manchester University Press
Series: New Approaches to Conflict Analysis
Publication Date: 08 September 2005
ISBN: 9780719071164
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:

POLITICAL SCIENCE / Political Freedom, International relations, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Women's Studies, Political control and freedoms, Gender studies: women and girls

REVIEWS Icon

1. Introduction
2. Theorizing security and identity
3. Reading Mayan women’s in/security: a framework for analysis
4. Reading in/security in the family/community context
5. Constructing security-identity in Ladino-Mayan relations
6. Organizations/movements: building a collective self
7. The political economy of Mayan women
8. Mayan women as citizens - Guatemala a nation-state?
9. Concluding comments