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| Publications of Frances S. Hasso :chronological alphabetical combined listing:%% Books @book{fds362038, Author = {Hasso, FS}, Title = {Buried in the Red Dirt: Race, Reproduction, and Death in Modern Palestine}, Publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, Year = {2021}, Month = {November}, ISBN = {9781316513545}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/9781009072854}, Abstract = {Bringing together a vivid array of analog and non-traditional sources, including colonial archives, newspaper reports, literature, oral histories, and interviews, Buried in the Red Dirt tells a story of life, death, reproduction and missing bodies and experiences during and since the British colonial period in Palestine. Using transnational feminist reading practices of existing and new archives, the book moves beyond authorized frames of collective pain and heroism. Looking at their day-to-day lives, where Palestinians suffered most from poverty, illness, and high rates of infant and child mortality, Frances Hasso's book shows how ideologically and practically, racism and eugenics shaped British colonialism and Zionist settler-colonialism in Palestine in different ways, especially informing health policies. She examines Palestinian anti-reproductive desires and practices, before and after 1948, critically engaging with demographic scholarship that has seen Zionist commitments to Jewish reproduction projected onto Palestinians. This title is also available as Open Access on Cambridge Core.}, Doi = {10.1017/9781009072854}, Key = {fds362038} } @book{fds259093, Author = {Hasso, FS}, Title = {Consuming Desires: Family Crisis and the State in the Middle East}, Publisher = {Stanford University Press}, Year = {2011}, Abstract = {http://www.sup.org/book.cgi?id=9486}, Key = {fds259093} } @book{fds259092, Author = {Hasso, FS}, Title = {Resistance, Repression and Gender Politics in Occupied Palestine and Jordan}, Publisher = {Syracuse University Press}, Year = {2005}, ISBN = {9781684450237}, Abstract = {https://syracuseopen.syr.edu/upressbooks/resistance-repression-and-gender-politics-in-occupied-palestine-and-jordan/}, Key = {fds259092} } %% Journal Articles @article{fds376132, Author = {Hasso, FS}, Title = {Beyond the Treatment Room: The Psyche-Body-Society Care Politics of Cairo’s El-Nadeem}, Journal = {Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society}, Volume = {49}, Number = {1}, Pages = {7-35}, Publisher = {University of Chicago Press}, Year = {2023}, Month = {September}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/725840}, Doi = {10.1086/725840}, Key = {fds376132} } @article{fds362664, Author = {Hasso, FS}, Title = {Disruptive Situations: Fractal Orientalism and Queer Strategies in Beirut. By Ghassan Moussawi. Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 2020. Pp. 210. $94.50 (cloth); $29.95 (paper).}, Journal = {American Journal of Sociology}, Volume = {127}, Number = {2}, Pages = {679-681}, Publisher = {University of Chicago Press}, Year = {2021}, Month = {September}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/715270}, Doi = {10.1086/715270}, Key = {fds362664} } @article{fds349710, Author = {Hasso, FS}, Title = {“I have ambition”: Muhammad Ramadan's proletarian masculinities in postrevolution Egyptian cinema}, Journal = {International Journal of Middle East Studies}, Volume = {52}, Number = {2}, Pages = {197-214}, Publisher = {Cambridge University Press (CUP)}, Year = {2020}, Month = {May}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0020743820000033}, Abstract = {This article provides a close reading of two popular Egyptian action films, al-Almani (The German, 2012), the first blockbuster since the 25 January 2011 revolution, and Qalb al-Asad (Lion heart, 2013), both starring Muhammad Ramadan as a socially produced proletarian “thug” figure. Made for Egyptian audiences, the films privilege entertainment over aesthetics or politics. However, they express distinct messages about violence, morality, and revolution that are shaped by their moments of postrevolutionary release. They present the police state in salutary yet ambivalent terms. They offer a rupture with prerevolutionary cinema by staging the failure of proletarian masculinities and femininities that rely on middle-class respectability in relation to sex, marriage, and work. Even as each film expresses traces of revolutionary upheaval and even nostalgia, cynicism rather than hopefulness dominates, especially in al-Almani, which conveys to the middle and upper classes the specter of an ever-present threat of masculine frustration. The form and content of Qalb al-Asad, by comparison, offer the option of reconciling opposing elements-an Egyptian story line with a less repressive conclusion if one chooses a path between revolutionary resistance and accepting defeat.}, Doi = {10.1017/S0020743820000033}, Key = {fds349710} } @article{fds340468, Author = {Hasso, FS}, Title = {Generations}, Journal = {Journal of Middle East Women's Studies}, Volume = {14}, Number = {3}, Pages = {265-267}, Publisher = {Duke University Press}, Year = {2018}, Month = {November}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/15525864-7025371}, Doi = {10.1215/15525864-7025371}, Key = {fds340468} } @article{fds342472, Author = {Hasso, FS}, Title = {Masculine love and sensuous reason: the affective and spatial politics of Egyptian Ultras football fans}, Journal = {Gender, Place and Culture}, Volume = {25}, Number = {10}, Pages = {1423-1447}, Year = {2018}, Month = {October}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/0966369X.2018.1531830}, Abstract = {This article uses a feminist spatial approach attentive to masculine affect and difference to analyze the language, cultural production, and practices of the two largest Ultras football fan groups in Egypt–White Knights (affiliated with Zamalek Sporting Club) and Ahlawy (affiliated with Al-Ahly Sporting Club)–both established in 2007. Egyptian Ultras cultivate embodied passion, joy, love and anger. By excluding girls and women, the Ultras reflect the sexism that permeates Egyptian social and political life. However, sexism does not appear to be the most important reason for Ultras homosociality and misogyny is not particularly relevant to their practices and cultural oeuvre. The Ultras do not encourage sexual attacks on girls and women, let alone boys and men, and explicitly discourage sectarianism and racism. Ultras groups in Egypt, I contend, offer a masculine alternative to a government that represents itself as a militarist ‘factory of men’. As they battle state efforts to control space and reinforce the dominant order, their practices challenge rationality/affect and mind/body binaries, as well as divisions between street/stadium and corporate/commons. Informed by fieldwork in Egypt, the article uses semiotic and discursive methods to analyze hundreds of Ultras’ images, songs, chants, Facebook pages, and live performances on multiple sites, as well as scholarly sources in Arabic and English and a book-length Arabic account about the Ultras in Egypt by the founder of the Ultras White Knights.}, Doi = {10.1080/0966369X.2018.1531830}, Key = {fds342472} } @article{fds335497, Author = {Hasso, FS}, Title = {Editorial Introduction}, Journal = {Journal of Middle East Women's Studies}, Volume = {14}, Number = {1}, Pages = {1-2}, Publisher = {Duke University Press}, Year = {2018}, Month = {March}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/15525864-4296977}, Doi = {10.1215/15525864-4296977}, Key = {fds335497} } @article{fds335498, Author = {Hasso, FS}, Title = {Cover art concept}, Journal = {Journal of Middle East Women's Studies}, Volume = {14}, Number = {1}, Pages = {92-93}, Publisher = {Duke University Press}, Year = {2018}, Month = {January}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/15525864-4297132}, Doi = {10.1215/15525864-4297132}, Key = {fds335498} } @article{fds327365, Author = {Hasso, FS}, Title = {Entering and remaking spaces: Young palestinian feminists in Jerusalem}, Journal = {Journal of Middle East Women's Studies}, Volume = {13}, Number = {2}, Pages = {337-345}, Publisher = {Duke University Press}, Year = {2017}, Month = {July}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/15525864-3861411}, Doi = {10.1215/15525864-3861411}, Key = {fds327365} } @article{fds302996, Author = {Hasso, FS}, Title = {Civil and the Limits of Politics in Revolutionary Egypt}, Journal = {Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle East}, Volume = {35}, Number = {3}, Pages = {605-621}, Publisher = {Duke University Press}, Year = {2015}, Month = {December}, ISSN = {1548-226X}, url = {http://cssaame.dukejournals.org/content/35/3/605.refs}, Abstract = {Based on analysis of scholarly and primary sources that include July 2011 and January and February 2014 fieldwork in Cairo, this article examines civil as a word with multiple synchronic meanings and shifts in valence in Egypt between January 2011 and July 2013. I argue that civil stood as a rhetorical placeholder in a time with few secure ideological positions, little agreement about the content of the good society, and wide recognition of the enormity of obstacles to transformation. The article draws on Jacques Rancière's understandings of “politics” and “police” to examine sensibilities and relations of transgression and control that work on and through bodies, intimacies, and meanings of the civil. Among the essential lessons of the 2011 Arab revolutions is that ideological differences and material inequalities do not easily melt, even in emergent, pluralistic, and nondoctrinaire revolutionary politics, because it is difficult to erase positional and embodied differences in the scenes where politics are made.}, Doi = {10.1215/1089201X-3426445}, Key = {fds302996} } @article{fds318218, Author = {Cooke, M and Hasso, F}, Title = {Association tounissiet}, Journal = {Journal of Middle East Women's Studies}, Volume = {11}, Number = {3}, Pages = {365-367}, Publisher = {Duke University Press}, Year = {2015}, Month = {November}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/15525864-3142581}, Doi = {10.1215/15525864-3142581}, Key = {fds318218} } @article{fds318219, Author = {Kahraman, H and Hasso, F}, Title = {Art concept}, Journal = {Journal of Middle East Women's Studies}, Volume = {11}, Number = {2}, Pages = {233-234}, Publisher = {Duke University Press}, Year = {2015}, Month = {July}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/15525864-2886595}, Doi = {10.1215/15525864-2886595}, Key = {fds318219} } @article{fds318217, Author = {Kahraman, H and Hasso, FS}, Title = {Editor's Note}, Volume = {11}, Number = {3}, Pages = {349}, Publisher = {Duke University Press}, Year = {2015}, Month = {January}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/15525864-3142526}, Doi = {10.1215/15525864-3142526}, Key = {fds318217} } @article{fds259091, Author = {Hasso, FS}, Title = {Bargaining with the devil: States and intimate life}, Journal = {Journal of Middle East Women's Studies}, Volume = {10}, Number = {2}, Pages = {107-134}, Publisher = {Duke University Press}, Year = {2014}, Month = {Spring}, ISSN = {1552-5864}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.2979/jmiddeastwomstud.10.2.107}, Abstract = {Since the 1980s, an explosion in state, international, and nongovernmental campaigns and programs propose to increase women's rights and protections in Arab countries. Women and women's rights activists often invite and appeal to male-dominated states to regulate, intervene, or change the rules in sexual and family life in order to address a range of problems and challenges, including lack of economic and other resources, political and citizenship exclusions, or intimate violence. What are the implications of relying on states as the main arbiters of rights and protections This is a longstanding feminist question whose answer hinges on underlying assumptions and theories about states and governance. Reliance on states as the primary sources of protection and support in intimate life has largely worked to rearticulate gendered, economic, and other inequitable power relations, bolster states, reconstitute state authority over intimate domains, and limit possibilities for gendered, sexual, and kin subjectivities and affinities. This dynamic may be metaphorically described as a "devil's bargain" since state-delivered rights and protections in these realms are so often attached to important restrictions and foreclosures. The article conceptually and theoretically expands on my research on family law projects in Egypt and the United Arab Emirates in Consuming Desires: Family Crisis and the State in the Middle East (Stanford University Press, 2011). Its title is inspired by Deniz Kandiyoti's influential article, "Bargaining with Patriarchy" (Gender & Society, 1988), which I re-engage for analytical purposes. © 2014 Journal of Middle East Women's Studies.}, Doi = {10.2979/jmiddeastwomstud.10.2.107}, Key = {fds259091} } @article{fds259090, Author = {Hasso, FS}, Title = {<i>Desiring Arabs</i> (review)}, Journal = {Journal of the History of Sexuality}, Volume = {20}, Number = {3}, Pages = {652-656}, Publisher = {Project MUSE}, Year = {2011}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/sex.2011.0054}, Doi = {10.1353/sex.2011.0054}, Key = {fds259090} } @article{fds259089, Author = {Hasso, FS}, Title = {Deconstructing Sexuality in the Middle East: Challenges and Discourses}, Journal = {Contemporary Sociology: A Journal of Reviews}, Volume = {39}, Number = {1}, Pages = {47-48}, Publisher = {SAGE Publications}, Year = {2010}, Month = {January}, ISSN = {0094-3061}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0094306109356659w}, Doi = {10.1177/0094306109356659w}, Key = {fds259089} } @article{fds259101, Author = {Hasso, FS}, Title = {Empowering governmentalities rather than women: The Arab Human Development Report 2005 and western development logics}, Journal = {International Journal of Middle East Studies}, Volume = {41}, Number = {1}, Pages = {63-82}, Publisher = {Cambridge University Press (CUP)}, Year = {2009}, Month = {May}, ISSN = {0020-7438}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0020743808090120}, Abstract = {The researchers and writers of the Arab Human Development Report 2005 (AHDR 2005) include activists, social critics, intellectuals, and feminists who aspire for izdihar (flourishing) in the Arab world "based on a peaceful process of negotiation for redistributing power and building good governance." This passage suggests that the aims the AHDR 2005 shares with the previous three volumes are to encourage state apparatuses and officials to transform themselves by changing policies and surrendering some of the power and resources they have fortified vis-à-vis their citizenries. This article argues that rather than encouraging the rise of women or any group interested in political or social transformation, the AHDR 2005 works within a U.N. development framework that strengthens states and political elites in relation to their populations by constituting the former as the causes of underdevelopment and thus the primary agents for economic, social, and political improvement. © 2009 Cambridge University Press.}, Doi = {10.1017/S0020743808090120}, Key = {fds259101} } @article{fds259102, Author = {F.S. Hasso and Abu-Lughod, L and Adely, FJ and Hasso, FS}, Title = {Overview: Engaging the Arab Human Development Report 2005 on Women}, Journal = {International Journal of Middle East Studies}, Volume = {41}, Number = {1}, Pages = {59-60}, Publisher = {Cambridge University Press (CUP)}, Year = {2009}, Month = {May}, ISSN = {0020-7438}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0020743808090107}, Abstract = {The Arab Human Development Report 2005: Towards the Rise of Women in the Arab World (AHDR 2005), published in Arabic with English and French translations, was launched at the end of 2006. With a title carefully crafted to avoid Western development buzzwords like "empowerment" and to signal the inclusion of all women living in the region, it is the third in a series of detailed studies meant to unpack the themes of the original overview report that garnered both acclaim and criticism when it was published in 2002. The other two topical reports examine what were billed as "deficits" in knowledge and in freedom. This one tackles what the original report framed as the third major obstacle to the flourishing of the Arab world: the deficit in gender equality. © 2009 Cambridge University Press.}, Doi = {10.1017/S0020743808090107}, Key = {fds259102} } @article{fds259100, Author = {Hasso, FS}, Title = {'Culture Knowledge' and the Violence of Imperialism: Revisiting The Arab Mind}, Journal = {MIT Electronic Journal of Middle East Studies}, Volume = {7}, Number = {Spring}, Pages = {24-40}, Year = {2007}, Month = {Spring}, url = {http://franceshasso.files.wordpress.com/2013/02/culture-knowledge-hasso.pdf}, Key = {fds259100} } @article{fds259082, Author = {Hasso, FS}, Title = {Book Review: Geographies of Muslim Women: Gender, Religion, and Space}, Journal = {Gender & Society}, Volume = {20}, Number = {6}, Pages = {826-828}, Publisher = {SAGE Publications}, Year = {2006}, Month = {December}, ISSN = {0891-2432}, url = {http://www.jstor.org/stable/27640936}, Doi = {10.1177/0891243206292857}, Key = {fds259082} } @article{fds259103, Author = {Hasso, FS}, Title = {Discursive and political deployments by/of the 2002 Palestinian women suicide bombers/martyrs}, Journal = {Feminist Review}, Volume = {81}, Number = {81}, Pages = {23-51}, Publisher = {Springer Nature}, Year = {2005}, Month = {November}, ISSN = {0141-7789}, url = {http://gateway.webofknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=PARTNER_APP&SrcAuth=LinksAMR&KeyUT=WOS:000232801300008&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=ALL_WOS&UsrCustomerID=47d3190e77e5a3a53558812f597b0b92}, Abstract = {This paper focuses on representations by and deployments of the four Palestinian women who during the first four months of 2002 killed themselves in organized attacks against Israeli military personnel or civilians in the Occupied Palestinian Territories or Israel. The paper addresses the manner in which these militant women produced and situated themselves as gendered-political subjects, and argues that their self-representations and acts were deployed by individuals and groups in the region to reflect and articulate other gendered-political subjectivities that at times undermined or rearticulated patriarchal religio-nationalist understandings of gender and women in relation to corporeality, authenticity, and community. The data analysed include photographs, narrative representations in television and newspaper media, the messages the women left behind, and secondary sources. © 2005 Feminist Review.}, Doi = {10.1057/palgrave.fr.9400257}, Key = {fds259103} } @article{fds259099, Author = {Hasso, FS}, Title = {Problems and promise in Middle East and North Africa gender research}, Journal = {Feminist Studies}, Volume = {31}, Number = {3}, Pages = {653-678}, Publisher = {JSTOR}, Year = {2005}, Month = {January}, ISSN = {0046-3663}, url = {http://gateway.webofknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=PARTNER_APP&SrcAuth=LinksAMR&KeyUT=WOS:000234987900010&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=ALL_WOS&UsrCustomerID=47d3190e77e5a3a53558812f597b0b92}, Doi = {10.2307/20459056}, Key = {fds259099} } @article{fds259081, Author = {Hasso, F}, Title = {Women and gender in early Jewish and Palestinian nationalism}, Journal = {MIDDLE EAST JOURNAL}, Volume = {58}, Number = {1}, Pages = {163-164}, Publisher = {MIDDLE EAST INSTITUTE}, Year = {2004}, Month = {December}, url = {http://www.jstor.org/stable/4329995}, Key = {fds259081} } @article{fds335499, Author = {Hasso, FS and Brinkley, D and Spagna, GF and Chin, EJ and Lynn, D}, Title = {What People Just Don't Understand About Academic Fields}, Journal = {The Chronicle of Higher Education}, Year = {2003}, Month = {July}, Key = {fds335499} } @article{fds259078, Author = {Hasso, FS}, Title = {Who Covered The War Best? Try al-Jazeera}, Journal = {Newsday}, Year = {2003}, Month = {April}, url = {http://www.newsday.com/who-covered-the-war-best-try-al-jazeera-1.307818}, Key = {fds259078} } @article{fds346931, Author = {Hasso, F and Charrad, MM}, Title = {States and Women's Rights: The Making of Postcolonial Tunisia, Algeria, and Morocco}, Journal = {Contemporary Sociology}, Volume = {31}, Number = {6}, Pages = {735-735}, Publisher = {SAGE Publications}, Year = {2002}, Month = {November}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3089962}, Doi = {10.2307/3089962}, Key = {fds346931} } @article{fds259097, Author = {Hasso, FS}, Title = {Feminist generations? The long-term impact of social movement involvement on Palestinian women's lives}, Journal = {American Journal of Sociology}, Volume = {10}, Number = {3}, Pages = {586-611}, Publisher = {University of Chicago Press}, Year = {2001}, Month = {January}, ISSN = {0002-9602}, url = {http://gateway.webofknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=PARTNER_APP&SrcAuth=LinksAMR&KeyUT=WOS:000175830600002&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=ALL_WOS&UsrCustomerID=47d3190e77e5a3a53558812f597b0b92}, Abstract = {While there is an extensive literature addressing gender and women in social movements, there is very little addressing the impact of such participation on individual women in the aftermath of involvement. This article explores the individual impact of social movement participation using longitudinal qualitative research with working-class Palestinian women and argues that there exists among these former participants a "feminist generation" that is differentiated by a gender-egalitarian ideology and a high sense of self-efficacy. The article also argues that feminist subjectivities and possibilities will be circumscribed and difficult to maintain without the structural and cultural support provided by a stable, sovereign, and at least nominally democratic state and accountable feminist organizations that are responsive to diverse groups of women.}, Doi = {10.1086/338974}, Key = {fds259097} } @article{fds259084, Author = {Hasso, FS}, Title = {Modernity and Gender in Arab Accounts of the 1948 and 1967 Defeats}, Journal = {International Journal Middle East Studies}, Volume = {32}, Number = {4}, Pages = {491-510}, Publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, Year = {2000}, ISSN = {0020-7438}, url = {http://gateway.webofknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=PARTNER_APP&SrcAuth=LinksAMR&KeyUT=WOS:000165350300003&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=ALL_WOS&UsrCustomerID=47d3190e77e5a3a53558812f597b0b92}, Abstract = {The victory which the Zionists have achieved…lies not in the superiority of one people over another, but rather in the superiority of one system over another. The reason for this victory is that the roots of Zionism are grounded in modern Western life while we for the most part are still distant from this life and hostile to it. They live in the present and for the future while we continue to dream the dreams of the past and to stupify ourselves with its fading glory. © 2000, Cambridge University Press. All rights reserved.}, Doi = {10.1017/S0020743800021188}, Key = {fds259084} } @article{fds259077, Author = {Hasso, F}, Title = {Glenn Robinson, Building a Palestinian State: The Incomplete Revolution. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.}, Journal = {Comparative Studies in Society and History}, Volume = {41}, Number = {1}, Pages = {209-210}, Publisher = {Cambridge University Press (CUP)}, Year = {1999}, Month = {January}, ISSN = {1475-2999}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0010417599231921}, Doi = {10.1017/s0010417599231921}, Key = {fds259077} } @article{fds259096, Author = {Hasso, FS}, Title = {The "women's front" - Nationalism, feminism, and modernity in Palestine}, Journal = {GENDER & SOCIETY}, Volume = {12}, Number = {4}, Pages = {441-465}, Publisher = {SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC}, Year = {1998}, ISSN = {0891-2432}, url = {http://gateway.webofknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=PARTNER_APP&SrcAuth=LinksAMR&KeyUT=WOS:000075389600005&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=ALL_WOS&UsrCustomerID=47d3190e77e5a3a53558812f597b0b92}, Doi = {10.1177/089124398012004005}, Key = {fds259096} } %% Papers Published @article{fds372509, Author = {Hasso, FS}, Title = {"The Art of Death in Life" Palestinian Futurism and Reproduction after 1948}, Pages = {210-243}, Booktitle = {BURIED IN THE RED DIRT}, Year = {2022}, ISBN = {978-1-316-51354-5}, Key = {fds372509} } @article{fds372510, Author = {Hasso, FS}, Title = {"Making the Country Pay for Itself" Health, Hunger, and Midwives}, Pages = {78-114}, Booktitle = {BURIED IN THE RED DIRT}, Year = {2022}, ISBN = {978-1-316-51354-5}, Key = {fds372510} } @article{fds372504, Author = {Hasso, FS}, Title = {Historiography and History of Missing Palestinian Bodies Introduction}, Pages = {1-+}, Booktitle = {BURIED IN THE RED DIRT}, Year = {2022}, ISBN = {978-1-316-51354-5}, Key = {fds372504} } @article{fds372505, Author = {Hasso, FS}, Title = {"Technically Illegal" Birth Control in Religious, Colonial, and State Legal Traditions}, Pages = {152-181}, Booktitle = {BURIED IN THE RED DIRT}, Year = {2022}, ISBN = {978-1-316-51354-5}, Key = {fds372505} } @article{fds372506, Author = {Hasso, FS}, Title = {"I Did Not Want Children" Birth Control in Discourse and Practice}, Pages = {182-209}, Booktitle = {BURIED IN THE RED DIRT}, Year = {2022}, ISBN = {978-1-316-51354-5}, Key = {fds372506} } @article{fds372507, Author = {Hasso, FS}, Title = {"We Are Far More Advanced" The Politics of Ill and Healthy Babies in Colonial Palestine}, Pages = {47-77}, Booktitle = {BURIED IN THE RED DIRT}, Year = {2022}, ISBN = {978-1-316-51354-5}, Key = {fds372507} } @article{fds372508, Author = {Hasso, FS}, Title = {"Children Are the Treasure and Property of the Nation" Demography, Eugenics, and Mothercraft}, Pages = {115-151}, Booktitle = {BURIED IN THE RED DIRT}, Year = {2022}, ISBN = {978-1-316-51354-5}, Key = {fds372508} } @article{fds372511, Author = {Hasso, FS}, Title = {CODA: Life, Death, Regeneration}, Pages = {244-251}, Booktitle = {BURIED IN THE RED DIRT}, Year = {2022}, ISBN = {978-1-316-51354-5}, Key = {fds372511} } @article{fds318216, Title = {Freedom Without Permission Bodies and Space in the Arab Revolutions}, Pages = {312 pages}, Publisher = {Duke University Press Book}, Editor = {Hasso, F and Salime, ZS}, Year = {2016}, Month = {October}, ISBN = {9780822362418}, Abstract = {As the 2011 uprisings in North Africa reverberated across the Middle East, a diverse cross section of women and girls publicly disputed gender and sexual norms in novel, unauthorized, and often shocking ways. In a series of case studies ranging from Tunisia's 14 January Revolution to the Taksim Gezi Park protests in Istanbul, the contributors to Freedom without Permission reveal the centrality of the intersections between body, gender, sexuality, and space to these groundbreaking events. Essays include discussions of the blogs written by young women in Egypt, the Women2Drive campaign in Saudi Arabia, the reintegration of women into the public sphere in Yemen, the sexualization of female protesters encamped at Bahrain's Pearl Roundabout, and the embodied, performative, and artistic spaces of Morocco's 20 February Movement. Conceiving of revolution as affective, embodied, spatialized, and aesthetic forms of upheaval and transgression, the contributors show how women activists imagined, inhabited, and deployed new spatial arrangements that undermined the public-private divisions of spaces, bodies, and social relations, continuously transforming them through symbolic and embodied transgressions.}, Key = {fds318216} } @article{fds363963, Author = {Hasso, F}, Title = {The Sect-Sex-Police Nexus and Politics and Bahrain's Pearl Revolution}, Pages = {105-137}, Booktitle = {Freedom without Permission: Bodies and Space in the Arab Revolutions}, Publisher = {Duke University Press}, Editor = {Hasso, FS and Salime, Z}, Year = {2016}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/9780822373728-005}, Doi = {10.1215/9780822373728-005}, Key = {fds363963} } @article{fds259087, Author = {Hasso, FS}, Title = {Shifting Practices and Identities: Nontraditional Relationships among Sunni Muslim Egyptians and Emiratis}, Pages = {211-222}, Booktitle = {Family, Gender, and Law in a Globalizing Middle East and South Asia}, Publisher = {Syracuse University Press}, Editor = {Cuno, KM and Desai, M}, Year = {2009}, Key = {fds259087} } @article{fds259086, Author = {Hasso, FS}, Title = {Comparing Emirati and Egyptian Narratives On Marriage, Sexuality, and the Body}, Pages = {59-74}, Booktitle = {Global Migration, Social Change, and Cultural Transformation}, Publisher = {Palgrave Publishers}, Address = {New York}, Editor = {Elliott, E and Payne, J and Ploesch, P}, Year = {2007}, Key = {fds259086} } @article{fds259083, Author = {Hasso, FS and Lopez, LM}, Title = {Frontlines and Borders: Identity Thresholds for Latinas and Arab American Women.}, Pages = {253-279}, Booktitle = {Everyday Inequalities: Critical Inquiries}, Publisher = {Blackwell}, Editor = {O'Brien, J and Howard, J}, Year = {1998}, Abstract = {This collection provides, the everyday practice of structural and cultural hierarchies is revealed through empirical case studies by cutting edge sociologists.}, Key = {fds259083} } %% Articles Online @article{fds222256, Author = {F.S. Hasso}, Title = {Alternative Worlds at the 2013 World Social Forum in Tunis}, Journal = {Jadaliyya}, Year = {2013}, Month = {April}, url = {http://arabic.jadaliyya.com/pages/index/11396/alternative-worlds-at-the-2013-world-social-forum-}, Key = {fds222256} } | |
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