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Feminism, Violence and Nonviolence: An Anthology

Selina Gallo-Cruz

Edinburgh University Press, April 2024

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Selina Gallo-Cruz, associate professor and graduate director of sociology, has edited and written the introduction for “Feminism, Violence and Nonviolence: An Anthology” (Edinburgh University Press, 2024).

The book is a collection of essays, articles, pamphlets, flyers and excerpts from books of feminist thought. It brings together the voices of those who helped transform movement consciousness on issues of sexism, racism, colonialism and a broader array of “otherisms,” expanding and diversifying nonviolent philosophy.

Its entries examine questions such as “What can nonviolence offer to feminists working to end violence against women?” and “What are the connections between war and sexism, and how should nonviolent activists address them?”

Gallo-Cruz’s introduction is titled “No One is the Other: Feminism, Violence, and Nonviolence.”

She is a faculty affiliate of the Department of Women’s and Gender Studies in the College of Arts and Sciences as well as a senior research associate for the Program for the Advancement of Research on Conflict and Collaboration and a research affiliate for the Program on Latin America and the Caribbean. She researches culture, conflict, gender, global change, NGOs, nonviolence, social movements and theory.

Gallo-Cruz is the author of “Political Invisibility and Mobilization: Women Against State Violence (Routledge, 2021), winner of the American Sociological Association’s Peace, War, and Social Conflict section’s Outstanding Book Award.

From the publisher:

What can nonviolence offer to feminists working to end violence against women? Can nonviolence be used by women to protect themselves from street and work harassment, from partner battering, date rape and sexual assault? What are the connections between war and sexism, and how should nonviolent activists address them? How should feminists confront the structural violence of racism, xenophobia, colonialism, land displacement and environmental destruction? Feminism, Violence and Nonviolence features a carefully curated selection of seminal texts originally published from the 1970s to the 2000s, which document dynamic feminist thinking on the root causes of violence, the social forces inculcating violence into patriarchal institutions and relationships, and the many insights that nonviolence can gain from a feminist perspective. This collection of essays, articles, pamphlets, flyers and excerpts from books of feminist thought brings together the voices of the women and men who helped to transform movement consciousness on issues of sexism, racism, colonialism and a broader array of ‘otherisms’, expanding and diversifying nonviolent philosophy. With a sociological and historical introduction to the movement, and author and organisational biographies, this is an essential resource for students of gendered and sexualised peace, violence and justice.