1st Edition
Working with Affect in Feminist Readings Disturbing Differences
Introduction: Feeling Differences Marianne Liljeström, & Susanna Paasonen Part 1: Affective Identities 1. Differences Disturbing Identities: Deleuze and Feminism Elizabeth Grosz 2. Queer + Identity + Intersectionality = Something Truly Disturbing? Leena-Maija Rossi 3. Feminism, Happiness and Affected Differences Sara Ahmed 4. Revisiting Race in Cyberspace María Fernández Part 2: Carnal Feelings 5. Disturbing, Fleshy Texts: Pornography and the Strategies of Reading Susanna Paasonen 6. Energetic Bodies, Devotional Spaces: Affective Encounters in Fieldwork Johanna Ahonen 7. Hips Don’t Lie? Affective and Kinesthetic Dance Ethnography Anu Laukkanen 8. Laughing (at) Differences. Corporeal Spectatorship, Fat Actress and Politics of Body Size Katariina Kyrölä Part 3: Affective Research 9. Writing Scholarly Affects: Fallible Voices as Feminist Practice Melissa Gregg 10. Despite all Good Feminist Intentions: The Potentiality of Failed Reading across the East-West Divide Marianne Liljeström 11. Neither Straight nor Forward: Sexual and Textual Others in Caribbean Women’s Writing Elina Valovirta 12. Mobilizing Affect in Feminist Reading: The Case of ‘Moving Manchester’ Lynne Pearce 13. Feeling Wrong: Emotions and Researching Men’s Accounts of Fatherhood Ilana Aalto
Biography
Dr Marianne Liljeström is Professor of Women’s Studies at the University of Turku, Finland. She has published articles on Nordic and Soviet women’s history, and edited and written parts of three textbooks in Finnish on feminist theory and methodology. Her most recent publications include the co-edited anthology Models of Self. Russian Women’s Autobiographical Texts (2000), and the edited volume Feminist Knowing – Discussions on Methodology (in Finnish, 2004). Her latest monograph Useful Selves: Russian Women’s Autobiographical Texts from the Post-War Period was published in 2004.
Dr Susanna Paasonen is a research fellow at the Helsinki Collegium for Advanced Studies, University of Helsinki. Her teaching and research interests include Internet research, feminist theory, pornography and popular culture. She is the author of Figures of Fantasy: Women, Internet and Cyberdiscourse (2005) as well as the co-editor of Women and Everyday Uses of the Internet: Agency & Identity (2002) and Pornification: Sex and Sexuality in Media Culture (2007). Her work has recently appeared in the journals Feminist Theory, The Velvet Light Trap and European Journal of Cultural Studies.






