Forget(ting) feminism? Investigating relationality in international relations

TitleForget(ting) feminism? Investigating relationality in international relations
Publication TypeJournal Article
AuthorsZalewski, Marysia
JournalCambridge Review of International Affairs
Volume32
Issue5
Pagination615-635
ISSN0955-7571
AbstractWhat kind of theoretical or methodological changes are needed to more effectively theorize global politics? This question is one increasingly posed, one reason being the ever burgeoning weight of violence on our global political landscapes. To investigate this, the central concept examined at the workshop from which this special section emanates was relationality. Motivated by feminist scholarship, my initial question was, ‘Why did we not focus the whole workshop around feminist theory?’ This question is posed alongside the clear knowledge that the workshop was not ‘about’ feminism and thus it might not seem rational to choose such a focus. Yet given the concept and practice of relationality was so deeply embedded in feminist work, I wondered how feminism could have been forgotten. In this article, I explore the idea of ‘forgetting feminism’ through a further question, namely, ‘Is sexism (still) at work in international relations [IR]?’ This involves a perusal of the work of sexual politics and sexism, IR’s putative ‘failure to love’ and a personal, relational detour into the life, work and career of Lily Ling—corporeally suddenly absent but remaining a vital part of the work in which we are all engaged.
URLhttps://doi.org/10.1080/09557571.2019.1624688
DOI10.1080/09557571.2019.1624688
Short TitleForget(ting) feminism?
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