Table of contents for Pinay power : peminist critical theory : theorizing the Filipina-American experience / [edited by] Melinda L. de Jesâus.

Bibliographic record and links to related information available from the Library of Congress catalog.

Note: Contents data are machine generated based on pre-publication provided by the publisher. Contents may have variations from the printed book or be incomplete or contain other coding.


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Table of Contents
Dedication 
Table of Contents 
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Introduction: "Toward a Peminist Theory, or Theorizing the Filipina/American Experience"
I. Identity and Decolonization
Chapter 1: Leny Mendoza Strobel. "A Personal Story: On Being a Split Filipino Subject"
Chapter 2: Linda M. Pierce. "Not Just My Closet: Exposing Familial, Cultural, and Imperial Skeletons"
Chapter 3: Melinda L. de Jesús. "Fictions of Assimilation: Nancy Drew, Cultural Imperialism, and the Filipina/American Experience"
Chapter 4: Rachel A. Bundang. "'This Is Not Your Mother's Catholic Church:' When Filipino Catholic Spirituality Meets American Culture" 	
II. Re/Writing Peminist Sociohistory
Chapter 5: Catherine Ceniza Choy. "Asian American History: Reflections on Imperialism, Immigration, and 'The Body'"
Chapter 6: Rhacel Salazar Parreñas. "Migrant Filipina Domestic Workers and the International Division of Reproductive Labor"
Chapter 7: Dawn Bohulano Mabalon. "Beauty Queens, Bomber Pilots, and Basketball Players: Second Generation Filipina Americans in Stockton, California, 1930s to 1950s"
III. Peminist Dis/Engagements with Feminism
Chapter 8: Allyson Tintiangco-Cubales. "Pinayism"
Chapter 9: Frank Samson. "Filipino American Males: Comrades in the Filipina/o American Feminism Movement" 
Chapter 10: Delia Aguilar and Karin Aguilar-San Juan. "Feminisms across Our Generations"
IV. Theorizing Desire: Sexuality, Community, and Activism
Chapter 11: Christine T. Lipat, Trinity A. Ordona, Cianna Pamintuan Stewart, and Mary Ann Ubaldo. "Tomboy, Dyke, Lezzi and Bi: Filipina Lesbian and Bisexual Women Speak Out"
Chapter 12: M. Evelina Galang. "Deflowering the Sampaguita"
Chapter 13: Trinity A. Ordona. "The Long Road Ahead"
V. Talking Back: Peminist Interventions in Cyberspace and the Academy
Chapter 14: Perla Paredes Daly. "Creating New.Filipina.com and the Rise of Cyber Pinays" 
Chapter 15: Emily Noelle Ignacio. "'Ain't I a Filipino (Woman)?': An Analysis of Authorship/Authority through the Construction of Filipino/Filipina on the Net"
Chapter 16: Melinda L. de Jesús. "'A walkin' fo' de (Rice)kake': A Filipina-American Feminist's Adventures in Academia or A Pinay's Progress"
Chapter 17: Michelle R. Watts. "Not White Enough, Not Pilipino Enough: A Young Mestiza's Journey"
VI. Peminist Cultural Production
Chapter 18: Victoria Alba. "Sino Ka? Ano Ka?': Contemporary Art by Eight Filipina American Artists"
Chapter 19: Celine Parreñas Shimizu. "Theory in/of Practice: Filipina American Feminist Filmmaking"
Chapter 20: Gigi Ot lvaros-Hormillosa. "Resisting Appropriation and Assimilation via (a)eromestiza Consciousness and Performance Art Practice"
Chapter 21: Sabrina Margarita Alc ntara-Tan. "The Herstory of Bamboo Girl 'Zine"
Chapter 22: Marie-Therese Sulit. "Through Our Pinay Writings: Narrating Trauma, Embodying Recovery"
Chapter 23: Neferti Xina M. Tadiar. "Filipinas: 'Living in a Time of War'"
List of Contributors 	 567

Library of Congress Subject Headings for this publication:

Filipino American women -- Social conditions.
Filipino American women -- Intellectual life.
Feminism -- United States.
Feminist theory -- United States.
Critical theory.