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First published online March 27, 2017

No Place for a Feminist: Intersectionality and the Problem South: SWS Presidential Address

Abstract

Perceptions of the American South as being no place for a feminist continue to affect and inform decisions about research and activism in the region. By taking a closer look at Memphis and the American South, and by questioning longstanding assumptions, stereotypes, and omissions about the region, we create additional opportunities for further discussion about the complexities of feminism, intersectionality, and place. I challenge two common assumptions about the South. The first is the assumption that southern feminists are rare, or nonexistent, and have had little influence on developing feminist perspectives or pursuing social activism as local initiatives. The second assumption involves the concept of the Problem South and the propensity of scholars, journalists, and activists to fall back on old ideas about southern exceptionalism, and to emphasize continuities between the Old South and New South while minimizing discontinuities. In challenging these assumptions, I review the significance of intersectionality and suggest that paying attention to region and place offers an additional level of complexity and explanatory power for understanding social phenomena, including gender, sexualities, and social movements, as well as southern feminism and the Problem South.

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Biographies

Wanda Rushing is professor emerita of Sociology at the University of Memphis. She served as SWS President in 2016. She is author of Memphis and the Paradox of Place: Globalization in the American South (2009) and editor of Urbanization, Volume 15 of the New Encyclopedia of Southern Culture (2010), both published by the University of North Carolina Press. She has published numerous articles on social inequality and the American South, most recently in Urban Studies (2016) and Urban Education (2017). Her current research focuses on feminism and the South, and the reproduction of durable inequality in education.

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Article first published online: March 27, 2017
Issue published: June 2017

Keywords

  1. intersectionality
  2. American South
  3. place
  4. feminism
  5. southern exceptionalism

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Wanda Rushing

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Wanda Rushing, University of Memphis, Memphis, TN, USA; e-mail: [email protected]

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