ISBN 978-3-03777-310-9
288 pages
2025
format 15.5 x 22.5 cm

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SFr. 38.00 / € 38.00

Doing Gender Studies: Producing Knowledge Otherwise

Dina Bolokan, Anukriti Dixit, Melina Rutishauser, Julia Wartmann (ed.)

This volume is rooted in a commitment to epistemic justice in times of rising precarity in academia. It seeks to question the hegemonic definitions of ‘doing research’. Commitment to gender studies, as the title suggests, is already an assurance to a form of research that is ‘otherwise’ – one that looks beyond neoliberal, competitive, and individual-driven agendas. Moreover, the anthology is an attempt to unfollow hierarchies, confront oppressive structures and question taken-for-grantedness in disciplinary knowledge production. The contributors are part of the Inter-university Doctoral Program Gender Studies CH at the universities of Basel, Bern and Zürich. They consist of professors, doctoral students, coordinators and further scholars, that belong to the wider network. They have all ‘done’ gender studies in various transnational and transdisciplinary contexts. Reflections on how knowledge is produced are thus nurtured by diverse networks of feminist solidarity, an ethics of care and a politics of situated research(ers). Authors engage with the politics of such an ‘otherwise’ in their respective contexts to illuminate intersubjective and collaborative ways of ‘doing gender studies’ and of ‘producing research otherwise’.

Authors/editors

Dina Bolokan holds a PhD in Sociology and has researched and taught at the Centre for Gender Studies at the University of Basel. Their dissertation examines the political economy of labour migration in the European agricultural sector. Bolokan has also been actively involved in the Inter-University Doctoral Program in Gender Studies CH and Basel, moving from student assistant to PhD candidate and later serving as the program coordinator.

Anukriti Dixit is an advanced postdoctoral scholar and lecturer at University of Bern. Her primary research interests include anti-caste and decolonial qualitative research, intersectional policy design and poststructuralist policy analysis. She was awarded a Swiss government excellence scholarship (2019–2020) and a Ford Foundation small grant for feminist research (in 2018, administered through the Institute for Social Sciences trust, New Delhi).

Melina Rutishauser is a PhD candidate in medical anthropology at the University of Basel and part of the Inter-University Doctoral Program Gender Studies CH since 2016. Her research interests include topics such as health, gender and visual representations.

Julia Wartmann received her PhD from the University of Basel for her thesis on the Autonomous Administration of North and East Syria’s gender equality reforms. Her work, which investigates the role of freedom’s meaning in reinforcing gender binaries, can be situated at the intersection of International Relations and Gender Studies.

With contributions by Dina Bolokan, Ayşegül Şah Bozdoğan Iles, Tina Büchler, Stephanie Deig, Anukriti Dixit, Philomena Essed, Surangika Jayarathne, Tomke König, Muneeb Ul Lateef Banday, Isabell Lorey, Andrea Maihofer, Katrin Meyer, Melina Rutishauser, Birgit Sauer, roan schmid, Thiemo Strutzenberger, Julia Wartmann, Regina Wecker, Rahel Sophia Wehrlin, Cita Wetterich, Andrea Zimmermann.