Living West as Feminists
Conversations about the Where of Us
by Krista Comer
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Pub Date Nov 01 2024 | Archive Date Oct 31 2024
University of Nebraska Press | Bison Books
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Description
Living West as Feminists moves from travelogue to interviews to critical meditations. It asks who one’s people are, to whom one feels accountable, and how we might make peace with the itinerant, often displaced lives of late-stage capitalist culture. Ultimately, the book understands feminism not as a specific politics or set of theories but as a network of relations. Its coalitional perspective allows for coming together even while distinguishing feminists who write from Black, Indigenous, queer, Chicanx, and materialist perspectives. Feminist rest areas, in which relational securities find footing, can create the most priceless resource in desperate times: well-being and political hope.
Advance Praise
"An introspective memoir full of love and meditation."—Kirkus Reviews
“This book is an innovative and forward-thinking project that pushes us to reimagine what a committed feminist book on the American West might look like in our current moment. It includes lively and informative interviews that emerged from insightful questions.”—Susan Kollin, author of Captivating Westerns: The Middle East in the American West
“Living West as Feminists is a book filled with illumination, inspiration, and intimacy. Each of Krista Comer’s in situ conversations casts a thoughtful and nuanced light on complex subject matter, cumulatively granting access to an enlarged (and still-growing) portrait of seriously engaged academic and personal investigations into the relationships between place, history, identity, and some movements (again both personal and collective) toward forms of restorative justice. A highly recommended text for academics and non-academics alike.”—Elizabeth Rosner, author of Third Ear: Reflections on the Art and Science of Listening
“How many ways can we answer the question, ‘What is the where of here?’ For Comer and her contributors the question takes us to many worlds, many intricate and dense connections, to relations that trouble settler assumptions and open paths toward reparations, toward an ethic that attends to the care of where. This beautiful, intimate set of reflective conversations offers stories of feminist struggle, of gardens, and of hikes and friendships between surfers. It’s a joy to read and a promise that another world is possible.”—Mary Pat Brady, author of Scales of Captivity: Racial Capitalism and the Latinx Child
“In Living West as Feminists Krista Comer leads readers on a road trip through the politics of place, engaging in a series of conversations with scholars, educators, activists, and feminists about the U.S. West, a region that is not only geographically vast but also a contested space and a contested term. As a passenger on this journey, I found myself thinking through Comer’s questions about how we live in specific places—and especially how we pay attention to the ways we live on specific lands. They feel like a challenge as well as an invitation: How can coalitional feminism inform our relations to place? How does rootedness in place call us to be in coalition with others and with land and home? These questions, and the ensuing conversations, will stay with me for a long, long time.”—Lacy M. Johnson, author of The Reckonings: Essays on Justice for the Twenty-First Century
Available Editions
EDITION | Paperback |
ISBN | 9781496229533 |
PRICE | $24.95 (USD) |
PAGES | 316 |
Available on NetGalley
Featured Reviews
As someone who hosted a road-tripping podcast interviewing feminist activists across the US, I feel like I'm the ideal audience for this book! I really enjoyed the exploration of feminism across the US West and the interwoven essays.
This book offers our world so much, and such necessary sustenance and nutrition to help us thrive in the chaos of rapid changes we must embrace and endure. The clear encouragement to face the messy parts of ourselves and our histories and how those have impacted the places we now call home, for however long is wonderfully helpful in a time of narrowing, disastrously narrowing our willingness to be uncomfortable. The road trip as structure provides intriguing access for non-academic readers who can slip into the stream wherever it feels welcoming, and then maybe get tugged along into the questioning whirlpools that might spit us out in completely unfamiliar landscapes of culture or concept. The many voices combining into this exploration, this journey, provide "connections and generosities" that emerge as "small justice moments creating affective bonds." In the hypermasculinized histories of a typically whitewashed "American West" these conversations open more senses than many of us even know we have, and certainly invite nonhierarchical, nonpossessive relationships, "invoking community and dwelling together" across human cultures and life species and processes. This is one to keep handy on your shelf and open often, as antidote and as pathway.