GNDR 1000 Lecture Notes - Lecture 2: Microsoft Powerpoint, Anita Hill, Intersectionality
Document Summary
Intersectionality: kil(cid:271)erle cre(cid:374)shaw (cid:272)oi(cid:374)ed the ter(cid:373) (cid:858)i(cid:374)terse(cid:272)tio(cid:374)ality(cid:859) i(cid:374) 1(cid:1013)(cid:1012)6. He is a legal scholar/lawyer who represented anita hill against clarence thomas. It indicates a way of looking at the world that sees the intersecting identities (social locations) and systems of power/oppression that operates in our lives. Resistance: resistance has a few different meanings, depending on the context in which you are using it. In the context we are discussing it here, it means one of the following: The refusal to accept or comply with something. The use of force of violence to oppose someone or something. Solidarity: solidarity is unity or agreement of feeling or action, especially among individuals with a common interest; mutual support within a group. E(cid:454): (cid:858)factor(cid:455) (cid:449)orkers (cid:448)oiced solidarit(cid:455) (cid:449)ith the striking students(cid:859) Ableism: discrimination in favour of able-bodied people. In unit 2 you are introduced to the concept of intersectionality and the use of.