Hostname: page-component-7c8c6479df-24hb2 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-03-29T09:05:12.590Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Gender and Nationalism

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 December 2019

Jennifer Thomson*
Affiliation:
University of Bath, Bath, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
*
*Corresponding author. Email: j.thomson@bath.ac.uk
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Nationalism has long been understood to be a deeply gendered phenomenon. This article provides an overview of some of the key concepts and literature in the study of gender and nationalism, including women; gender; the nation and the intersection of sexuality, race, and migration; and gender within nationalist imaginations. It offers some future research agendas that might be pursued in work on gender and nationalism—namely the gendered dimensions of populism or “new” nationalism.

Type
State of the Field
Copyright
© Association for the Study of Nationalities 2020

Introduction

In Poland in May 2019, a 51-year-old woman was arrested after posters of the Virgin Mary appeared with her halo in rainbow colors around the central city of Płock. In response to her arrest, the leader of the ruling right-wing Law and Justice political party, Jarosław Kaczyński, declared, “We are dealing with a direct attack on the family and children—the sexualization of children, that entire LBGT movement, gender … This is imported, but they today actually threaten our identity, our nation, its continuation and therefore the Polish state” (The Guardian, May 6, 2019).

In France in 2016, several seaside town mayors banned the wearing of the burkini, a swimsuit for women that covers most of the body, typically associated with Islamic dress. Pictures emerged of three French policemen surrounding a woman on a beach in Nice as she removed part of her clothing, apparently at their behest. Then prime minister Manuel Valls defended the bans, saying that a burkini was “not compatible with the values of the French Republic” (The Guardian, August 17, 2019).

In these two brief examples, we can see the centrality of gender to nationalism. For Kaczyński, “that entire LGBT movement, gender” is over there, not here in Poland—gender and sexuality act to define the boundaries of the Polish nation and what its values are. Similarly, in Valls’s description, the (Muslim) female body becomes a signifier on which what is and is not French can be understood. Gender, and its intersection with the body, race, sexuality, and religion, acts as a marker by which nations represent themselves, assign value, and provide symbols around which to rally.

This article provides an overview of some of the key concepts and literature in the study of gender and nationalism. In the first section I look at the dominant trends in gender and nationalist studies, focusing specifically on work that addresses women, gender and the nation. I then address the ways that gender intersects with violence, sexuality, race and migration in nationalist understandings. I close with some future research agendas that might be pursued in work on gender and nationalism—namely the gendered dimensions of populism or “new” nationalism.

Women, Gender, and the Nation

In the words of Suruchi Thapar-Björket, “discussions on nationalism have been primarily by men about men” (Reference Thapar-Björket, Waylen, Celis, Kantola and Weldon2013, 806, emphasis in original). As a result, they have seen little difference in the way that men and women understand nationalism or the distinct situation of women as nationalist subjects (Thapar-Björket Reference Thapar-Björket, Waylen, Celis, Kantola and Weldon2013, 806). National understandings and identities have thus “typically sprung from masculinized memory, masculinized humiliation, and masculinized hope” (Enloe Reference Enloe1990, 44) that treat the male experience as universal and marginalize women’s specific role in the creation and sustenance of national identities.

From the late 1980s onward, feminist scholarship began to challenge this accepted maleness of nationalism studies. Preliminary interventions focused on the role that women have had as both agents and repositories of collective national identity and in bringing to light this silence around women’s positioning vis-à-vis the national project. In their introduction to their path-breaking collection, Woman–Nation–State, editors Floya Anthias and Nira Yuval-Davis (Reference Anthias, Yuval-Davis, Yuval-Davis and Anthias1989, 7) theorize five ways that women constitute the national project:

  1. 1. as biological reproducers of the members of national collectives

  2. 2. as reproducers of the boundaries of national groups (through restrictions on sexual or marital relations)

  3. 3. as active transmitters and producers of the national culture

  4. 4. as symbolic signifiers of national difference

  5. 5. as active participants in national struggles

Although the third and fifth categories suggest a more active role for women, the rest suggest a largely passive and conservative position. While men “represent the progressive agent of national modernity (forward-thrusting, potent and historic)” (McClintock Reference McClintock1993, 66), contrastingly “women are, by design, supporting actors whose roles reflect masculinist notions of femininity and women’s proper ‘place’” (Nagel Reference Nagel1998, 243). These often reflect traditional notions of femininity and women’s role within a male-headed, patriarchal family unit. A striking example of such a conservative understanding of women’s situation within nationalist sentiment can be seen in a well-publicized letter that appeared in the London Morning Post in 1916, signed “A Little Mother.” The letter’s author declared that the “mothers of the British race … play the most important part in the history of the world, for it is we who ‘mother the men’ who have to uphold the honour and traditions not only of our Empire but of the whole civilised world” (quoted in Elshtain Reference Elshtain1987, 192). In dramatic terms, this language illustrates a central tenet of the literature on women and nationalism. Women exist as the standard-bearers of national identity through their position as wives or mothers, with these roles being vitally important in the transmission of national values, particularly to the next generation (Basu Reference Basu1996; Hansen Reference Hansen1994; McClintock Reference McClintock1993; Nagel Reference Nagel1998).

This extends from practical roles within the family unit to broader discursive and visual symbolism. We might think of references in language to the nation as the Motherland (for example, describing India as the Bhārat Mātā in nationalist discourse), or women representing the nation in images, cartoons, and propaganda (in, among many possible examples, Soviet-era state publications, the depiction of Lady Liberty in the United States, or the Marianne in France [Mosse, Reference Mosse1985, 91–93]). Sexual violence by men against women during conflict is also a means through which women and their bodies come to symbolically represent the nation (Hansen, Reference Hansen2000), which is reiterated in language referring to particularly destructive episodes within conflicts (the taking of Nanjing by the Japanese in the Second World War was long referred to as the “rape of Nanjing”). Rape represents a “militarized, masculinized nationalism, and it is on a woman’s body that the politics of the nation are mapped” (Thapar-Björkert Reference Thapar-Björket, Waylen, Celis, Kantola and Weldon2013, 811; see also Peterson Reference Peterson1999, 48).

This sense that nationalism is a masculine terrain in which women have little agency is also seen in the difficulties that female voices and feminist demands have when attempting to be incorporated within nationalist identity or struggles. Women’s rights are often understood to be second in line to the bigger picture of national struggles. In Cynthia Enloe’s description, “‘Not now, later’ is the advice that rings in the ears of many nationalist women.… It is advice predicated on the belief that the most dire problems facing the nascent national community are problems which can be explained and solved without reference to power relations between women and men” (Enloe Reference Enloe1990, 62). This can be seen, for example, in the fight for abortion rights within Irish nationalism in the 1980s. The dominant ideology of the Irish nationalist political party Sinn Féin at this point was polarised between “a traditionalist and probably even patriarchal tendency” and “a radical voice which was seeking change and recognition” (Maillot Reference Maillot2005, 111). As one activist from this period described the situation regarding discussion of abortion, “We gradually found that this was damaging the overall struggle, which was more important… If it damages our struggle, then it will have to wait” (quoted in Maillot Reference Maillot2005, 114; see also Thomson Reference Thomson2019). As a result, feminist demands were dampened, with the emphasis remaining on the national question.

As this overview of the literature suggests, and reflecting broader trends across the social sciences, there has been a steady movement from seeing women in nationalism to gender and nationalism (although the two terms have often been, and continue to be, conflated [Nagel Reference Nagel1998, 243]). This perspective has focused less on where women as individuals are within nationalism and more, as shown in the literature summarized above, on where symbolic ideas of men/masculinity and women/femininity exist and what impact these ideas are having. As such, there has been a turn toward considering the role that men and masculinity play within nationalisms and the types of male identity that are valorized within national projects (Anand Reference Anand2007; Banerjee Reference Banerjee2006; Mosse Reference Mosse1985; Nagel Reference Nagel1998; Sperling Reference Sperling2015).

Nationalist discourse often incites particular types of masculinity, many of which encourage violence. Men can be exhorted to act as “noble warriors” (Elshtain Reference Elshtain1987; see also Banerjee Reference Banerjee2006) to protect the nation. Indeed, “militarization of ethnic nationalism often depends on persuading individual men that their own manhood will be fully validated only if they perform as soldiers” (Enloe Reference Enloe2004, 108). This often results in misogynist violence carried out on those who are imagined to be “others.” In a consideration of the systematic use of rape in the Bosnian conflict and a concurrent discussion of Christopher R. Browning’s work on Nazi Germany (Reference Browning2001), Enloe (Reference Enloe2004) argues that a particular type of homosociality occurs in nationalist conflict, which acts to bond men together and make certain types of violence acceptable to them.

Simultaneously, much work has explored how women create an identity and work together as women in the face of nationalist violence. In many contexts, a feminist identity has emerged in opposition to nationalist violence and as part of a fight for peace. Cynthia Cockburn (Reference Cockburn1998) explores women’s peace activism during conflict in Northern Ireland, Bosnia-Herzegovina and Israel-Palestine (see also Deiana Reference Deiana2015; Fearon Reference Fearon1999; Shadmi Reference Shadmi2000). However, in focusing on this type of activism there is a danger of reifying an essentialist understanding of women as inherently peaceful (El-Bushra Reference El‐Bushra2007). Indeed, as the letter from “Little Mother’” illustrates, women can also incite and encourage violence from within their position as conservative nationalist tropes. Women have played key roles in the violence of the Indian Hindu nationalist movement, including partaking in it themselves (Basu Reference Basu1996; Hansen Reference Hansen1994; Menon Reference Menon2011; Sethi Reference Sethi2002; on gendered understandings of women’s violence more broadly see Sjoberg and Gentry Reference Sjoberg and Gentry2007). Furthermore, developing research also considers men as victims of violence (including sexual violence) in nationalist conflict [Dolan Reference Dolan, Aoláin, Cahn, Haynes and Valji2018]).

The diversity of work outlined in this first section understands that nations and nationalisms always “depend on powerful constructions of gender” (McClintock Reference McClintock1993, 61). These may vary across context, but they are based on “sanctioned institutionalization of gender difference” (McClintock Reference McClintock1993, 61, emphasis in original) and specific understandings of men’s and women’s roles within the nation. Although this interpretation is given little credence outside of scholarship that focuses on gender, it has underpinned work on gender and nationalism for almost thirty years.

Beyond Gender Alone

Reflecting this turn from women to gender, much scholarship looks beyond the single category of gender. Instead, it understands that gender is “intermeshed in concrete social situations with other social divisions such as ethnic, racial, class, age and sexuality” (Yuval-Davis Reference Yuval-Davis, Wilford and Miller2004, 28; see also Anthias and Yuval-Davis Reference Anthias and Yuval-Davis1992). This understanding of the intersectionality of identity construction originates in African-American feminist thought, from a “need to account for multiple grounds of identity when considering how the social world is constructed.” (Crenshaw Reference Crenshaw1991, 1245). Below, I consider the intersection of gender with sexuality, race, and migration in the context of nationalism.

Nationalism and Sexuality

As the second category of Anthias and Yuval-Davis (Reference Anthias, Yuval-Davis, Yuval-Davis and Anthias1989) suggests, there is a long-standing acknowledgment that “sexual identity and national identity are mutually dependent” (Thapar-Björket Reference Thapar-Björket, Waylen, Celis, Kantola and Weldon2013, 810). Joane Nagel (Reference Nagel2000, 107–108) describes a US army photograph taken during the liberation of France in 1944. It shows two French women who had been accused of conducting sexual relationships with Nazis during the occupation. They have been stripped to their underwear, their heads shaven, shoes removed, and foreheads tattooed with swastikas. Similar practices were seen in Northern Ireland during the Troubles, where women accused of relationships with British soldiers were tarred and feathered in public. As Nagel writes, these practices represent “an opportunity to reinforce and reestablish sexual, gender, and nationalist hegemony. By disciplining women collaborators, proper sexual demeanor and approved ethnosexual partners were publicly proclaimed” (Reference Nagel2000, 109). The idea of the nation is linked to ideas of sexual purity—often, as in the above cases, a sexual purity that is written on the bodies of women.

In his history of the growth of nationalism in the long twentieth century in Western Europe, George Mosse describes nationalism as a force that “helped control sexuality, yet also provided the means through which changing sexual attitudes could be absorbed and tamed into respectability” (1985, 10). In this sense, nationalism has been understood as heterosexist, in that “correct heterosexual masculine and feminine behavior constitutes gender regimes” that often lie at the heart of national self-understanding (Nagel Reference Nagel2000, 113; Peterson Reference Peterson1999).Footnote 1 V. Spike Peterson (Reference Peterson1999) reworks Anthias and Yuval-Davis’s (Reference Anthias, Yuval-Davis, Yuval-Davis and Anthias1989) five categories of gender and nationalism to highlight the ways in which heterosexism operates within each. She notes most especially the ways in which women’s social and biological role as reproducers of nationalist ideology is intimately linked to their role within the heterosexual family unit and the control exerted over women’s bodies with regards to reproduction, sanctioning pro- and anti-natalist policies for those populations whom the nation deems to be desirable or not (Reference Peterson1999, 44–45). Indeed, such heterosexist policies can be seen in contemporary pro-family and pro-natalist policies in Hungary (see Hammond Reference Hammond2018).

In such nationalisms that are profoundly heteronormative, homosexuality is understood and presented as an aberrant other. In Mosse’s historical exploration, nationalism in the early twentieth century was fundamentally centered on notions of “respectable” heterosexuality and “abnormal” homosexuality: “any confusion between these categories threatened chaos and lack of control” (Reference Mosse1985, 16). Similarly, in contemporary contexts, homosexuality can be viewed as threatening or antithetical to nationalist sentiment because it not only “threatens the homosocial male bonding required to forge the nation and defend it militarily” (Mole Reference Mole, Slootmaeckers, Touquet and Vermeersch2016, 107), but also ideas about the centrality of the heterosexual family and reproduction to the future of the nation. Furthermore, lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender rights and identities are often cast as Western, foreign, and potentially corrupting to the nation. Across the African continent, homosexuality has been decried in various countries as being “un-African,” tapping into complex nationalist and postcolonial sentiments (for example, McAllister Reference McAllister2013, on Botswana; Vincent and Howell Reference Vincent and Howell2014, on South Africa). Similarly, in Eastern Europe and Russia, “nationalist politicians use the EU’s more liberal position towards LGBT rights to draw a boundary between the ‘decadent West’ and ‘traditional East’ for their own social and political purposes” (Mole Reference Mole, Slootmaeckers, Touquet and Vermeersch2016, 100; see also Ayoub and Paternotte Reference Ayoub and Paternotte2014) For many nations homosexuality remains a marker of difference—a line in the sand, as in the story that opened this article, where the nation defines what counts as “us” and “them.”

For others however, “‘gay-friendliness’ becomes a key factor in assessing a country’s modernity” (Slootmaeckers, Touquet, and Vermeersch Reference Slootmaeckers, Touquet, Vermeersch, Slootmaeckers, Touquet and Vermeersch2016, 2–3). More recent work has addressed the ways in which homosexuality can be incorporated into national identity. Looking at the contemporary United States in particular, Jasbir Puar (Reference Puar2007) argues that there has been a “transition… in how queer bodies are relating to nation-states… from being figures of death (i.e., the AIDS epidemic) to becoming tied to ideas of life and productivity (i.e., gay marriage and families)” (xii). She argues that “homonationalism” can now be seen in the ways that the United States, among others, embeds homosexuality within its nationalist practices. As C. Heike Schotten paraphrases her argument, “homosexuality has become complicit with and is now part of the nation” and homonational discourse and practice “both sanctions homosexuality and produces it in sanitized forms, normalizing queerness into patriotism, marriage and consumption, while queering racialized threats to the nation and national security as (for example) terrorist” (Reference Schotten2016, 354). Puar’s coining of the term homonationalism has been hugely influential, and a wide body of work now addresses the ways in which homonationalism plays out in different contexts (for example, Hartal and Sasson-Levy Reference Hartal and Sasson-Levy2017, Reference Hartal and Sasson-Levy2018, on Israel; Smith Reference Smith2019, on Canada).

Nationalism and the Intersections of Race, Migration and Gender

Much debate about immigration and multiculturalism in a Western context has often centered on women and their position within the nation state, as in the burkini incident from France noted above. While there has been a long-standing debate within feminist theory about the relationship between feminism and multiculturalism,Footnote 2 more contemporary work explores how discussion of immigrant women’s rights are taken up within nationalist discourse. This conversation often pitches women’s rights as the “good” West versus the rest: “natives are already gender-equal, whereas migrants from non-Western countries are accused of oppressive behavior in terms of such categories as gender and sexuality” (Siim and Stoltz Reference Siim and Stoltz2014, 247). Sara Farris (Reference Farris2017) advances an understanding of “femonationalism” as explicitly placed at the intersection of gender, the nation, and migration. For her femonationalism is both “the attempts of western European right-wing parties and neoliberals to advance xenophobic and racist politics through the touting of gender equality” but also “feminists and femocrats… framing… Islam as a quintessentially misogynistic religion and culture” (2017, 4). Farris explores the way in which women’s rights discourse has been used by right-wing political parties in the Netherlands (Partij voor de Vrijheid), France (Front National), and Italy (Lega Nord), in terms not only of “native” women against the “other” immigrant male, but also of immigrant women who are “victims to be rescued, injured and exotic subjects lacking autonomy to whom western countries promise shelter and liberation” (Farris Reference Farris2017, 102).

The context of Sweden has also been of particular empirical interest given both the stated commitment to feminism on the part of the current liberal government (Aggestam and Bergman-Rosamond Reference Aggestam and Bergman-Rosamond2016) and the rise of nationalist right-wing politics in the context of the EU-wide migrant crisis. Maja Sager and Diana Mulinari (Reference Sager and Mulinari2018) argue, similarly to Farris, that there is an antagonistic relationship between feminism and racism in the Swedish context. On the one hand feminism is vilified by far-right nationalists but “at the same time, feminist-inspired concerns about gender equality and women’s safety are often mobilised and appropriated for racist and anti-immigration arguments” (Reference Sager and Mulinari2018, 155). Likewise, Ann Towns, Erika Karlsson, and Joshua Eyre argue that, in the context of the right-wing Swedish Democrats party, “our Swedish gender equality” is celebrated “when discussing migration and multiculturalism [but] fiercely contested in all other contexts” (Reference Towns, Karlsson and Eyre2014, 245). The Swedish case study thus highlights an inconsistency (Mayer, Ajanovic, and Sauer Reference Ajanovic and Sauer2014) seen elsewhere in other right-wing employment of women’s rights discourse. While feminism is to be rejected in terms of the challenge it poses to the heteronormative understanding of the nation, women’s rights are also used as justification for racist arguments for exclusion. Within the context of migration and right-wing politics here—as with homosexuality, as described above—the boundaries of “us” and “them” depend on national context, but gender remains a key marker.

Gender and Nationalism: Future Research Agendas

Considerations of the gendered nature of nationalism are therefore well established, even if this research remains ghettoized within nationalism studies. No other topic is exciting more interest in contemporary political science and international relations than the growth of populism. An overview of these debates is beyond the scope of this article, but populism is clearly linked to an idea of the nation and who merits inclusion within it (Brubaker Reference Brubaker2019). The gendered dimensions of this “new” nationalism have yet to be fully considered. While there is a body of work on the gendered breakdown of votes for populist parties and (the absence of) women within them (Immerzeel, Coffé, and Van der Lippe Reference Immerzeel, Coffé and Van Der Lippe2015; Kantola and Lombardo Reference Kantola and Lombardo2019; Köttig, Bitzan, and Petö Reference Köttig, Bitzan and Petö2017; Mudde Reference Mudde2007; Zaslove, Mügge, and de Lange Reference Zaslove, Mügge and de Lange2015), there is much less work thinking about the gendered nature of the ideologies that they are espousing as parties and movements. Furthermore, while there has been much recent consideration of anti-feminist and anti-gender equality movements and their global growth (Ahrens et al. Reference Ahrens, Celis, Childs, Engeli, Evans and Mügge2018; Kuhar and Paternotte Reference Kuhar and Paternotte2017; Korolczuk and Graff Reference Korolczuk and Graff2018; Norocel Reference Norocel2010, Reference Norocel2018; Verloo, Reference Verloo2018; Verloo and Paternotte, Reference Verloo and Paternotte2018), for the most part this is discussed within a context of the global right and transnational movements.

There has been less thinking about the work this type of “antigenderism” (Korolczuk and Graff Reference Korolczuk and Graff2018) is doing in specific contemporary nationalisms, many of which are largely referred to in the language of populism, and the concepts that nationalism studies might provide to think through them. In the current climate, future case studies abound: President Trump and the United States’ move to remove the word gender from UN documents, as well as the national discourse around reproductive rights; President Jair Bolsonaro of Brazil and his rise to power on the back of homophobic lies and misogynist public speech; Hungary’s president Orbán and the country’s natalist and anti-immigrant policies. I argue, therefore, similarly to Paternotte and Kuhar (Reference Paternotte and Roman2018), that language around the “Global Right” can be too diffuse, and that there needs to be an injection of national, contextual understanding to thinking about how nationalism infects pushback on women’s and LGBT rights.

Conclusion

As this overview of some of the key ways in which gender creates, sustains, and underpins nationalism has illustrated, there is a long-held understanding within the literature of women’s role within nationalism—most especially as biological and symbolic reproducers of the nation and as vessels in which cultural value and collective aspirations are projected. Yet the literature has also moved beyond an understanding of women in nationalism, to gender as a socially constructive force, and the ways in which masculinity and femininity shape roles and ideas within nationalism. The article has also explored how gender works in conversation with other social categories to create national identities, with its intersections with sexuality and migration particularly highlighted here. Future considerations of gender and nationalism will continue to approach the issue beyond a “single-axis framework” (Crenshaw Reference Crenshaw1989, 139) to look at the ways gender works with sexuality, race, ethnicity, and class to construct nationalisms.

We are currently living, as the ancient Chinese curse would have it, in interesting times for the academic study of nationalism. New (and old) varieties of nationalist sentiment are (re-)emerging around the globe. Gender is fundamental to understanding these, and a consideration of it merits greater attention within nationalism studies. The literature outlined here represents key ideas for interested scholars to begin with, as they help to explain and explore how gendered nationalisms continue to shape our world.

Disclosure.

Author has nothing to disclose.

Footnotes

1 Although less focused on nationalism, Adrienne Rich’s term “compulsory heterosexuality” (Reference Rich1980) is instructive here.

2 This debate, initiated in Susan Moller Okin, Joshua Cohen, Matthew Howard, and Martha C. Nussbaum (Reference Okin, Cohen, Howard and Nussbaum1999), has often been seen as presenting a simplistic view of Western society in which women are fully emancipated, versus a backward, patriarchal “Other.” An overview of the debate can be found in Baukje Prins and Sawirti Saharso (Reference Prins, Saharso, Waylen, Celis, Kantola and Weldon2013).

References

Aggestam, Karin, and Bergman-Rosamond, Annika. 2016. “Swedish Feminist Foreign Policy in the Making: Ethics, Politics, and Gender.” Ethics and International Affairs 30 (3): 323334.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ahrens, Petra, Celis, Karen, Childs, Sarah, Engeli, Isabelle, Evans, Elizabeth, and Mügge, Liza. 2018. “Contemporary Crises in European Politics: Gender Equality+ Under Threat.” European Journal of Politics and Gender 1 (3): 301306.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Anand, Dibyesh. 2007. “Anxious Sexualities: Masculinity, Nationalism and Violence.” British Journal of Politics and International Relations 9 (2): 257269.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Anthias, Floya, and Yuval-Davis, Nira. 1989. Introduction to Woman–Nation–State, edited by Yuval-Davis, Nira and Anthias, Floya, 115. Houndmills: Palgrave Macmillan.Google Scholar
Anthias, Floya, and Yuval-Davis, Nira. 1992. Racialized Boundaries: Race, Nation, Gender, Colour, and Class and the Anti-racist Struggle. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Ayoub, Phillip, and Paternotte, David, eds. 2014. LGBT Activism and the Making of Europe: A Rainbow Europe? London: Palgrave Macmillan.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Banerjee, S. 2006. Armed Masculinity, Hindu Nationalism and Female Political Participation in India: Heroic Mothers, Chaste Wives and Celibate Warriors. International Feminist Journal of Politics 8 (1): 6283.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Basu, Amrita. 1996. “The Gendered Imagery and Women’s Leadership of Hindu Nationalism.” Reproductive Health Matters 4 (8): 7076.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Browning, Christopher R. 2001. Ordinary Men: Reserve Police Battalion 101 and the Final Solution in Poland. London: Penguin.Google Scholar
Brubaker, Rogers. 2019. “Populism and Nationalism.” Nations and Nationalism. Published online ahead of print April 29, 2019. doi: 10.1111/nana.12522.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cockburn, Cynthia. 1998. The Space between Us: Negotiation Gender and National Identities in Conflict. London: Zed Books.Google Scholar
Crenshaw, Kimberlé Williams. 1989. “Demarginalizing the Intersection of Race and Sex: A Black Feminist Critique of Antidiscrimination Doctrine, Feminist Theory and Antiracist Politics.” University of Chicago Legal Forum 1989 (1): 139167.Google Scholar
Crenshaw, Kimberlé Williams. 1991. “Mapping the Margins: Intersectionality, Identity Politics, and Violence against Women of Color.” Stanford Law Review 43 (6): 12411299.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Deiana, Maria-Adriana. 2015. “To Settle for a Gendered Peace? Spaces for Feminist Grassroots Mobilization in Northern Ireland and Bosnia-Herzegovina. Citizenship Studies 20 (1): 99114.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dolan, Chris. 2018. “Victims Who Are Men.” In The Oxford Handbook of Gender and Conflict, edited by Aoláin, Fionnuala Ní, Cahn, Naomi, Haynes, Dina Francesca, and Valji, Nahla, 86101. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
El‐Bushra, Judy. 2007. “Feminism, Gender, and Women’s Peace Activism.” Development and Change 38 (1): 131148.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Elshtain, Jean Bethke. 1987. Women and War. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Enloe, Cynthia. 1990. Bananas, Beaches and Bases: Making Feminist Sense of International Politics. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Enloe, Cynthia. 2004. The Curious Feminist: Searching for Women in a New Age of Empire. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Farris, Sara R. 2017. In the Name of Women’s Rights: The Rise of Femonationalism. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fearon, Kate. 1999. Women’s Work: The Story of the Northern Ireland Women’s Coalition. Belfast: Blackstaff Press.Google Scholar
Guardian. 2016. “French PM Supports Local Bans on Burkinis.” August 17.Google Scholar
Guardian. 2019. “Woman Arrested in Poland over Posters of Virgin Mary with Rainbow Halo.” May 6.Google Scholar
Hammond, Samuel. 2018. “Born in Hungary.” National Review, August 27. https://www.nationalreview.com/magazine/2018/08/27/born-in-hungary/. (Accessed October 10, 2019).Google Scholar
Hansen, Lene. 2000. “Gender, Nation, Rape: Bosnia and the Construction of Security.” International Feminist Journal of Politics 3 (1): 5575.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hansen, Thomas Blom. 1994. “Controlled Emancipation: Women and Hindu Nationalism.” European Journal of Development Research 6 (2): 8294.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hartal, Gilly, and Sasson-Levy, Orna. 2017. “Being [in] the Center: Sexual Citizenship and Homonationalism at Tel Aviv’s Gay-Center.” Sexualities 20 (5/6): 738761.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hartal, Gilly, and Sasson-Levy, Orna. 2018. “Re-Reading Homonationalism: An Israeli Spatial Perspective.” Journal of Homosexuality 65 (10): 13911414.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Immerzeel, Tim, Coffé, Hilde, and Van Der Lippe, Tanja. 2015. “Explaining the Gender Gap in Radical Right Voting: A Cross-National Investigation in 12 Western European Countries.” Comparative European Politics 13 (2): 263286.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kantola, Johanna, and Lombardo, Emanuela. 2019. “Populism and Feminist Politics: The Cases of Finland and Spain. European Journal of Political Research. Published online ahead of print February 28, 2019. doi: 10.1111/1475-6765.12333.Google Scholar
Korolczuk, Elżbieta, and Graff, Agnieska. 2018. “Gender as ‘Ebola from Brussels’: The Anticolonial Frame and the Rise of Illiberal Populism.” Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society 43 (4): 797821.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Köttig, Michaela, Bitzan, Renate, and Petö, Andrea, eds. 2017. Gender and Far Right Politics in Europe. Cham: Palgrave Macmillan.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kuhar, Roman, and Paternotte, David, eds. 2017. Anti-Gender Campaigns in Europe: Mobilizing against Equality. London: Rowman & Littlefield.Google Scholar
Maillot, Agnès. 2005. New Sinn Féin: Irish Republicanism in the Twenty-First Century. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Mayer, Stefanie, Ajanovic, Edma, and Sauer, Brigit. 2014. “Intersections and Inconsistencies. Framing Gender in Right-Wing Populist Discourses in Austria.” NORA: Nordic Journal of Feminist and Gender Research 22 (4): 250256.Google Scholar
McAllister, J. E. 2013. “Tswanarising Global Gayness: The ‘unAfrican’ Argument, Western Gay Media Imagery, Local Responses and Ray Culture in Botswana.” Culture, Health and Sexuality 15 (Supp. 1): 88101.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McClintock, Ann. 1993. “Family Feuds: Gender, Nationalism and the Family.” Feminist Review 44 (1): 6180.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Menon, Kalyani Devaki. 2011Everyday Nationalism. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.Google Scholar
Mole, Richard C. M. 2016. “Nationalism and Homophobia in Central and Eastern Europe.” In The EU Enlargement and Gay Politics: The Impact of Eastern Enlargement on Rights, Activism and Prejudice, edited by Slootmaeckers, Koen, Touquet, Heleen, and Vermeersch, Peter, 99121. London: Palgrave Macmillan.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mosse, George L. 1985. Nationalism and Sexuality: Middle-Class Morality and Sexual Norms in Modern Europe. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press.Google Scholar
Mudde, Cas. 2007Populist Radical Right Parties in Europe. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nagel, Joane. 1998. “Masculinity and Nationalism: Gender and Sexuality in the Making of Nations.” Ethnic and Racial Studies 21 (2): 242269.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nagel, Joane. 2000. “Ethnicity and Sexuality.” Annual Review of Sociology 26: 107133.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Norocel, Ov Cristian. 2010. “Constructing Radical Right Populist Resistance: Metaphors of Heterosexist Masculinities and the Family Question in Sweden,” NORMA: Nordic Journal for Masculinity Studies 5 (2): 169183.Google Scholar
Norocel, Ov Cristian. 2018. “Antifeminist and ‘Truly Liberated’: Conservative Performances of gender by Women Politicians in Hungary and Romania. Politics and Governance 6 (3): 4354.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Okin, Susan Moller, and Cohen, Joshua, Howard, Matthew, and Nussbaum, Martha C., eds. 1999Is Multiculturalism Bad for Women? Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Paternotte, David, and Roman, Kuhar. 2018. Disentangling and Locating the “Global Right”: Anti-Gender Campaigns in Europe. Politics and Governance 6 (3): 619.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Peterson, V. Spike. 1999. “Political Identities/Nationalism as Heterosexism.” International Feminist Journal of Politics 1 (1): 3465.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Puar, Jasbir K. 2007Terrorist Assemblages: Homonationalism in Queer Times. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Prins, Baukje and Saharso, Sawitri, 2013, “Multiculturalism and Identity.” In The Oxford Handbook of Gender and Politics, edited by Waylen, Georgina, Celis, Karen, Kantola, Johanna, and Weldon, S. Laurel, 781802. New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Rich, Adrienne. 1980. “Compulsory Heterosexuality and Lesbian Existence.” Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society 5 (4): 631660.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sager, Maja, and Mulinari, Diana. 2018. “Safety for Whom? Exploring Femonationalism and Care-Racism in Sweden. Women’s Studies International Forum 68 (May–June): 149156.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schotten, C. Heike. 2016. “Homonationalism: From Critique to Diagnosis or, We Are All Homonational Now.” International Feminist Journal of Politics 18 (3): 351370.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sethi, Manisha. 2002. “Avenging Angels and Nurturing Mothers: Women in Hindu Nationalism.” Economic and Political Weekly 37 (16): 15451552.Google Scholar
Shadmi, Erella. 2000. “Between Resistance and Compliance, Feminism and Nationalism: Women in Black in Israel.” Women’s Studies International Forum 23 (1): 2334.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Siim, Birte, and Stoltz, Pauline2014. “Special issue on ‘Nationalism, Gender Equality and Welfare—Intersectional Contestations and the Politics of Belonging.’” NORA: Nordic Journal of Feminist and Gender Research 22 (4): 247249.Google Scholar
Sjoberg, Laura, and Gentry, Caron E.. 2007. Mothers, Monsters, Whores: Women’s Violence in Global Politics. London: Zed Books.Google Scholar
Slootmaeckers, Koen, Touquet, Heleen, and Vermeersch, Peter. 2016. “Introduction: EU Enlargement and LGBT Rights—Beyond Symbolism?” In The EU Enlargement and Gay Politics: The Impact of Eastern Enlargement on Rights, Activism and Prejudice, edited by Slootmaeckers, Koen, Touquet, Heleen, and Vermeersch, Peter, 116. London: Palgrave Macmillan.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smith, Miriam. 2019. Homophobia and Homonationalism: LGBTQ Law Reform in Canada. Social & Legal Studies. Published online ahead of print January 10, 2019. doi: 10.1177/0964663918822150.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sperling, Valerie. 2015. Sex, Politics, and Putin: Political Legitimacy in Russia. Oxford University Press. Published online ahead of print January 29, 2019. doi: 10.1177/0964663918822150.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thapar-Björket, Suruchi. 2013. “Gender, Nations and Nationalism.” In The Oxford Handbook of Gender and Politics, edited by Waylen, Georgina, Celis, Karen, Kantola, Johanna, and Weldon, S. Laurel, 803833. New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Thomson, Jennifer. 2019. Abortion Law and Political Institutions: Explaining Policy Resistance. Cham: Palgrave Macmillan.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Towns, Ann, Karlsson, Erika, and Eyre, Joshua. 2014. “The Equality Conundrum: Gender and Nation in the Ideology of the Sweden Democrats.” Party Politics 20 (2): 237247.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Verloo, Mieke, ed. 2018. Varieties of Opposition to Gender Equality in Europe. New York: Routledge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Verloo, Mieke, and Paternotte, David. 2018. “The Feminist Project under Threat in Europe.” Politics and Governance 6 (3): 15.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vincent, Louise, and Howell, Simon. 2014. “‘Unnatural,’ ‘Un-African’ and ‘Ungodly’: Homophobic Discourse in Democratic South Africa.” Sexualities 17 (4): 472483.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Yuval-Davis, Nira. 2004. “Gender and Nation.” In Women, Ethnicity and Nationalism: The Politics of Transition, edited by Wilford, Rick and Miller, Robert E., 2131. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Zaslove, Andrej, Mügge, Liza M., and de Lange, Sarah L.. 2015. “Gender and Populist Radical-Right Politics.” Patterns of Prejudice 49 (1/2): 315.Google Scholar