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The Palgrave Handbook of Critical Menstruation Studies
other
Editor(s):
Chris Bobel
,
Inga T. Winkler
,
Breanne Fahs
,
Katie Ann Hasson
,
Elizabeth Arveda Kissling
,
Tomi-Ann Roberts
Publication date
(Print):
2020
Publisher:
Springer Singapore
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There is no author summary for this book yet. Authors can add summaries to their books on ScienceOpen to make them more accessible to a non-specialist audience.
Related collections
Prometheus. Critical Studies in Innovation
Author and book information
Book
ISBN (Print):
978-981-15-0613-0
ISBN (Electronic):
978-981-15-0614-7
Publication date (Print):
2020
DOI:
10.1007/978-981-15-0614-7
SO-VID:
3ce1a41a-2db8-418a-98ee-357e7c419d07
History
Funding
Water Supply and Sanitation Collaborative Council;
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Book chapters
pp. 1
Introduction: Menstruation as Lens—Menstruation as Opportunity
pp. 9
Introduction: Menstruation as Fundamental
pp. 15
Bleeding in Public? Rethinking Narratives of Menstrual Management from Delhi’s Slums
pp. 31
The Realities of Period Poverty: How Homelessness Shapes Women’s Lived Experiences of Menstruation
pp. 49
Opinion: Prisons that Withhold Menstrual Pads Humiliate Women and Violate Basic Rights
pp. 53
Bleeding in Jail: Objectification, Self-Objectification, and Menstrual Injustice
pp. 69
Navigating the Binary: A Visual Narrative of Trans and Genderqueer Menstruation
pp. 77
The Human Rights of Women and Girls with Disabilities: Sterilization and Other Coercive Responses to Menstruation
pp. 93
Personal Narrative: Let Girls Be Girls—My Journey into Forced Womanhood
pp. 99
“I Treat My Daughters Not Like My Mother Treated Me”: Migrant and Refugee Women’s Constructions and Experiences of Menarche and Menstruation
pp. 115
Menstruation and Religion: Developing a Critical Menstrual Studies Approach
pp. 131
Personal Narrative: Out of the Mikvah, into the World
pp. 137
Personal Narrative: Caste Is My Period
pp. 143
Menstrual Taboos: Moving Beyond the Curse
pp. 163
Transnational Engagements: Cultural and Religious Practices Related to Menstruation
pp. 177
Introduction: Menstruation as Embodied
pp. 181
The Menstrual Mark: Menstruation as Social Stigma
pp. 201
The Menarche Journey: Embodied Connections and Disconnections
pp. 215
Resisting the Mantle of the Monstrous Feminine: Women’s Construction and Experience of Premenstrual Embodiment
pp. 233
Learning About What’s “Down There”: Body Image Below the Belt and Menstrual Education
pp. 253
Living in Uncertain Times: Experiences of Menopause and Reproductive Aging
pp. 269
The Womb Wanders Not: Enhancing Endometriosis Education in a Culture of Menstrual Misinformation
pp. 287
Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS) and the Myth of the Irrational Female
pp. 303
The Sexualization of Menstruation: On Rape, Tampons, and ‘Prostitutes’
pp. 319
(In)Visible Bleeding: The Menstrual Concealment Imperative
pp. 337
Transnational Engagements: From Debasement, Disability, and Disaster to Dignity—Stories of Menstruation Under Challenging Conditions
pp. 349
Introduction: Menstruation as Rationale
pp. 353
If Men Could Menstruate
pp. 357
Introducing Menstrunormativity: Toward a Complex Understanding of ‘Menstrual Monsterings’
pp. 375
Empowered Bleeders and Cranky Menstruators: Menstrual Positivity and the “Liberated” Era of New Menstrual Product Advertisements
pp. 395
“You Will Find Out When the Time Is Right”: Boys, Men, and Menstruation
pp. 409
Menstrual Shame: Exploring the Role of ‘Menstrual Moaning’
pp. 423
Becoming Female: The Role of Menarche Rituals in “Making Women” in Malawi
pp. 441
Researcher’s Reflection: Learning About Menstruation Across Time and Culture
pp. 449
Transnational Engagement: Designing an Ideal Menstrual Health (MH) Curriculum—Stories from the Field
pp. 469
Introduction: Menstruation as Structural
pp. 475
Practice Note: Why We Started Talking About Menstruation—Looking Back (and Looking Forward) with the UN Special Rapporteur on the Human Rights to Water and Sanitation
pp. 485
Policy and Practice Pathways to Addressing Menstrual Stigma and Discrimination
pp. 511
Menstrual Justice: A Missing Element in India’s Health Policies
pp. 529
Practice Note: Menstrual Hygiene Management—Breaking Taboos and Supporting Policy Change in West and Central Africa
pp. 539
U.S. Policymaking to Address Menstruation: Advancing an Equity Agenda
pp. 551
Personal Narrative: Bloody Precarious Activism in Uganda
pp. 561
Addressing Menstruation in the Workplace: The Menstrual Leave Debate
pp. 577
Monitoring Menstrual Health in the Sustainable Development Goals
pp. 593
Practice Note: Menstrual Health Management in Humanitarian Settings
pp. 609
Mapping the Knowledge and Understanding of Menarche, Menstrual Hygiene and Menstrual Health Among Adolescent Girls in Low- and Middle-Income Countries
pp. 637
Interventions to Improve Menstrual Health in Low- and Middle-Income Countries: Do We Know What Works?
pp. 653
Transnational Engagements: Menstrual Health and Hygiene—Emergence and Future Directions
pp. 669
Introduction: Menstruation as Material
pp. 673
Of Mice and (Wo)Men: Tampons, Menstruation, and Testing
pp. 687
Toxic Shock Syndrome and Tampons: The Birth of a Movement and a Research ‘Vagenda’
pp. 705
Measuring Menstruation-Related Absenteeism Among Adolescents in Low-Income Countries
pp. 725
Practice Note: ‘If Only All Women Menstruated Exactly Two Weeks Ago’: Interdisciplinary Challenges and Experiences of Capturing Hormonal Variation Across the Menstrual Cycle
pp. 733
Monitoring Menses: Design-Based Investigations of Menstrual Tracking Applications
pp. 751
“Life is Much More Difficult to Manage During Periods”: Autistic Experiences of Menstruation
pp. 763
Not a “Real” Period?: Social and Material Constructions of Menstruation
pp. 787
Painting Blood: Visualizing Menstrual Blood in Art
pp. 803
To Widen the Cycle: Artists Engage the Menstrual Cycle and Reproductive Justice
pp. 813
The Modern Way to Menstruate in Latin America: Consolidation and Fractures in the Twenty-First Century
pp. 833
Challenging the Menstruation Taboo One Sale at a Time: The Role of Social Entrepreneurs in the Period Revolution
pp. 853
Transnational Engagements: Smashing the Last Taboo—Caring Corporations in Conversation
pp. 865
Introduction: Menstruation as Narrative
pp. 869
Challenging Menstrual Normativity: Nonessentialist Body Politics and Feminist Epistemologies of Health
pp. 885
Menstrual Trolls: The Collective Rhetoric of Periods for Pence
pp. 901
Menstruation Mediated: Monstrous Emergences of Menstruation and Menstruators on YouTube
pp. 915
Rituals, Taboos, and Seclusion: Life Stories of Women Navigating Culture and Pushing for Change in Nepal
pp. 931
From Home to School: Menstrual Education Films of the 1950s
pp. 945
Degendering Menstruation: Making Trans Menstruators Matter
pp. 961
Sex During Menstruation: Race, Sexual Identity, and Women’s Accounts of Pleasure and Disgust
pp. 985
Normality, Freedom, and Distress: Listening to the Menopausal Experiences of Indian Women of Haryana
pp. 1001
The Messy Politics of Menstrual Activism
pp. 1019
Transnational Engagements: Women’s Experiences of Menopause
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