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Implicit feminist solidarity(ies)? The role of gender in the social movements of the Greek crisis
26
Citations
55
References
2020
Year
Greek CrisisSocial ChangeFeminist GeographyFeminist DebateSocial SciencesActivismImplicit Feminist SolidarityGender IdentityFeminist ResearchGender StudiesRadical Social MovementsTransnational FeminismsFeminist IdentityGender EqualityFeminist ScholarshipFeminist PerspectiveFeminist ScienceFeminist Political TheoryMany Social MovementsFeminist TheorySocial MovementsFeminist MethodologiesCommunity OrganizingSociologyPolitical MovementsArts
Abstract This article explores the role of gender in the social movements of the Greek crisis. Building on extensive fieldwork, we observe a gradual shift from claim‐based, street mobilizations to locally embedded solidarity initiatives that addressed social reproduction needs in relation to food, health, education, and housing. We illustrate how this foregrounded social reproductive practices; challenged traditional divisions of labor and the temporalities and spatialities of movement organizing; and brought forward the value of building intersectional coalitions and of embracing affect and radical care. Despite the lack of explicitly articulated feminist values and principles, we argue that many social movements of the crisis therefore have cultivated situated and implicit modes of feminist solidarity that warrant further attention. Accordingly, we discuss the implications for feminist organizing and radical social movements more broadly.
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