Table Of Contentindex to Volume 28 
Author/Title Index, General 
A  Bardenstein, Carol, “Transmissions  Inter- 
Aboitiz, Mikele (see Hill, Felicity, Mikele  rupted: Reconfiguring Food, Memory, 
Aboitiz,  and  Sara  Pochlman-  and Gender in the Cookbook-Memoirs 
Doumbouya)  of  Middle  Eastern  Exiles,”  no.  1: 
“After the Bodies Fell,” by Laurie Stone,  353-87 
no.  1:473-75  “Bastard Daughters and the Possession of 
Alvarez, Sonia E., Elisabeth Jay Friedman,  History in Corregidora and Paradise,” 
Ericka  Beckman,  Mayiei  Blackwell,  by Elizabeth Yukins, no.  1:221-47 
Norma Stoltz Chinchilla, Nathalie Le-  Bauhardt, Christine, “Gendering the City: 
bon, Marysa Navarro, and Marcela Rios  Women, Boundaries, and Visions of Ur- 
Tobar, “Encountering Latin American  ban Life edited by Kristine B. Miranne 
and  Caribbean  Feminisms,”  no.  2:  and Alma H. Young; Streetwalking the 
537-79  Metropolis:  Women,  the City, and Mo- 
“The  Amenorrhea  of War,”  by  Peggy  dernity by Deborah  L. Parsons:  Book 
McCracken, no. 2:625-43  Review,” no. 2:736-39 
“‘Among the mourners who mourn, why  Beckman,  Ericka  (see  Alvarez,  Sonia  E., 
should  I among them  be?’”  by Mari  Elisabeth  Jay Friedman,  Ericka  Beck- 
Matsuda, no.  1:475-77  man,  Maylei  Blackwell,  Norma  Stoltz 
“Art, Affect, and the ‘Bad Death’: Strate-  Chinchilla, Nathalie Lebon, Marysa Na- 
gies  for  Communicating  the  Sense  varro, and Marcela Rios Tobar) 
Memory of Loss,” by Jill Bennett, no.  Bennett,  Jill, “Art, Affect,  and  the ‘Bad 
1:333-51  Death’:  Strategies for Communicating 
the  Sense  Memory  of Loss,”  no.  1: 
8B  333-51 
Bahar, Saba, “‘If I’m one  of the victims,  Blackwell,  Maylei  (see Alvarez,  Sonia  E., 
who survives?’: Marilyn Hacker’s Breast  Elisabeth  Jay Friedman,  Ericka  Beck- 
Cancer Texts,” no. 4:1025-52  man,  Maylei  Blackwell,  Norma  Stoltz 
Banner, Lois W., “Mannish Women, Pas-  Chinchilla, Nathalie Lebon, Marysa Na- 
sive  Men,  and  Constitutional  Types:  varro, and Marcela Rios Tobar) 
Margaret Mead’s Sex and Temperament  Blanchard, Eric M., “Gender, International 
in  Three  Primitive  Societies  as  a Re-  Relations,  and  the  Development  of 
sponse to Ruth Benedict’s  Patterns of  Feminist  Security  Theory,”  no.  4: 
Culture,” no. 3:833-58  289-1312 
Barad, Karen, “Posthumanist Performativ-  Bold, Christine, Ric Knowles, and Belinda 
ity: Toward an Understanding of How  Leach,  “Feminist  Memorializing  and 
Matter  Comes  to  Matter,”  no.  3:  Cultural Countermemory: The Case of 
801-31  Marianne’s Park,” no.  1:125-48
1348  1  Intdo Veoluxme  28 
Boose,  Lynda  E.,  “Crossing  the  River  Conkey,  Margaret  W.,  “Has  Feminism 
Drina:  Bosnian  Rape Camps, Turkish  Changed Archaeology?” no. 3:867-80 
Impalement, and Serb Cultural Mem-  “Considerations for a Psychoanalytic The- 
ory,” no.  1:71-96  ory of Gender Identity and Sexual De- 
Brady, Mary Pat, “Quotidian Warfare,” no.  sire: The Case of Intersex,” by Myra J. 
1:446-47  Hird, no. 4:1067-92 
Brickhouse, Nancy W., and Pamela S. Lot-  “A Conversation on Feminist Science Stud- 
tero-Perduc,  “Athena  Unbound:  The  ies,” by Evelynn Hammonds and Banu 
Advancement of Women in Science and  Subramaniam, no. 3:923-44 
Technology by Henry Etzkowitz, Carol  “A Conversation with Cynthia Enloe: Fem- 
Kemelgor, and Brian Uzzi; Women, Sci-  inists Look at Masculinity and the Men 
ence, and Society: The Crucial Union by  Who Wage War,” by Carol Cohn and 
Sue V. Rosser; Women Becoming Math-  Cynthia Enloe, no. 4:1187-207 
ematicians:  Creating  a  Professional  “A Conversation with Gayatri Chakravorty 
Identity in Post-World War II America  Spivak:  Politics and the Imagination,” 
by Margaret A. M. Murray: Book Re-  by Jenny Sharpe and Gayatri Chakra- 
view,” no. 3:987-91  vorty Spivak, no. 2:609-24 
Brison, Susan J., “Gender, Terrorism, and  cooke, miriam, “Saving Brown Women,” 
War,” no.  1:435-37  no.  1:468-70 
Bug, Amy, “Has Feminism Changed Phys-  Cornell,  Drucilla,  “For  RAWA,”  no.  1: 
ics?” no. 3:881-99  433-35 
“Crossing the River Drina:  Bosnian  Rape 
c  Camps, Turkish Impalement, and Serb 
Campbell, Kirsten, “Legal Memories: Sex-  Cultural Memory,” by Lynda E. Boose, 
ual Assault, Memory, and International  no.  1:71-96 
Humanitarian Law,” no.  1:149-78  “Cultural Amnesia: Memory, Trauma, and 
“Charlotte Salomon’s Memory Work in the  War,” by Janice Haaken, no. 1:455-57 
‘Postscript’ to Life? or Theatre?” by Ju-  Cvetkovich,  Ann, “9-11  Every Day,” no. 
lia Watson, no.  1:409-20  1:471-73 
“Charlotte Salomon’s ‘Postscript’ to Life? 
or Theatre?” by Charlotte Salomon and  D 
trans.  Julia Watson, no.  1:421-—29  Dean, Jodi, “Why Feminism? Gender, Psy- 
Childers, Mary M., “‘The Parrot or the Pit  chology, Politics by Lynne Segal; Femi- 
Bull’: Trying to Explain Working-Class  nist Debates: Issues of Theory and Polit- 
Life,” no.  1:201-20  ical Practice by Valerie  Bryson:  Book 
Chinchilla,  Norma  Stoltz  (see  Alvarez,  Review,” no. 2:733-—36 
Sonia E., Elisabeth Jay Friedman, Ericka  “Deconstructing  and  Locating  Survivor 
Beckman,  Maylei  Blackwell,  Norma  Discourse: Dynamics of Narrative, Em- 
Stoltz Chinchilla, Nathalie Lebon, Mar-  powerment,  and Resistance  for Survi- 
ysa Navarro, and Marcela Rios Tobar)  vors of Childhood  Sexual  Abuse,” by 
Cixous, Héléne, “The Towers:  Les tours,”  Nancy A. Naples, no. 4:1151-85 
no.  1:431-33  Delgadillo,  Theresa,  “Latin  American 
Cohn, Carol, and Cynthia Enloe, “A Con-  Women Dramatists: Theater, Texts, and 
versation with Cynthia Enloe: Feminists  Theories edited by Catherine Larson and 
Look at Masculinity and the Men Who  Margarita Vargas; Latina Performance: 
Wage War,” no. 4:1187-207  Traversing the Stage by Alicia Arrizon; 
“Composites,” by Suheir Hammad, no. 1:  New Latina  Narrative:  The Feminine 
470-71  Space of Postmodern Ethnicity by Ellen
S'I1GNS  Summer 2003  I!  1349 
McCracken:  Book  Review,”  no.  2:  G 
719-23  Garner, Karen, “Global Democracy, Social 
Movements, and Feminism by Catherine 
E  Eschle;  Gender and Social Movements by 
“Empathic  Identification  in  Anne  Mi-  M. Bahati Kuumba; Feminism and An- 
chaels’s Fugitive Pieces. Masculinity and  tiracism: International Strugglefso r Jus- 
Poetry after Auschwitz,” by Susan Gu-  tice edited by France Winddance Twine 
bar, no.  1:249-76  and Kathleen  M. Blee: Book Review,” 
“Encountering  Latin  American  and Car-  no. 4:1313-18 
ibbean Feminisms,” by Sonia E. Alva-  “Gender  and  Peacekeeping:  The  United 
rez,  Elisabeth  Jay  Friedman,  Ericka  Nations Transitional Administration in 
Beckman,  Maylei  Blackwell,  Norma  East Timor,”  by Sherrill  Whittington, 
Stoltz Chinchilla, Nathalie Lebon, Mar-  no. 4:1283-88 
ysa Navarro, and Marcela  Rios Tobar,  “Gender  Constructions  and  Vio- 
no. 2:537-79  lence—Ambivalences of Modernity  in 
Enloe, Cynthia (see Cohn, Carol, and Cyn-  the Process of Globalization:  Toward 
thia Enloe)  an  Interdisciplinary  and International 
Research  Network,”  by Lydia  Potts 
F  and Silke Wenk, no.  1:459-61 
“Family Matters: Fiction’s Contribution to  “Gender,  International  Relations, and the 
the Memory Wars,” by Carol Osborne,  Development of Feminist Security The- 
no. 4:1121-49  ory,”  by Eric  M.  Blanchard,  no.  4: 
“Feminism and Cultural Memory: An In-  1289-312 
troduction,”  by Marianne  Hirsch  and  “The Gender of Memory:  Rural Chinese 
Valerie Smith, no.  1:1-19  Women and the 1950s,” by Gail Her 
“Feminist  Memorializing  and  Cultural  shatter, no.  1:43-70 
Countermemory:  The  Case  of Mar-  “Gender, Terrorism, and War,” by Susan J. 
ianne’s  Park,”  by Christine  Bold, Ric  Brison, no.  1:435-37 
Knowles,  and  Belinda  Leach,  no.  1:  Giles, Judy, “Narratives of Gender, Class, 
125-48  and Modernity in Women’s Memories 
“Feminist  Solidarity after Queer Theory:  of Mid-Twentieth  Century  Britain,” 
The Case of Transgender,” by Cressida  no.  1:21-41 
J. Heyes, no. 4:1093-120  Gilmore,  Leigh,  “Jurisdictions:  J, Rigo- 
Fonow,  Mary  Margaret,  “Liberating  berta Menchu, The Kiss, and Scandalous 
Method: Feminism and Social Research  Self-Representation in the Age of Mem 
by Marjorie L. DeVault; Writing the So-  oir and Trauma,” no. 2:695-718 
cial: Critique, Theory, and Investigations  Gowaty,  Patricia  Adair,  “Sexual  Natures: 
by Dorothy E. Smith:  Book Review,”  How Feminism Changed Evolutionary 
no. 2:726-29  Biology,” no. 3:901-21 
“For RAWA,” by Drucilla Cornell, no.  1:  “A  Grim  Fantasy’:  Remaking  American 
433-35  History in Octavia  Butler’s  Kindred,” 
Freccero, Carla, ““They are all sodomites!””  by Lisa Yaszek, no. 4:1053-66 
no.  1:453-55  “Ground  Zero,”  by Diana Taylor, no.  1: 
Friedman, Elisabeth Jay (see Alvarez, Sonia  448-50 
E.,  Elisabeth  Jay  Friedman,  Ericka  Gubar, Susan, “Empathic Identification in 
Beckman,  Maylei  Blackwell,  Norma  Anne  Michaels’s  Fugitive Pieces:  Mas- 
Stoltz Chinchilla, Nathalie Lebon, Mar-  culinity and  Poetry  after Auschwitz,” 
ysa Navarro, and Marcela Rios Tobar)  no.  1:249-76
H  “Introduction:  Feminism  Inside  the Sci- 
Haaken, Janice, “Cultural Amnesia: Mem-  ences,” by Londa Schiebinger, no.  3: 
ory, Trauma, and War,” no.  1:455-57  859-66 
Hammad,  Suheir,  “Composites,”  no.  1:  Irupé Sanabria, Ruth, “Now for the Eve- 
470-71  ning News,” no.  1:440-42 
Hammonds,  Evelynn,  and  Banu  Subra- 
maniam, “A Conversation on Feminist  J 
Science Studies,” no. 3:923-44  Jacobson, Ruth, “Engendering Forced Mi- 
“Has  Feminism  Changed  Archaeology?”  Sration: Theory and Practice edited by 
by Margaret W. Conkey, no. 3:867-80  Doreen  Indra;  War’s  Offensive  on 
“Has Feminism Changed Physics?” by Amy  Women:  The Humanitarian  Challenge 
Bug, no. 3:881-99  in Bosnia, Kosovo, and Afghanistan by 
Hasbun, Muriel, “Journal Entries: 2001,”  Julie A. Mertus; Women and Civil War: 
no.  1:442-43  Impact,  Organizations, and Action ed- 
Hershatter, Gail, “The Gender of Memory:  ited by Krishna Kumar: Book Review,” 
Rural Chinese Women and the 1950s,”  no. 4:1318-23 
no.  1:43-70  “Journal  Entries:  2001,” by Muriel  Has- 
Heyes, Cressida J., “Feminist Solidarity af-  bun, no.  1:442-43 
ter Queer Theory: The Case of Trans-  “Jurisdictions:  I, Rigoberta  Menchu,  The 
gender,” no. 4:1093-120  Kiss, and Scandalous  Self-Representa- 
Hill,  Felicity,  Mikele  Aboitiz,  and  Sara  tion  in  the  Age  of  Memoir  and 
Poehlman-Doumbouya,  “Nongovern-  Trauma,”  by Leigh  Gilmore,  no.  2: 
mental  Organizations’  Role  in  the  695-718 
Buildup and Implementation of Secu- 
rity Council  Resolution  1325,” no. 4:  K 
1255-69  Kaplan, Temma, “Reversing the Shame and 
Hird, Myra J., “Considerations for a Psy-  Gendering the Memory,” no. 1:179-99 
choanalytic Theory of Gender Identity  Khanna, Ranjana, “Taking a Stand for Af- 
and Sexual  Desire: The Case of Inter-  ghanistan: Women and the Left,” no. 1: 
sex,” no. 4:1067-92  464-65 
Hirsch,  Marianne,  and  Valerie  Smith,  Knowles,  Ric  (see  Bold,  Christine,  Ric 
“Feminism  and Cultural  Memory: An  Knowles, and Belinda Leach) 
Introduction,” no.  1:1-19 
Hubbard,  Ruth,  “Rosalind Franklin:  The  L 
Dark Lady of DNA by Brenda Maddox:  Leach,  Belinda.(see  Bold,  Christine,  Ric 
Book Review,” no. 3:973-75  Knowles, and Belinda Leach) 
Hubbard, Ruth, “Science, Power, Gender:  Lebon,  Nathalie  (see  Alvarez,  Sonia  E., 
How DNA Became the Book of Life,”  Elisabeth  Jay Friedman,  Ericka  Beck- 
no. 3:791-99  man,  Maylei  Blackwell, Norma  Stoltz 
Humm, Maggie, “Memory, Photography,  Chinchilla, Nathalie Lebon, Marysa Na- 
and Modernism: The ‘dead bodies and  varro, and Marcela Rios Tobar) 
ruined  houses’  of  Virginia  Woolf's  Lee, Chana Kai, “Memories in the Making 
Three Guineas,” no. 2:645-63  and Other  National  Fictions,”  no.  1: 
438-39 
'  “Legal Memories: Sexual Assault, Memory, 
“If I’m one of the victims, who survives?’:  and International  Humanitarian  Law,” 
Marilyn Hacker’s Breast Cancer Texts,”  by Kirsten Campbell, no.  1:149-78 
by Saba Bahar, no. 4:1025-52  Lottero- Perdue, Pamela S. (see Brickhouse,
S'tGNS  Summer2003  1!  1351 
Nancy  W.,  and  Pamela  S.  Lottero-  nifer Rycenga; States of Conflict: Gender, 
Perdue)  Violence and Resistance edited by Susie 
Jacobs,  Ruth  Jacobson,  and  Jennifer 
M  Marchbank; Victims, Perpetrators or Ac- 
“Mannish Women, Passive Men, and Con-  tors? Gender, Armed Conflict and Polit- 
stitutional Types: Margaret Mead’s Sex  ical Violence edited by Caroline O. N. 
and Temperament in Three Primitive So-  Moser and Fiona C. Clark:  Book Re- 
cietiesa s a Response to Ruth Benedict’s  view,” no. 4:1323-28 
Patterns of Culture,” by Lois W. Ban-  Moore, Patricia, “On Her Own Terms: An- 
ner, no. 3:833-58  nie Montague Alexander and the Rise of 
“Masculinity, Courage, and Sacrifice,” by  Science in the American West by Barbara 
Marita Sturken, no.  1:444-45  R. Stein; Improbable Warriors:  Women 
Matsuda,  Mari,  “‘Among  the  mourners  Scientists and the U.S.  Navy in World 
who mourn, why should I among them  War II by Kathleen Broome Williams: 
be?’” no.  1:475-77  Book Review,” no. 3:1006-9 
McCracken,  Peggy, “The Amenorrhea of  Moynagh, Maureen, “This history’s only 
War,” no. 2:625-43  good for anger’: Gender and Cultural 
McDermott, Sinead, “Memory, Nostalgia,  Memory  in Beatrice  Chancy,”  no.  1: 
and Gender in A Thousand Acres,” no.  97-124 
1:389-407 
McManus,  Sheila,  “Lessons  from  the  N 
Damned:  Queers,  Whores, and Junkies  Naples,  Nancy A., “Deconstructing  and 
Respond to AIDS by Nancy E. Stoller;  Locating Survivor Discourse: Dynamics 
How to Have  Theory in an Epidemic:  of Narrative,  Empowerment, and Re- 
Cultural Chronicles of AIDS by Paula  sistance for Survivors of Childhood Sex- 
A. Treichler; Women Take Care: Gender,  ual Abuse,” no. 4:1151-85 
Race, and the Culture of AIDS by Katie  “Narratives of Gender, Class, and Modern- 
Hogan: Book Review,” no. 3:979-83  ity in  Women’s  Memories  of Mid- 
“Memories in the Making and Other Na-  Twentieth  Century  Britain,”  by Judy 
tional Fictions,” by Chana Kai Lee, no.  Giles, no.  1:21-41 
1:438-39  Navarro,  Marysa  (see Alvarez,  Sonia  E., 
“Memory,  Nostalgia,  and  Gender  in A  Elisabeth  Jay Friedman,  Ericka  Beck- 
Thousand  Acres,”  by  Sinead  Mc-  man, Maylei  Blackwell,  Norma Stoltz 
Dermott, no.  1:389-407  Chinchilla, Nathalie Lebon, Marysa Na- 
“The Memory of Gender,” by Susan Win-  varro, and Marcela Rios Tebar) 
nett, no.  1:462-63  Naveh, Hannah, “Nine Eleven: An Ethics 
“Memory, Photography, and Modernism:  of Proximity,” no.  1:450-52 
The ‘dead bodies and ruined houses’ of  “Nine Eleven: An Ethics of Proximity,” by 
Virginia  Woolf's  Three  Guineas,”  by  Hannah Naveh, no.  1:450-52 
Maggie Hurnm, no. 2:645-63  “9-1] Every Day,” by Ann Cvetkovich, no. 
“Missing,” by Lorie Novak, no.  1:478-79  1:471-73 
Mohanty, Chandra Talpade, “‘Under West-  “Nongovernmental Organizations’ Role 
ern Eyes’ Revisited: Feminist Solidarity  in the Buildup and Implementation of 
through Anticapitalist Struggles,” no. 2:  Security  Council  Resolution  1325,” 
499-535  by Felicity Hill, Mikele Aboitiz, and 
Moon, Katharine  H. S., “Frontline Femi-  Sara  Poehlman-Doumbouya,  no.  4: 
nisms: Women, War, and Resistance ed-  1255-69 
ited by Marguerite R. Waller and Jen-  Novak, Lorie, “Missing,” no.  1:478-79
1352  |  Intdo Veoluxme  28 
“Now  for the Evening  News,”  by Ruth  “Quotidian Warfare,” by Mary Pat Brady, 
Irupé Sanabria, no.  1:440-42  no.  1:446-47 
oO  R 
Osborne, Carol, “Family Matters: Fiction’s  “Rachel Carson Died of Breast Cancer: The 
Contribution  to  the Memory  Wars,”  Coming of Age of Feminist Environ- 
no. 4:1121-49  mentalism,”  by Joni  Seager,  no.  3: 
945-72 
P  Radstone, Susannah, “The War of the Fa- 
“The  Parrot  or the Pit Bull’: Trying to  thers: Trauma, Fantasy, and September 
Explain Working-Class Life,” by Mary  11,” no.  1:457-59 
M. Childers, no.  1:201-20  “Recent Efforts by Feminists to Advance 
Poehiman-Doumbouya, Sara (see Hill, Fe-  Peace:  Some  Reports,”  by  Judith 
licity, Mikele Aboitiz, and Sara Poehl-  Stichm, no. 4:1231-—32 
man-Doumbouya)  “Reexamining Femicide:  Breaking the Si- 
“Posthumanist  Performativity: Toward an  lence  and  Crossing  ‘Scientific’  Bor- 
Understanding of How Matter Comes  ders,” by Nadera Shalhoub-Kevorkian, 
to  Matter,”  by Karen  Barad,  no.  3:  no. 2:581-608 
801-31  “Reversing the Shame and Gendering the 
Potts,  Lydia,  and  Silke  Wenk,  “Gender  Memory,”  by Temma  Kaplan, no.  1: 
Constructions  and  Violence—Ambi-  179-99 
valences of Modernity in the Process of  Rios Tobar, Marcela (see Alvarez, Sonia E., 
Globalization: Toward an Interdiscipli-  Elisabeth  Jay Friedman,  Ericka  Beck- 
nary and International  Research  Net-  man,  Maylei  Blackwell,  Norma Stoltz 
work,” no.  1:459-61  Chinchilla, Nathalie Lebon, Marysa Na- 
“Private  Pain/Public  Peace:  Women’s  varro, and Marcela Rios Tobar) 
Rights as Human Rights and Amnesty  Rosser, Sue V., “Gender and Boyle’s Law of 
International’s  Report  on  Violence  Gases by Elizabeth Potter; Feminism in 
against Women,” by Gillian Youngs, no.  Twentieth-Century  Science,  Technology, 
4:1209-29  and Medicine edited by Angela N. H. 
“Public  Women,  Private  Men:  American  Creager, Elizabeth Lunbeck, and Londa 
Women Poets and the Common Good,”  Schiebinger;  Revisioning  Women, 
by Shira Wolosky, no. 2:665-94  Health,  and Healing:  Feminist,  Cul- 
Puechguirbal,  Nadine, “Women  and War  tural,  and  Technoscience  Perspectives 
in  the  Democratic  Republic  of the  edited by Adele E. Clarke and Virginia 
Congo,” no. 4:1271-81  L. Olesen; Wild Science: Reading Fem- 
inism, Medicine and the Media, edited 
Q  by Janine Marchessault and Kim Saw- 
Quintana, Alvina E., “The Decolonial Imag-  chuk: Book Review,” no. 3:992-99 
inary: Writing Clicanas into History by 
Emma Pérez; Speaking Chicana: Voice,  s 
Power, and Identity edited by D. Let-  Salomon, Charlotte, and trans.  Julia Wat- 
ticia Galindo and Maria Dolores Gon-  son, “Charlotte Salomon’s ‘Postscript” 
zales; Feminism on the Border: Chicana  to Life? or Theatre?” no.  1:421-29 
Gender Politics and Literature by Sonia  “Saving Brown Women,” by miriam cooke, 
Saldivar-Hull:  Book  Review,”  no.  2:  no.  1:468-70 
724-26  Schiebinger, Londa, “Introduction: Fem-
S'tGNS  Summer2003  1!  1353 
inism  Inside  the  Sciences,”  no.  3:  Court:  Changing  the  Landscapes  of 
859-66  Justice and Power,” no. 4:1233-54 
Schweitzer,  Ivy, “Women: The Canary in  Spivak, Gayatri Chakravorty  (see Sharpe, 
the Mine,” no.  1:466-68  Jenny, and Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak) 
“Science, Power, Gender: How DNA Be-  Stevens, Maurice E., “Subject to Counter- 
came the Book of Life,” by Ruth Hub-  memory:  Disavowal  and  Black  Man- 
bard, no. 3:791-99  hood in Spike Lee’s Malcolm X,” no. 
Seager,  Joni,  “Rachel  Carson  Died  of  1:277-301 
Breast Cancer: The Coming of Age of  Stichm, Judith, “Recent Efforts by Femi- 
nists to Advance Peace: Some Reports,” 
Feminist  Environmentalism,”  no.  3: 
945-72  no. 4:1231-32 
“Sexing the Hyena: Intraspecies Readings  Stone, Laurie, “After the Bodies Fell,” no. 
of the Female Phallus,” by Anna Wil-  1:473-75 
Sturken,  Marita,  “Masculinity,  Courage, 
son, no. 3:755-90 
“Sexual Desire and Social Transformation  and Sacrifice,” no.  1:444—45 
“Subject  to  Countermemory:  Disavowal 
in Aimée & Jaguar,” by Katrin Sieg, 
and Black Manhood in Spike Lee’s Mal- 
no.  1:303-31 
colm X,” by Maurice E. Stevens, no. 1: 
“Sexual Natures: How Feminism Changed 
277-301 
Evolutionary  Biology,”  by  Patricia 
Subramaniam, Banu (see Hammonds, Eve- 
Adair Gowaty, no. 3:901-21 
lynn, and Banu Subramaniam) 
Shalhoub-Kevorkian, Nadera, “Reexamin- 
ing Femicide: Breaking the Silence and 
T 
Crossing  ‘Scientific’  Borders,”  no.  2: 
“Taking a Stand for Afghanistan: Women 
581-608 
and the Left,” by Ranjana Khanna, no. 
Sharpe,  Jenny,  and  Gayatri  Chakravorty 
1:464-65 
Spivak, “A Conversation  with Gayatri 
Taylor,  Diana,  “Ground  Zero,”  no.  1: 
Chakravorty  Spivak:  Politics  and  the 
448-50 
Imagination,” no. 2:609-24  “*They are all sodomites!’” by Carla Frec- 
Sieg, Katrin,  “German  Bodies:  Race and 
cero, no.  1:453-55 
Representation  after  Hitler  by  Uli 
“*This history’s only good for anger’: Gen- 
Linke; Jazz, Rock, and Rebels: Cold War 
der and Cultural  Memory in Beatrice 
Politics and American Culture in a Di-  Chancy,” by Maureen Moynagh, no. 1: 
vided Germany by Uta G. Poiger: Book  97-124 
Review,” no. 2:729-33 
“The Towers: Les tours,” by Héléne Cixous, 
Sieg,  Katrin,  “Sexual  Desire  and  Social  no.  1:431-33 
Transformation  in Aimée & Jaguar,”  “Transmissions Interrupted: Reconfiguring 
no.  1:303-31 
Food,  Memory,  and  Gender  in  the 
Smith, Valerie (see Hirsch, Marianne, and  Cookbook-Memoirs of Middle Eastern 
Valerie Smith)  Exiles,”  by Carol  Bardenstein,  no.  1: 
Spanier, Bonnie B., “Breast Cancer: Society  353-87 
Shapes an Epidemic edited by Anne S. 
Kasper and Susan  J. Ferguson;  Man-  u 
made Breast Cancers by Zillah  Eisen-  “*Under Western Eyes’ Revisited: Feminist 
stein: Book Review,” no. 3:983-87  Solidarity through Anticapitalist Strug- 
Spees,  Pam, “Women’s  Advocacy  in the  gles,” by Chandra  Talpade  Mohanty, 
Creation of the International Criminal  no. 2:499-535
1354  1  Intdo Veoluxme  28 
Ww  Wilson, Anna, “Sexing the Hyena: Intra- 
“The War of the Fathers: Trauma, Fantasy,  species Readings of the Female  Phal- 
and September 11,” by Susannah Rad-  lus,” no. 3:755-90 
stone, no.  1:457-59  Winnett,  Susan,  “The  Memory  of Gen- 
Watson, Julia, “Charlotte Salomon’s Mem-  der,” no.  1:462-63 
ory Work in the ‘Postscript’ to Life? or  Wolosky,  Shira,  “Public  Women,  Private 
Theatre?” no.  1:409-20  Men: American Women Poets and the 
Watson,  Julia, trans.  (see Salomon, Char-  Common Good,” no. 2:665-94 
lotte, and trans. Julia Watson)  “Women and War in the Democratic  Re- 
Weasel, Lisa H., “Biology at Work: Rethink-  public  of  the  Congo,”  by  Nadine 
ing Sexual  Equality  by Kingsley  R. 
Puechguirbal, no. 4:1271-81 
Browne; Reinventing the Sexes: The Bi-  “Women: The Canary in the Mine,” by Ivy 
omedical  Construction  of Femininity 
Schweitzer, no.  1:466-68 
and Masculinity by Marianne van den 
“Women’s Advocacy in the Creation of the 
Wijngaard:  Book  Review,”  no.  3: 
International  Criminal  Court:  Chang- 
1000-1003 
ing  the  Landscapes  of  Justice  and 
Wenk, Silke  (see  Potts,  Lydia, and Silke 
Power,” by Pam Spees, no. 4:1233-54 
Wenk) 
Wyer, Mary, “Has Feminism Changed Sci- 
Wertheim, Christine, and Margaret Werth- 
ence? by Londa  Schiebinger;  Feminist 
eim,  “Cybersexualities:  A  Reader  on 
Science Studies:  A New Generation ed- 
Feminist Theory,  Cyborgs and Cyberspace 
ited by Maralee  Mayberry, Banu Sub- 
edited  by Jenny Wolmark;  Global Ob- 
scenities: Patriarchy,  Capitalism, and the  ramaniam, and Lisa H. Weasel:  Book 
Lure of Cyberfantasy by Zillah  Eisen-  Review,” no. 3:1003-6 
stein: Book Review,” nu. 3:975-78 
Y 
Wertheim, Margaret (see Wertheim, Chris- 
tine, and Margaret Wertheim)  Yaszek, Lisa, “‘A Grim Fantasy’: Remaking 
Whittington, Sherrill, “Gender and Peace-  American  History in Octavia  Butler’s 
keeping:  The  United  Nations  Transi-  Kindred,” no. 4:1053-66 
tional  Administration  in East Timor,”  Youngs,  Gillian,  “Private  Pain /Public 
no. 4:1283-88  Peace:  Women’s  Rights  as  Human 
Whitworth,  Sandra,  “Women  and  Inter-  Rights and Amnesty International’s Re- 
national Peacekeeping edited by Louise  port on Violence against Women,” no. 
Olsson  and  Torunn  L.  Tryggestad;  4:1209-29 
Gender, Peace and Conflict edited by In-  Yukins, Elizabeth, “Bastard Daughters and 
ger Skjelsbak and Dan Smith: Book Re-  the Possession  of History in Corregi- 
view,” no. 4:1328-31  dora and Paradise,” no.  1:221-47
Index to Volume 28 
Author/Title Index, Books Reviewed 
A  ory, Cyborgs and Cyberspace, edited by 
Arrizon, Alicia, Latina Performance: Tra-  Jenny Wolmark, no. 3:975-78 
versing the Stage, no. 2:719-23 
Athena  Unbound:  The  Advancement  of  D 
Women  in  Science  and  Technology,  The Decolonial  Imaginary:  Writing Chi- 
Henry Etzkowitz, Carol Kemelgor, and  canas into History, Emma Pérez, no. 2: 
Brian Uzzi, no. 3:987-91  724-26 
DeVault,  Marjorie  L., Liberating Method: 
B  Feminism  and Social Research,  no.  2: 
Biology at Work: Rethinking Sexual Equal-  726-29 
ity,  Kingsley  R.  Browne,  no.  3: 
1000-1003  E 
Blee, Kathleen M. (see Winddance Twine,  Eisenstein,  Zillah,  Global Obscenities:  Pa- 
triarchy, Capitalism, and the Lure of Cy- 
France, and Kathleen M. Blee, eds.) 
berfantasy, no. 3:975-78 
Breast  Cancer: Society Shapes an Epidemic, 
Eisenstein., Zillah, Manmade Breast Can- 
edited by Anne S. Kasper and Susan J. 
cers, nO. 3:983-87 
Ferguson, no. 3:983-87 
Engendering Forced Migration: Theory and 
Browne, Kingsley R., Biology at Work: Re- 
Practice, edited by Doreen  Indra, no. 
thinking  Sexual  Equality,  no.  3: 
4:1318-23 
1000-1003 
Eschie, Catherine,  Global  Democracy, Social 
Bryson., Valerie, Feminist Debates: Issues of 
Movements,  and  Feminism,  no.  4: 
Theory and  Political  Practice,  no.  2: 
1313-18 
733-36 
Etzkowitz,  Henry,  Carol  Kemelgor,  and 
Brian Uzzi, Athena Unbound: The Ad- 
c  vancement  of Women  in  Science  and 
Clark, Fiona C. (see  Moser, Caroline  O.  Technology, no. 3:987-91 
N., and Fiona C. Clark, eds.) 
Clarke, Adele E., and Virginia L. Olesen, 
F 
eds., Revisioning  Women,  Health, and  Feminism  and Antiracism:  International 
Healing: Feminist, Cultural, and Tech-  Struggles for Justice, edited  by France 
noscience Perspectives, no. 3:992-99  Winddance  Twine  and  Kathleen  M. 
Creager, Angela N. H., Elizabeth Lunbeck,  Blee, no. 4:1313-18 
and Londa Schiebinger, eds., Feminism  Feminism  in  Twentieth-Century  Science, 
in Twentieth-Century Science,  Technol-  Technology, and Medicine, edited by An- 
ogy, and Medicine, no. 3:992-99  gela N. H. Creager, Elizabeth Lunbeck, 
Cybersexualities:  A Reader on Feminist The-  and Londa Schiebinger, no. 3:992-99
1356  1  Index to Volume 28 
Feminism  on  the Border: Chicana  Gender  Hogan, Katie, Women  Take Care: Gender, 
Politics and Literature, Sonia Saldivar-  Race, and the Culture of AIDS, no. 3: 
Hull, no. 2:724-26  979-83 
Feminist Debates: Issues of Theory and Po-  How to Have Theory in an Epidemic: Cul- 
litical Practice, Valerie  Bryson, no.  2:  tural Chronicles of AIDS, Paula A. Trei- 
733-35  chler, no. 3:979-83 
Feminist Science Studies:  A New Genera- 
tion, edited by Maralee Mayberry, Banu  1 
Subramaniam, and Lisa H. Weasel, no.  Improbable Warriors: Women Scientists and 
3:1003-6  the U.S.  Navy in World War II, Kath- 
Ferguson, Susan  J. (see  Kasper, Anne S.,  leen Broome Williams, no. 3:1006-9 
and Susan J. Ferguson, eds.)  Indra,  Doreen,  ed.,  Engendering  Forced 
Frontline Feminisms: Women, War, and Re-  Migration: Theory and Practice, no. 4: 
sistance, edited by Marguerite R. Waller  1318-23 
and Jennifer Rycenga, no. 4:1323-28 
J 
Jacobson, Ruth (see Jacobs, Susie, Ruth Ja- 
cobson, and Jennifer Marchbank, eds.) 
Galindo,  D.  Letticia,  and  Maria  Dolores 
Jazz, Rock, and Rebels:  Cold War Politics 
Gonzales,  eds.,  Speaking  Chicana: 
and American  Culture  in a  Divided 
Voice,  Power,  and  Identity,  no.  2:  Germany, Uta G. Poiger, no. 2:729-33 
724-26 
Jacobs, Susie, Ruth Jacobson, and Jennifer 
Gender and Boyle’s Law of Gases, Elizabeth 
Marchbank, eds., States of Conflict:  Gen- 
Potter, no. 3:992-99 
der,  Violence  and  Resistance,  a0.  4: 
Gender and Social Movements,  M. Bahati 
1323-28 
Kuumba, no. 4:1313-18 
Gendering  the City:  Women,  Boundaries, 
and  Visions of Urban  Life, edited  by  K 
Kasper, Anne S., and Susan  J. Ferguson, 
Kristine  B.  Miranne  and  Alma  H. 
eds.,  Breast  Cancer:  Society Shapes an 
Young, no. 2:736-39 
Epidemic, no. 3:983-87 
Gender, Peace and Conflict, edited by Inger 
Kemelgor,  Carol  (see  Etzkowitz,  Henry, 
Skjelsbek  and  Dan  Smith,  no.  4: 
1328-31  Carol Kemelgor, and Brian Uzzi) 
German  Bodies:  Race and Representation  Kumar,  Krishna,  ed.,  Women  and  Civil 
War:  Impact,  Organizations,  and Ac- 
after Hitler, Uli Linke, no. 2:729-33 
Global Democracy,  Social Movements,  and  tion, no. 4:1318-23 
Feminism,  Catherine  Eschle,  no.  4:  Kuumba,  M.  Bahati,  Gender  and  Social 
1313-18  Movements, no. 4:1313-18 
Global Obscenities:  Patriarchy, Capitalism, 
and the Lure of Cyberfantasy, Zillah Ei-  L 
senstein, no. 3:975-78  Larson, Catherine, and Margarita Vargas, 
Gonzales, Maria Dolores (see Galindo, D.  eds., Latin American  Women Drama- 
Letticia, and Maria  Dolores Gonzales,  tists: Theater, Texts, and Theories, no. 2: 
eds.)  719-23 
Latin American  Women Dramatists:  The- 
H  ater, Texts, and Theories, edited by Cath- 
Has  Feminism  Changed  Science?  Londa  erine Larson and Margarita Vargas, no. 
Schiebinger, no. 3:1003-6  2:719-23