Dancehalls, Masquerades, Body Protest and the Law: The Female Body as a Redemptive Tool Against Trinidad and Tobago’s Gender-biased Laws

The female body has long been the subject of awe, shame and controversy. ‘Sexual profiling’ in all cultures, cast assumptions about women who use their bodies to express themselves. Social stereotypes regarding ‘morality’ are generally used to evaluate women’s behaviours and justify sexual profiling. An analysis of the effects of sexual profiling on female bodily expression reveals that laws and social constructs conspire to restrict women’s autonomy and freedom of expression, and has even impacted on feminist jurisprudence’s view of female bodily expression. This impact is evidenced by the fact that, thus far, feminist jurisprudence has neglected to embrace the female body as a tool for redemption and liberation. Such an omission, however, has not derailed female bodily expression. In all cultures, there are women who use their bodies to fight patriarchy and resist gender-biased laws and assumptions. Comparing and contrasting U.S. based concerns with those of Trinidad and Tobago, this article argues that feminist jurisprudence must identify women’s bodies as tools for redemption against sexual profiling, sexism and patriarchy.

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Autor principal: Alexandre, Michèle
Formato: Atigo biblioteca
Publicado em: 2013-06-13
Assuntos:body, srxual profiling, feminist theory,
Acesso em linha:http://hdl.handle.net/2139/15568
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spelling oai:oai:uwispace.sta.uwi.edu:2139:2139-155682013-06-14T01:01:29Z Dancehalls, Masquerades, Body Protest and the Law: The Female Body as a Redemptive Tool Against Trinidad and Tobago’s Gender-biased Laws Alexandre, Michèle body srxual profiling feminist theory The female body has long been the subject of awe, shame and controversy. ‘Sexual profiling’ in all cultures, cast assumptions about women who use their bodies to express themselves. Social stereotypes regarding ‘morality’ are generally used to evaluate women’s behaviours and justify sexual profiling. An analysis of the effects of sexual profiling on female bodily expression reveals that laws and social constructs conspire to restrict women’s autonomy and freedom of expression, and has even impacted on feminist jurisprudence’s view of female bodily expression. This impact is evidenced by the fact that, thus far, feminist jurisprudence has neglected to embrace the female body as a tool for redemption and liberation. Such an omission, however, has not derailed female bodily expression. In all cultures, there are women who use their bodies to fight patriarchy and resist gender-biased laws and assumptions. Comparing and contrasting U.S. based concerns with those of Trinidad and Tobago, this article argues that feminist jurisprudence must identify women’s bodies as tools for redemption against sexual profiling, sexism and patriarchy. 2013-06-13T17:58:14Z 2013-06-13T17:58:14Z 2013-06-13 Article http://hdl.handle.net/2139/15568 Issue 1; application/pdf
institution UWI TT
collection DSpace
country Trinidad y Tobago
countrycode TT
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-uwi-tt
tag biblioteca
region Caribe
libraryname UWI library system TT
topic body
srxual profiling
feminist theory
body
srxual profiling
feminist theory
spellingShingle body
srxual profiling
feminist theory
body
srxual profiling
feminist theory
Alexandre, Michèle
Dancehalls, Masquerades, Body Protest and the Law: The Female Body as a Redemptive Tool Against Trinidad and Tobago’s Gender-biased Laws
description The female body has long been the subject of awe, shame and controversy. ‘Sexual profiling’ in all cultures, cast assumptions about women who use their bodies to express themselves. Social stereotypes regarding ‘morality’ are generally used to evaluate women’s behaviours and justify sexual profiling. An analysis of the effects of sexual profiling on female bodily expression reveals that laws and social constructs conspire to restrict women’s autonomy and freedom of expression, and has even impacted on feminist jurisprudence’s view of female bodily expression. This impact is evidenced by the fact that, thus far, feminist jurisprudence has neglected to embrace the female body as a tool for redemption and liberation. Such an omission, however, has not derailed female bodily expression. In all cultures, there are women who use their bodies to fight patriarchy and resist gender-biased laws and assumptions. Comparing and contrasting U.S. based concerns with those of Trinidad and Tobago, this article argues that feminist jurisprudence must identify women’s bodies as tools for redemption against sexual profiling, sexism and patriarchy.
format Article
topic_facet body
srxual profiling
feminist theory
author Alexandre, Michèle
author_facet Alexandre, Michèle
author_sort Alexandre, Michèle
title Dancehalls, Masquerades, Body Protest and the Law: The Female Body as a Redemptive Tool Against Trinidad and Tobago’s Gender-biased Laws
title_short Dancehalls, Masquerades, Body Protest and the Law: The Female Body as a Redemptive Tool Against Trinidad and Tobago’s Gender-biased Laws
title_full Dancehalls, Masquerades, Body Protest and the Law: The Female Body as a Redemptive Tool Against Trinidad and Tobago’s Gender-biased Laws
title_fullStr Dancehalls, Masquerades, Body Protest and the Law: The Female Body as a Redemptive Tool Against Trinidad and Tobago’s Gender-biased Laws
title_full_unstemmed Dancehalls, Masquerades, Body Protest and the Law: The Female Body as a Redemptive Tool Against Trinidad and Tobago’s Gender-biased Laws
title_sort dancehalls, masquerades, body protest and the law: the female body as a redemptive tool against trinidad and tobago’s gender-biased laws
publishDate 2013-06-13
url http://hdl.handle.net/2139/15568
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