(ii) Gender and food / diet

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Adams, C. J. (2006). An animal manifesto gender, identity, and vegan-feminism in the twenty-first century. Parallax, 12(1), 120-128.

Adams, C. J. (2018). Neither man nor beast: Feminism and the defense of animals. Bloomsbury Publishing.

Birke, L. (2002). Intimate familiarities? Feminism and human-animal studies. Society and Animals, 10(4), 429-436.

Birke, L. (2007). Relating animals: Feminism and our connections with nonhumans. Humanity & Society, 31(4), 305-318.

Deckha, M. (2008). Disturbing images: PETA and the feminist ethics of animal advocacy. Ethics and the Environment, 35-76.

Donovan, J. (1990). Animal rights and feminist theory. Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society, 15(2), 350-375.

Donovan, J. (2006). Feminism and the treatment of animals: From care to dialogue. Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society, 31(2), 305-329.

Fraiman, S. (2012). Pussy panic versus liking animals: Tracking gender in animal studies. Critical Inquiry, 39(1), 89-115.

Gaarder, E. (2011). Where the boys aren’t: The predominance of women in animal rights activism. Feminist Formations, 54-76.

Gaarder, E. (2011). Women and the animal rights movement. Rutgers University Press.

George, K. P. (1994). Should feminists be vegetarians?. Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society, 19(2), 405-434.

Hird, M. J., & Roberts, C. (2011). Feminism theorises the nonhuman.

McKenna, E. (1994). Feminism and vegetarianism: A critique of Peter Singer. Philosophy in the Contemporary World, 1(3), 28-35.

Peek, C. W., Bell, N. J., & Dunham, C. C. (1996). Gender, gender ideology, and animal rights advocacy. Gender & Society, 10(4), 464-478.

Twine, R. (2010). Intersectional disgust? Animals and (eco) feminism. Feminism & Psychology, 20(3), 397-406.