Working lesson plan:
W1. 04.10.2023 – Introductory lesson (class orientation, main themes, course outlook)
W2. 11.10.2023 – Evolution of menstruation research
· Definition and scope of Critical Menstruation Studies
· Intersectionality and the study of menstruation
Required readings:
Bobel, Chris, and Elizabeth Alverda Kissling. "Menstruation matters: Introduction to representations of the menstrual cycle." Women's Studies 40.2 (2011): 121-126.
Bobel, Chris, and Breanne Fahs. "From bloodless respectability to radical menstrual embodiment: Shifting menstrual politics from private to public." Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society 45.4 (2020): 955-983.
Recommended readings:
Patterson, Ashly. “The social construction and resistance of menstruation as a public spectacle.” Illuminating how identities, stereotypes, and inequalities matter through gender studies (2014): 91-108.
Smith, Linda Tuhiwai. Decolonizing research: Indigenous story work as methodology. Bloomsbury Publishing, 2019
W3. 18.10.2023 – Theories & Concepts