I received my Ph.D. degree in Gender Studies from Arizona State University in 2013. My research brings political economies, feminism, critical race theory, queer theory and cultural studies to the forefront of the discussion of neoliberalism and cor
...More
I received my Ph.D. degree in Gender Studies from Arizona State University in 2013. My research brings political economies, feminism, critical race theory, queer theory and cultural studies to the forefront of the discussion of neoliberalism and corporate globalization, and my publications are focused on the inter-relationship between identities and neoliberalism. In my current book project tentatively titled Intersectionalizing Neoliberalism: The Gendered, Classed and Sexualized Fabrics of Biopolitics and Ungovernability in Global China, I try to examine how the Chinese government employs and deploys the categories gender, class and sexuality to dissemble and reassemble the Chinese population to facilitate China’s marketization and re-integration with the global economy. I also explore how new controlling images have been produced through the intersection of these categories to justify this process. Moreover, as I contend, new space of survival and resistance has also been created for social change through the ruptures and fissures of the identity-anchored intersectional system of control and regulation.
Less