
Can Feminism be African?: A Most Paradoxical Question by Minna Salami Bücher, spannende Analyse über afrikanischen Feminismus und kulturelle Identität, 240 Seiten im hochwertigen Hardback-Format.
- Hersteller: William Collins
5 Angebote mit vergleichbaren Preisen von 20,03 € bis 29,99 €

20,03 €
zzgl. 3,00 € VersandAngebote
von 20,03 € bis 29,99 €
Finden Sie auf Codecheck die besten Preise für 18.132.091 Produkte
-
Can Feminism be African?: A Most Paradoxical Question and a Vision of African Political Philosophy
Can Feminism be African?: A Most Paradoxical Question and a Vision of African Political Philosophy
20,03 €
zzgl. 3,00 € VersandCan Feminism be African?: A Most Paradoxical Question and a Vision of African Political Philosophy
Can Feminism be African?: A Most Paradoxical Question and a Vision of African Political Philosophy
-
Can Feminism be African?: A Most Paradoxical Question by Minna Salami
Format: Hardback, 240 pages, Breite: 15.9 cm, Gewicht: 0.44 kg, Höhe: 2.7 cm, Länge: 24 cm, Sprache: Eng
23,55 €
zzgl. 0,00 € VersandCan Feminism be African?: A Most Paradoxical Question by Minna Salami
Format: Hardback, 240 pages, Breite: 15.9 cm, Gewicht: 0.44 kg, Höhe: 2.7 cm, Länge: 24 cm, Sprache: Eng
-
Can Feminism be African?: A Most Paradoxical Question and a Vision of African Political Philosophy
Can Feminism be African?: A Most Paradoxical Question and a Vision of African Political Philosophy
27,38 €
zzgl. 0,00 € VersandCan Feminism be African?: A Most Paradoxical Question and a Vision of African Political Philosophy
Can Feminism be African?: A Most Paradoxical Question and a Vision of African Political Philosophy
-
Can Feminism be African?
In this shining, powerful polemic, Minna Salami opens up a new view of gender equality through two simple questions. What happens when we consider feminism through an African lens, and Africa through a feminist one?
29,99 €
zzgl. 0,00 € VersandCan Feminism be African?
In this shining, powerful polemic, Minna Salami opens up a new view of gender equality through two simple questions. What happens when we consider feminism through an African lens, and Africa through a feminist one?