In this article, the authors examine the practices of survival that Rohingya and Syrian refugees perform as they confront multiple forms of violence resulting from their forced displacement in India and Turkey, respectively. We consider these practices as they are performed in the everyday and reflect on how they expand existing debates in social reproduction feminism.
Read MoreMaria Rashid studies relationships in military households as intimate sites that make visible the everyday practices of war. She argues that the silences and disconnects experienced in them are not a side effect of soldiering and its demands but a deliberate product and requirement of military training and service.
Read More