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Ilse Lenz (2016)

Ilse Lenz (born February 16, 1948 in Munich ) is a German sociologist . Her work focuses on the labor market and gender in Japan and Germany, the Japanese and German women's movement, new integrative approaches in social structure research , intercultural qualitative research as well as globalization and social change.

academic career

Ilse Lenz studied in the USA, Japan and at the University of Munich . In 1983 she completed her doctorate at the Free University of Berlin with a dissertation on women's work in Japanese industrialization from a development-sociological perspective. In her habilitation in 1989 at the University of Münster , she examined the gender ratio on the Japanese labor market and the influences of computerization . Both researches were based on expert interviews and archive work in Japanese .

From 1992 until her retirement in 2012, Ilse Lenz held a professorship for sociology at the Faculty of Social Sciences at the University of Bochum . In the summer semester 2017 and in the summer semester 2018 she was senior professor at the Johann Wolfgang Goethe University in Frankfurt.

plant

Ilse Lenz worked on the project “The new women's movements in Germany and Japan in an interdisciplinary and intercultural comparison” together with Michiko Mae, chair holder of the Institute for Modern Japan at the University of Düsseldorf , the result of which was an anthology with translated sources on the history of the Japanese women's movement should appear. She edited three publications with Mae and coordinates an annual workshop on gender studies on Japan as part of the Association for Social Science Research on Japan.

In 2008 Ilse Lenz published a book entitled The New Women's Movement in Germany , which gathers and comments on 262 original sources from 1968 to the present day. In her review for the taz, Heide Oestreich praised it as the “legacy of the women's movement ”, which appears to be “the purest enlightenment” in view of the clichés about feminism that have been repeatedly processed in the media . Thomas Gesterkamp described it as a "historical standard work".

Ilse Lenz is co-editor of the book series Gender & Society of the publishing house for social sciences and was spokeswoman for the section women's studies in the German society for sociology . She is an active member of the Institute for Protest and Movement Research .

She is a member of the Migration Council .

Fonts

  • Capitalist Development, Subsistence Production, and Women's Labor: The Case of Japan. Dissertation . Campus Verlag, Frankfurt 1984, ISBN 3-593-33407-0 .
  • with Ute Luig : Women's power without rule. Gender relations in non-patriarchal societies. (= Fischer 12827 The woman in society ). Fischer-Taschenbuch-Verlag, Frankfurt am Main 1995, ISBN 3-596-12827-7 .
  • with Michiko Mae (Ed.): Separate worlds, common modernity? Gender Relations in Japan. (= Gender & Society. Volume 4). Leske and Budrich, Opladen 1997.
  • with Michiko Mae (ed.): Women's movement in Japan. Equality, difference, participation. VS Verlag für Sozialwissenschaften, Wiesbaden, 2006, ISBN 3-531-14730-7 ; Springer Verlag, Heidelberg 2018, ISBN 978-3-531-14730-7 (new edition)
  • with Charlotte Ullrich and Barbara Fersch: Gender Orders Unbound. Globalization, restructuring, reciprocity . Barbara Budrich Publishing House, Leverkusen 2007.
  • The new women's movement in Germany. Farewell to the small difference. VS Verlag für Sozialwissenschaften, Wiesbaden 2008, ISBN 978-3-531-14729-1 . (second, updated edition. 2010)
  • with Katja Sabisch and Marcel Wrzesinski (eds.): Different and equal in NRW - equality and acceptance of sexual and gender diversity. Research status, conference documentation, practical projects . Network Women and Gender Studies, Essen 2012, ISBN 978-3-936199-14-7 .
  • German changes: new contrasts? New parallels? Budrich Verlag, Leverkusen 2012, ISBN 978-3-8474-0021-9 .
  • with Gerhard Hauck and Hanns Wienold (eds.): Development, violence, memory . Münster 2015.
  • with Sabine Evertz and Saida Ressel (eds.): Gender in flexible capitalism? New inequalities . Wiesbaden 2017.

Essays

  • Who wanted to remember where and how? Breaks, continuities and social inequality in the new women's movements. In Schaser, Angelika, Schrauth, Sylvia (2019): Remember, forget, reinterpret? European women's movements in the 19th and 20th centuries Ed .: Angelika Schaser, Schrauth, Sylvia, Steymans-Kurz, Petra. Frankfurt am Main, New York: Campus, pp. 255–283.
  • What Comes After Patriarchy? In: Das Argument 330, 2019, pp. 826-841.
  • Gender inequalities and migration in post-migrant German society. In: Foroutan, Naika et al. (Ed.) (2018): Postmigrantische Perspektiven. Order systems, representations, criticism. Frankfurt, New York: Campus, pp. 129–144.
  • Quarrel, gender, conflict? In: Lautmann, Rüdiger, Wienold, Hanns (ed.) (2018): Georg Simmel and life in the present. Wiesbaden: Springer, pp. 209-226.
  • International and transnational women's movements. Differences, networks, changes. In: Kortendiek, Beate, Riegraf, Birgit, Sabisch, Katja (eds.): Handbook Interdisciplinary Gender Research . Wiesbaden: Springer 2018 ( https://link.springer.com/referencework/10.1007%2F978-3-658-12500-4 ).
  • Feminism: ways of thinking, differences, debates. In: Kortendiek, Beate, Riegraf, Birgit, Sabisch, Katja (eds.): Handbook Interdisciplinary Gender Research. Wiesbaden: Springer. 2018 ( https://link.springer.com/referencework/10.1007%2F978-3-658-12500-4 ).
  • From care work to # MeToo. Current feminist topics and debates in Germany. In: From Politics and Contemporary History 2018, 17, pp. 20–27.
  • From the men's state to gender democracy? One hundred years of women's suffrage 1918–2018. In: Extracurricular Education. Journal of Political Youth and Adult Education (2018); Pp. 4-11.
  • More gender flexible? On the current change in the gender order. In: Evertz, Sabine; Lenz, Ilse; Ressel, Saida (Ed.): Gender in flexible capitalism. New inequalities. Wiesbaden: VS Verlag 2017, pp. 181–222.
  • Equality, difference and participation: Women's movements in global perspective. In: S. Berger (Ed.): The History of Social Movements . London et al
  • Spaces in motion. On the dynamics and structuring of global and transnational gender spaces. In: Birgit Riegraf , Julia Gruhlich (ed.): Gender and transnational spaces: Feminist perspectives on new inclusions and exclusions . Westfälisches Dampfboot, Münster pp. 22–44.
  • Interactive inequalities. From the dualisms to the differentiation of the differences? In: Martina Löw (ed.): Diversity and cohesion. Negotiations of the 36th Congress of the German Society for Sociology . Campus Verlag, Frankfurt am Main / New York 2014, pp. 843–858.
  • Gender politics and masculinity. In: Cornelia Behnke et al. (Ed.): Knowledge - Method - Gender: grasping the unquestionably given . Gender and Society, Wiesbaden 2014, pp. 265–279.
  • Genders in motion? The new women's movements and the change in the gender order. In: Barbara Rendtorff, Birgit Riegraf, Claudia Mas (Ed.): 40 Years of Feminist Debates. Summary and outlook . Beltz Juventa, Weinheim / Basel 2014, pp. 12–30.
  • From Mothers of the Nation to embodied Citizens? Reflexive modernization, women's movements and the nation in Japan. In: Vera Mackie, Andrea Germer, Ulrike Wöhr: Gender, Nation and State in Modern Japan . Routledge, New York 2014, pp. 211-230.
  • Changing agents of change? Comments on the transformation of social movements using the example of the new women's movement. In: Jürgen Mittag, Heike Stadtland: Theoretical approaches and concepts in research on social movements in historical studies . Essen 2014, pp. 359–380.
  • Gender conflicts about the gender order in transition. To the new anti-feminism. In: Erna Appelt, Brigitte Aulenbacher, Angelika Wetterer (eds.): Society - Feminist crisis diagnoses . Münster 2013, pp. 204–227.
  • On the change in the gender order in globalized, flexible capitalism. New challenges for gender research. In: Feminist Studies. 2013, 1, pp. 124-130.
  • The new anti-feminism. Analyzes and alternatives In: Sheets for German and international politics . 7/2011, pp. 51-59. (on-line)
  • From a middle class society to a society of differences? On the dynamics of the New Center in Japan. In: Nicole Burzan, Peter Berger: Dynamics (in) the social center. Social structure analysis . VS-Verlag, Wiesbaden 2010, pp. 79-106.
  • Intersectionality. In: Ruth Becker, Beate Kortendiek (ed.): Handbook of women and gender research . Wiesbaden 2010, pp. 158-165.
  • Humanism and Differences from the Perspective of Gender Studies. In: Jörn Rüsen (Ed.): Perspektiven der Humanität - Being human in the discourse of the disciplines . Bielefeld 2010, pp. 373-407.
  • The private is political !? On the relationship between the women's movement and the alternative milieu. In: Sven Reichardt, Detlef Siegfried: The alternative milieu: Anti-bourgeois lifestyle and left politics in the Federal Republic of Germany and Europe 1968–1983 . Wallstein, 2010, pp. 375-405.
  • Gender, Inequality, and Globalization. In: Ulrike Schuerkens (Ed.): Globalization and Transformations of Social Inequality . Routledge, London 2010, pp. 175-203.
  • Contemporary Challenges for gender research in the context of globalization. In: Birgit Riegraf et al. (Ed.): Gender Change in Academia. Remapping the Fileds of Work, Knowledge and Politics from a Gender Perspective . VS-Verlag, Wiesbaden 2010, pp. 203-216.
  • Gender, Class, Migration and Social Inequality. In: Helma Lutz (Ed.): Gender-Mobil? Duplication and de-spatialization of forms of life - transnational spaces, migration and gender . Westfälisches Dampfboot, Münster 2009, pp. 25–68.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. hard meeting to bid farewell to Prof. Dr. Ilse Lenz, RUB
  2. Network Women and Gender Studies NRW
  3. ^ Review note in Perlentaucher.de, August 22, 2009
  4. Thomas Gesterkamp: For men, but not against women - essay. From politics and contemporary history (APuZ 40/2012)
  5. ^ Book series Gender & Society ( Memento from March 22, 2014 in the Internet Archive )
  6. https://rat-fuer-migration.de/verbindungen/
  7. Women's movement and feminist men . Review of The New Women's Movement in Germany in literaturkritik.de , No. 1, January 2009.