Samira van Bohemen
Erasmus University Rotterdam
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Featured researches published by Samira van Bohemen.
West European Politics | 2014
Willem de Koster; Peter Achterberg; Jeroen van der Waal; Samira van Bohemen; Roy Kemmers
Whereas electoral support for new-rightist parties is often understood as driven by ethnocentric anti-immigrant sentiments, scholars have noted that new-rightist politicians have, surprisingly, stressed culturally progressive arguments in the last decade. Using recent Dutch survey data (N = 1,302) especially collected for this purpose, the article analyses the electoral relevance of three types of cultural progressiveness for voting for the new right and their relation to the well-documented anti-immigrant agenda. The analysis shows that neither moral progressiveness nor aversion to public interference of religious orthodoxy underlies the new-rightist vote. Support for freedom of speech proves relevant, but, in accordance with literature on the new right’s electoral strategy and with theorising on framing, this only leads towards the new right among those who are ethnocentric. These findings are discussed in the light of electoral competition, and questions for further research are formulated.
Journal of Contemporary Ethnography | 2014
Samira van Bohemen; Liesbet van Zoonen; Stef Aupers
The Red Hat Society (RHS) is a relatively new and international women’s network that offers “fun” and “friendship” specifically for women over fifty. Its members, the Red Hatters, are easily recognized in the streets by their red hats and otherwise purple attire, giving the RHS its unique flavor of leisure combined with expressive public performance. In this article, we use interviews and observations to study how the fun experiences aimed at by the RHS are articulated with negotiations of gender and age. Our analysis directed us toward a contradictory and multilayered expression of feminism and femininity entrenched in RHS performance. While some of the Red Hatters explicitly identified with feminism using RHS performance as a means to “undo” gender, others identified more with traditional femininity, using it to “do” gender instead. We introduce the concept of “radical femininity” to show how the Red Hatters continuously negotiate the volatile space between these two broad societal discourses that position women in contradictory ways. Furthermore, we show how Red Hatters draw upon fantasy as embodied in play to negotiate this space.
European Journal of Cultural Studies | 2013
Samira van Bohemen; Liesbet van Zoonen; Stef Aupers
Since its foundation in 1998 the ‘Red Hat Society’ (RHS) has become a popular international movement of women aged over 50 that is known for its distinct group performances. Red Hatters show up in public spaces wearing red hats, purple clothing and sometimes red gloves, and engage in various fun and frivolous activities. Previous studies about the RHS have found that its main appeal is that it creates an escape from women’s day-to-day life experiences. However, such outcomes ignore the fact that the RHS’s appeal is motivated also by the particular life histories of its members. To explore the relevance of these life histories, interviews were conducted with RHS members in The Netherlands. The findings show that to understand the cultural meaning of the RHS it is necessary to include a diachronic dimension in the research, articulating members’ current negotiations of femininity and ageing with those of their past.
International Journal of Hydrogen Energy | 2010
Peter Achterberg; Dick Houtman; Samira van Bohemen; Katerina Manevska
Sociologie | 2012
Samira van Bohemen; Roy Kemmers; Willem de Koster
Poetics : Journal of Empirical Research on Culture, the Media and the Arts | 2018
Samira van Bohemen; Luna den Hertog; Liesbet van Zoonen
Poetics | 2017
Samira van Bohemen; Luna den Hertog; Liesbet van Zoonen
Sociologie | 2016
Marc Bevers; Samira van Bohemen
Community, Work & Family | 2015
Samira van Bohemen
Sociologie | 2013
Samira van Bohemen