Feminist Social Thought: A Reader

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Diana Tietjens Meyers
Routledge, 03/06/2014 - 772 páginas
First published in 1998. Feminist Social Thought brings together key articles by prominent feminist thinkers, offering students sophisticated treatment of the theoretical topics central to feminist social thought. This reader highlights salient concerns in contemporary feminist scholarship and the advances feminist philosophers have made.
The editor's introduction outlines alternative routes through the text, allowing instructors to easily adapt this reader to their particular courses and the interests of their students. Each article is prefaced with a short introduction by the editor placing it in context, highlighting the principle issues and the conclusions reached. Students will find these headnotes helpful when tackling the challenging theoretical issues addressed.
Representing a spectrum of feminist thinking, Feminist Social Thought is organized around seven topics constructions of gender; theorizing diversity; figurations of women; subjectivity, agency and feminist critique; social identity, solidarity and political engagement; care and its critics; and women, equality and justice. Students will be exposed to a wide variety of feminist philosophy and encouraged to think critically about challenging questions around pivotal subjects including
* How are gender norms instilled, enforced, and perpetuated?
* What are the relationships between gender and other socially demarcated positions such as race, class and sexual orientation?
* What resources do women have at their disposal for recognizing their subordination and resisting it?
* What goals should feminist politics pursue?
* How can social and legal equality be reconciled with difference?

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Páginas seleccionadas

Índice

Gender Relation and Difference in Psychoanalytic Perspective
7
A Feminist Materialist Approach
38
Foucault Femininity and the Modernization of Patriarchal Power
92
An Encounter
131
Separating Lesbian Theory from Feminist Theory
199
The Context
219
Black Feminism and 2 Live Crew
245
Woman as Metaphor
267
Emotion in Feminist Epistemology
384
A FindeSiècle Tragedy
440
Developing the Ground for a Specifically
461
Science Technology and Socialist
501
Womens Conceptions of Self and Morality
547
Trust and Antitrust
604
Feminism and Moral Theory
630
Some Reflections on Culture
695

And the One Doesnt Stir Without the Other
320
An Essay on Empty Signs Pregnant
331
Though This Be Method Yet There Is Madness in
341
The Role of Transformation
369
The KohlbergGilligan
735
Or the Uses
757
Permissions Acknowledgments
771
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Diana Tietjens Meyers is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Connecticut, Storrs. She is the author of Inalienable Rights: A Defense (1986), Women and Moral Theory (1987), Self, Society and Personal Choice (1989), Kindred Matters: Rethinking the Philosophy of the Family (1993), and Subjection and Subjectivity: Psychoanalytic Feminism and Moral Philosophy (Routledge, 1994).

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