Feminist Social Thought: A ReaderDiana 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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... sexist assumptions undergirding these traditions, and this commitment to gender equality enables feminists to make distinctive contributions to philosophy. Thus, this collection is organized to highlight salient concerns in contemporary ...
... sexist assumptions undergirding these traditions, and this commitment to gender equality enables feminists to make distinctive contributions to philosophy. Thus, this collection is organized to highlight salient concerns in contemporary ...
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... sexism), he took this meaning and valuation as a self-evident given, rather than a developmental and cultural product. We must remember that this transformed interpretation of difference, an interpreta— tion learned in the oedipal ...
... sexism), he took this meaning and valuation as a self-evident given, rather than a developmental and cultural product. We must remember that this transformed interpretation of difference, an interpreta— tion learned in the oedipal ...
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... sexism insofar as they are all structured by a dualistic hierarchy of dominance and subordination. Like Chodorow and Hartsock, Harding does not clearly and explicitly lay out the argument for this claim. As I reconstruct her argument ...
... sexism insofar as they are all structured by a dualistic hierarchy of dominance and subordination. Like Chodorow and Hartsock, Harding does not clearly and explicitly lay out the argument for this claim. As I reconstruct her argument ...
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... Sexist Society, edited by Vivian Gornick and Barbara K. Moran (New York: Basic Books, 1971); see also Chodorow, Reproduction ofMothering, pp. 181—83. . Included in Discovering Reality: Feminist Perspectives on Epistemology, Metaphysics ...
... Sexist Society, edited by Vivian Gornick and Barbara K. Moran (New York: Basic Books, 1971); see also Chodorow, Reproduction ofMothering, pp. 181—83. . Included in Discovering Reality: Feminist Perspectives on Epistemology, Metaphysics ...
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... sexism in the Afro-American community needs to be seen as a reflection of dominant white cultural forms (e.g., the sexual division of wage labor, macho images in the media, etc.) rather than as an autonomous structure of the community ...
... sexism in the Afro-American community needs to be seen as a reflection of dominant white cultural forms (e.g., the sexual division of wage labor, macho images in the media, etc.) rather than as an autonomous structure of the community ...
Índice
1 | |
5 | |
THEORIZING DIVERSITYGENDER RACE CLASS AND SEXUAL ORIENTATION | 129 |
FIGURATIONS OF WOMENWOMAN AS FIGURATION | 243 |
SUBJECTIVITY AGENCY AND FEMINIST CRITIQUE | 329 |
SOCIAL IDENTITY SOLIDARITY AND POLITICAL ENGAGEMENT | 459 |
CARE AND ITS CRITICS | 545 |
WOMEN EQUALITY AND JUSTICE | 693 |
Permissions Acknowledgments | 771 |
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Palavras e frases frequentes
activity Adrienne Rich analysis argue become biological black women body Carol Gilligan child Chodorow claim common conception consciousness construction context critical critique cultural cyborg defined Descartes desire discourse distinction emotions epistemology equality ethics experience feel female feminine feminism feminist theory find first forms Freud gender identity Gilligan groups heterosexual historical human ideology individual justice Kohlberg labor lesbian liberal Live Crew male domination Marxist masculine maternal means men’s metaphor misogyny Moral Luck moral theory mother motherhood Nancy Chodorow nature norms one’s oppression parenting patriarchal person perspective philosophy political pornography position postmodern practices pregnancy production psychoanalysis question race racism radical rape reason relationships reproduction responsibility role sense sexism sexual significance Socialist Feminism society specific strategies structure subordination suggests symbolic Tawana Brawley tion trust understanding University Press white women woman women of color York