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Italian Feminist Thought: A Reader

Wiley-Blackwell (1991)

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  1. A Movement Moves... Is There a Women's Movement in England Today?Kate Nash - 2002 - European Journal of Women's Studies 9 (3):311-328.
    There is a diversity of views among feminists who have been debating whether or not a women's movement exists in Britain today. In part this is due to the lack of a clear working definition of social movement. This article uses social movement theory to discuss the ambiguous signs that are taken to indicate either the movement's continuing existence or its disappearance: the growth of mainstream political organizations; a focus on `women' in cultural production; the `micro-politics' of everyday life. The (...)
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  • Who's who and Where's Where: Constructing Feminist Literary Studies.Mary Eagleton - 1996 - Feminist Review 53 (1):1-23.
    This article is concerned with the construction of feminist literary studies in the last twenty years and points out how we have created a literary history which is both selective and schematic. It suggests that we should be more critically aware of what we are constructing, how we are constructing it and of the political consequences of those constructs. It stresses three critical modes which might help us to complicate our history: a greater awareness of institutional contexts, a concern with (...)
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  • Gender, citizenship and human reproduction in contemporary Italy.Patrick Hanafin - 2006 - Feminist Legal Studies 14 (3):329-352.
    This article examines how the recently introduced law on assisted reproduction in Italy, which gives symbolic legal recognition to the embryo, came about, and how a referendum, which would have repealed large sections of it, failed. The occupation of the legal space by the embryo is the outcome of a crusade by a well-organised alliance of theo-conservatives. These groups see in reproductive medicine an uncontrolled interference with their notion of the natural order of things. Such a worldview requires a total (...)
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  • Experience, Subjectivity and Politics in the Italian Feminist Movement: Redefining the Boundaries between Body and Discourse.Ana Belén Martín Sevillano & Lucía Gómez Sánchez - 2006 - European Journal of Women's Studies 13 (4):343-355.
    This article describes the political practices of a part of the Italian women’s movement that, as of the 1980s, gave way to the sexual difference thought. Through a political analysis of their own experience, which removed any humanist identity assumptions, the women’s movement generated new practices and discourses. With these, women were able to exert self-criticism, and simultaneously to produce new subjectivities articulated around the sexual difference concept. The difference thought helped highlight the limits of institutional policy, renewing the premises (...)
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  • Carla Lonzi’s artwriting and the resonance of separatism.Francesco Ventrella - 2014 - European Journal of Women's Studies 21 (3):282-287.
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  • Refusing disembodiment: Abortion and the paradox of reproductive rights in contemporary Italy.Patrick Hanafin - 2009 - Feminist Theory 10 (2):227-244.
    Employing insights from Italian sexual difference theory on law and rights, this article examines how both the text of the Italian Abortion Law of 1978 and its operation reveal the contradictions within liberal rights discourse on reproductive freedom. The Act itself contains traces of both Roman Catholic and liberal pluralist worldviews and has, since its introduction, been the site of conflict over competing notions of citizenship and legal identity. This article explores the impact of the Act's paradoxical nature on its (...)
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  • Beauvoir, Hegel, war.Meryl Altman - 2007 - Hypatia 22 (3):66-91.
    : The importance of Hegel to the philosophy of Simone de Beauvoir, both to her early philosophical texts and to The Second Sex, is usually discussed in terms of the master-slave dialectic and a Kojève–influenced reading, which some see her as sharing with Sartre, others persuasively describe as divergent from and corrective to Sartre's. Altman shows that Hegel's influence on Beauvoir's work is also wider, both in terms of what she takes on board and what she works through and rejects, (...)
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  • Voiceless Woman: Observe, But from the Centre.Belinda Giannessi - 2004 - European Journal of Women's Studies 11 (4):445-454.
    This article argues that present feminism has been translating its practical principles into a cultural and theoretical phenomenon. Drawing on her own genealogical achievement of freedom, the author discusses the main issues concerning present feminism – ranging from the intergenerational shift, feminist production and the control of its texts and practices – in order to construct her own understanding and doing feminism. Against a feminine feminist revival of traditional culture, the article focuses on creative and humanitarian agency. After having discussed (...)
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  • Immigrant Women in Italy: Perspectives from Brussels and Bologna.Marina Orsini-Jones & Catherine Hoskyns - 1995 - European Journal of Women's Studies 2 (1):51-76.
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  • Language, Communication and Betrayal.Ida Dominijanni - 1994 - European Journal of Women's Studies 1 (1):61-71.
    The centrality of language for feminist theory and practice is a widely shared tenet. So is the awareness of the difficulty of 'creating' a language in which to express a female subject who cannot have a voice in the given symbolic order. In the Italian context, and working on a daily newspaper, how does one write about the feminist movement? And - which is more difficult - how does one write about feminist theory? The requirements of communication might seem to (...)
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  • Beauvoir, Hegel, War.Meryl Altman - 2007 - Hypatia 22 (3):66-91.
    The importance of Hegel to the philosophy of Simone de Beauvoir, both to her early philosophical texts and to The Second Sex, is usually discussed in terms of the master-slave dialectic and a Kojève-influenced reading, which some see her as sharing with Sartre, others persuasively describe as divergent from and corrective to Sartre's. Altman shows that Hegel's influence on Beauvoir's work is also wider, both in terms of what she takes on board and what she works through and rejects, and (...)
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