Switch to: References

Add citations

You must login to add citations.
  1. Breastfeeding and sexual difference: Queering Irigaray.Robyn Lee - 2018 - Feminist Theory 19 (1):77-94.
    It is commonly assumed that only women, and in particular women who have recently given birth, are able to breastfeed. However, through induced lactation, adoptive mothers, fathers and trans people have begun breastfeeding with greater frequency. Although breastfeeding is often regarded as a paradigmatic example of sexual difference, it actually exposes the instability of binary categories of sex. Luce Irigaray insists that sexual difference demands a new poetics, a language that is dynamic and fluid, capable of expressing difference while always (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   3 citations  
  • Beyond hierarchical oppositions: A feminist critique of Karen Barad’s agential realism.Caroline Braunmühl - 2018 - Feminist Theory 19 (2):223-240.
    The article contributes to the debate on new materialism commenced by Sara Ahmed (2008). Taking up Lena Gunnarsson’s (2013) argument that erasing distinctions is no effective antidote to dualistic theorising, the article argues that Karen Barad’s (2003, 2007) theory is problematic on this count. Whereas Barad dilutes the theoretical distinction between mind and matter as well as that between the animate and the inanimate, the contention here is that it is ethically and politically vital to hold on to a notion (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   2 citations  
  • The Bodies of the Commons: Towards a Relational Embodied Ethics of the Commons.Emmanouela Mandalaki & Marianna Fotaki - 2020 - Journal of Business Ethics 166 (4):745-760.
    This article extends current theorizations of the ethics of the commons by drawing on feminist thought to propose a relational embodied ethics of the commons. Departing from abstract ethical principles, the proposed ethical theory reconsiders commoning as a process emerging through social actors’ embodied interactions, resulting in the development of an ethics that accounts for their shared corporeal concerns. Such theorizing allows for inclusive alternative forms of organizing, while offering the ethical and political possibility of countering forms of economic competition (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   2 citations  
  • Ambivalence and penetration of boundaries in the worship of Dionysos: Analysing the enacting of psychical conflicts in religious ritual and myth, with reference to societal structure.Shehzad D. Raj - 2018 - Dissertation, University of Essex
    This thesis draws on Freud to understand the innate human need to create boundaries and argues that ambivalence is an inescapable dilemma in their creation. It argues that a re-reading of Freud’s major thesis in Totem and Taboo via an engagement with the Dionysos myth and cult scholarship allows for a new understanding of dominant forms of hegemonic psychic and social formations that attempt to keep in place a false opposition of polis and phusis, self and Other, resulting in the (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • Understanding the emotion of shame in transgender individuals – some insight from Kafka.Simona Giordano - 2018 - Life Sciences, Society and Policy 14 (1):1-22.
    Both clinical literature and biographical accounts suggest that many transgender individuals experience shame or have experienced shame at some point in their life for reasons related to their gender identity. In clinical psychology, at least until the 1960s, shame has not received much attention; focus was on guilt and shame was regarded mainly as a ‘by-product’ of guilt. From the 1960s shame has been identified as an emotion not necessarily related to guilt and with unique features, and has been studied (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   2 citations  
  • Learning from deep brain stimulation: the fallacy of techno-solutionism and the need for ‘regimes of care’.John Gardner & Narelle Warren - 2019 - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 22 (3):363-374.
    Deep brain stimulation (DBS) is an effective treatment for the debilitating motor symptoms of Parkinson’s disease and other neurological disorders. However, clinicians and commentators have noted that DBS recipients have not necessarily experienced the improvements in quality of life that would be expected, due in large part to what have been described as the ‘psychosocial’ impacts of DBS. The premise of this paper is that, in order to realise the full potential of DBS and similar interventions, clinical services need to (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   5 citations  
  • Towards a Political Philosophy of Management: Performativity & Visibility in Management Practices.François-Xavier de Vaujany, Jeremy Aroles & Pierre Laniray - 2019 - Philosophy of Management 18 (2):117-129.
    Phenomenological, process-based and post-Marxist approaches have stressed the immanent nature of the ontogenesis of our world. The concept of performativity epitomizes these temporal, spatial and material views. Reality is always in movement itself: it is constantly materially and socially ‘performed’. Other views lead to a pre-defined world that would be mostly revealed through sensations (i.e. ‘representational perspectives’). These transcendental stances assume that a subject, although pre-existing experience, is the absolute condition of possibility of it. In this paper, we develop another (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   2 citations  
  • Gender and sustainable livelihoods: linking gendered experiences of environment, community and self.Wendy Harcourt - 2017 - Agriculture and Human Values 34 (4):1007-1019.
    In this essay I explore the economic, social, environmental and cultural changes taking place in Bolsena, Italy, where agricultural livelihoods have rapidly diminished in the last two decades. I examine how gender dynamics have shifted with the changing values and livelihoods of Bolsena through three women’s narratives detailing their gendered experiences of environment, community and self. I reflect on these changes with Sabrina, who is engaged in a feminist community-based organization; Anna, who is running an alternative wine bar; and Isabella, (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   4 citations  
  • Husserl and queer theory.Lanei M. Rodemeyer - 2017 - Continental Philosophy Review 50 (3):311-334.
    In spite of a history wherein queer theory has openly rejected phenomenology, phenomenology has gained increasing interest amongst queer theorists. However, Husserl’s phenomenology is often marginalized in attempts to integrate queer theory with phenomenology, and when Husserl is addressed specifically, his work is often treated superficially or even misrepresented. Given this, my first goal is to demonstrate how Husserl’s work is already open to positions considered fundamental to queer theory, and that Husserl is often explicitly arguing for these positions himself. (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   2 citations  
  • El concepto de género como hermenéutica de la sospecha: de la Biología a la Filosofía Moral y Política.Alicia H. Puleo - 2013 - Arbor 189 (763):a070.
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • Honneth, Butler and the Ambivalent Effects of Recognition.Paddy McQueen - 2015 - Res Publica 21 (1):43-60.
    This paper explores the ambivalent effects of recognition through a critical examination of Axel Honneth’s theory of recognition. I argue that his underlying perfectionist account and his focus on the psychic effects of recognition lead him to overlook important connections between recognition and power. These claims are substantiated through Butler’s theory of gender performativity and recognition; and issues connected to the socio-institutional recognition of transgender identities. I conclude by suggesting that certain problems with Butler’s own position can corrected by drawing (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   10 citations  
  • Constructing a social subject: Autism and human sociality in the 1980s.Gregory Hollin - 2014 - History of the Human Sciences 27 (4):98-115.
    This article examines three key aetiological theories of autism, which emerged within cognitive psychology in the latter half of the 1980s. Drawing upon Foucault’s notion of ‘forms of possible knowledge’, and in particular his concept of savoir or depth knowledge, two key claims are made. First, it is argued that a particular production of autism became available to questions of truth and falsity following a radical reconstruction of ‘the social’ in which human sociality was taken both to exclusively concern interpersonal (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   2 citations  
  • The Sport Nexus and Gender Injustice.Ann Travers - 2008 - Studies in Social Justice 2 (1):79-101.
    Male-dominated and sex segregated elite professional and amateur sport1 in North America constitutes a "sport nexus" (Burstyn, 1999; Heywood & Dworkin, 2003) that combines economic and cultural influence to reinforce and perpetuate gender injustice. The sport nexus is an androcentric sex-segregated commercially powerful set of institutions that is highly visible and at the same time almost completely taken for granted to the extent that its anti-democratic impetus goes virtually unnoticed. The sport nexus’s hegemonic role in defining sporting norms (Coakley & (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   9 citations  
  • Neuroscience and Sex/Gender.Isabelle Dussauge & Anelis Kaiser - 2012 - Neuroethics 5 (3):211-215.
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   4 citations  
  • African Values, Human Rights and Group Rights: A Philosophical Foundation for the Banjul Charter.Thaddeus Metz - 2013 - In Oche Onazi (ed.), African Legal Theory and Contemporary Problems: Critical Essays. Dordrecht: Springer. pp. 131-51.
    A communitarian perspective, which is characteristic of African normative thought, accords some kind of primacy to society or a group, whereas human rights are by definition duties that others have to treat individuals in certain ways, even when not doing so would be better for others. Is there any place for human rights in an Afro-communitarian political and legal philosophy, and, if so, what is it? I seek to answer these questions, in part by critically exploring one of the most (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   6 citations  
  • Existential Transcendence in Late Modernity: Edgework and Hermeneutic Reflexivity. [REVIEW]Stephen Lyng - 2012 - Human Studies 35 (3):401-414.
    Increasing attention to existentialist thought by criminologists and other social scientists in recent decades has created an opportunity to envision new possibilities in critical theoretic inquiry that extend well beyond the classical formulations of this tradition. In this essay, I draw on existentialist ideas to outline a critical perspective rooted in recent developments associated with Ulrich Beck's notion of "risk society" and the related theory of reflexive modernization. I argue that, though the detraditionalization consequences of reflexive modernization give greater scope (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  • The Fracturing of LGBT Identities under Neoliberal Capitalism.Peter Drucker - 2011 - Historical Materialism 19 (4):3-32.
    Historians have linked the emergence of contemporary lesbian/gay identities to the development of capitalism. A materialist approach should also look atdifferentforms of sexual identity, and their connections with specific phases of capitalist development. Marxist long-wave theory can help us understand how the decline of Fordism contributed to shifts in LGBT identities, speeding the consolidation of gay identity while fostering the rise of alternative sexual identities. These alternative identities, sometimes defined as ‘queer’, characterised by sexual practices that are still stigmatised, by (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  • Sounding : Disintegrating visual space in music.David Guimond - unknown
    While the groundbreaking insights that contemporary theorists have formulated with regards to space---as a multiplicity without essence, as an active event, and as inseparable from subjectivity, power, Otherness and time---have ostensibly purged it of its traditional understanding as absolute, a specific visuality characteristic of Cartesian perspectivalism remains privileged in its theorization which force it to remain so. While the complexity of space cannot be recovered from an abstract contemplation of its visual geometry in a way that reflects these contemporary concerns, (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • From Political to Realist Essentialism: Rereading Luce Irigaray.Alison Stone - 2004 - Feminist Theory 5 (1):5-23.
    This paper re-examines debates surrounding Irigaray’s ‘essentialism’, arguing that these debates have generated a widespread assumption that realist essentialism is philosophically untenable and that Irigaray must therefore be read as a non-realist, merely ‘political’, essentialist. I suggest that this assumption is unhelpful, as Irigaray’s work shows increasing commitment to a realist form of essentialism. Moreover, I argue that political essentialism is internally unstable because it aims to revalue femininity and the body as symbolized, thereby reinforcing the traditional conceptual hierarchy of (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   3 citations  
  • Feminist Lecture: (Re) Imagining Gender-Based Violence as a Strategy for Enforcing Institutional Segregation and Reproducing Structural Inequalities.Angela J. Hattery - 2022 - Gender and Society 36 (6):789-812.
    In this article, I develop a framework for re-imagining gender-based violence not as an outgrowth of patriarchy but as a response to the threat of gender integration and the inversion of the gendered hierarchy. I argue that this reconceptualization is critical to re-envisioning not just research but also prevention and intervention strategies. I begin by identifying two reasons for the stalled revolution in reducing rates of gender-based violence: the focus on intimate partner violence and sexual violence as distinct rather than (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • Historicizing White Supremacist Terrorism with Ida B. Wells.Verena Erlenbusch-Anderson - 2022 - Political Theory 50 (2):275-304.
    In light of increasing white supremacist violence in the United States, calls to identify such violence as terrorism have surged in public discourse. Federal and state agencies have taken up these demands and included white supremacy in counterterrorism and national security policy. While this classification appears to remove the racist double standard in applications of the terrorism label, it has come under criticism for obscuring the history and distinctly U.S. American roots of white supremacy, on the one hand, and expanding (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • A Critique of the Model of Gender Recognition and the Limits of Self-Declaration for Non-Binary Trans Individuals.Caterina Nirta - 2021 - Law and Critique 32 (2):217-233.
    This article considers the model of recognition in the Gender Recognition Act 2004 (GRA) and, through a critique of the value of stability pursued through this legislation, argues that recognition as a model is incompatible with the variety of experiences of non-binary trans-identified individuals. The article then moves on to analyse self-declaration, part of the proposed reform recently dismissed by the Government. While self-declaration contains provisions that would minimise the length of the process of recognition as well as the level (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  • Pious and Critical: Muslim Women Activists and the Question of Agency.Rachel Rinaldo - 2014 - Gender and Society 28 (6):824-846.
    Recent turmoil in the Middle East and North Africa has prompted renewed concerns about women’s rights in Muslim societies. It has also raised questions about women’s agency and activism in religious contexts. This article draws on ethnographic research with women activists in Indonesia, the country with the world’s largest Muslim population, to address such concerns. My fieldwork shows that some Muslim women activists in democratizing Indonesia manifest pious critical agency. Pious critical agency is the capacity to engage critically and publicly (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   6 citations  
  • Women and their hair: Seeking power through resistance and accommodation.Rose Weitz - 2001 - Gender and Society 15 (5):667-686.
    This article explores how women seek power through both resisting and accommodating mainstream norms for female hair and delineates the strengths and limitations of these strategies. The data help to illuminate the complex role the body plays in sustaining and challenging women's subordinate position, how accommodation and resistance lie buried in everyday activities, the limits of resistance based on the body, and why accommodation and resistance are best viewed as coexisting variables rather than as polar opposites. Finally, these data suggest (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   9 citations  
  • Book Reviews. [REVIEW]Amy L. Best - 2003 - Gender and Society 17 (3):491-492.
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • “Said and Done” Versus “Saying and Doing”: Gendering Practices, Practicing Gender at Work.Patricia Yancey Martin - 2003 - Gender and Society 17 (3):342-366.
    Recently, the study of gender has focused on processes by which gender is brought into social relations through interaction. This article explores implications of a two-sided dynamic—gendering practices and practicing of gender—for understanding gendering processes in formal organizations. Using stories from interviews and participant observation in multinational corporations, the author explores the practicing of gender at work. She defines practicing gender as a moving phenomenon that is done quickly, directionally, and nonreflexively; is informed by liminal awareness; and is in concert (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   7 citations  
  • Trading On Heterosexuality: College Women's Gender Strategies and Homophobia.Laura Hamilton - 2007 - Gender and Society 21 (2):145-172.
    In this study, the author uses ethnographic and interview data from a women's floor in a university residence hall to examine how some heterosexual women's gender strategies contribute to their homophobia. The author describes a prevailing heterosexual erotic market on campus—the Greek party scene—and the status hierarchy linked to it. Within this hierarchy, heterosexual women assign lesbians low rank because of their assumed disinterest in the erotic market and perceived inability to acquire men's erotic attention. Active partiers invest more in (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   4 citations  
  • The social organization of sexuality and gender in alternative hard rock: An analysis of intersectionality.Mimi Schippers - 2000 - Gender and Society 14 (6):747-764.
    This article provides an empirical example and an analytic argument for how queer theory can be useful for sociological inquiries of gender relations. Using data collected through participant observation of a rock music subculture, the author addresses the importance of conceptualizing sexuality and gender as analytically distinct. There are five major findings drawn from this analysis. First, members of this subculture queered sexuality despite identifying as heterosexual. Second, there is a dissonance between how members talked about sexuality and how they (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   5 citations  
  • Object Lessons, Robyn Wiegman. [REVIEW]Sara Ahmed - 2012 - Feminist Theory 13 (3):345-348.
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • What’s wrong with aspiring to find out what has really happened in academic feminism’s recent past?: Response to Clare Hemmings’ ‘Telling feminist stories’.Rachel Torr - 2007 - Feminist Theory 8 (1):59-67.
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  • `I am not a woman writer': About women, literature and feminist theory today.Toril Moi - 2008 - Feminist Theory 9 (3):259-271.
    This essay first tries to answer two questions: Why did the question of the woman writer disappear from the feminist theoretical agenda around 1990? Why do we need to reconsider it now? I then begin to develop a new analysis of the question of the woman writer by turning to the statement `I am not a woman writer'. By treating it as a speech act and analysing it in the light of Simone de Beauvoir's understanding of sexism, I show that (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  • Agency, Anticipation and Indeterminacy in Feminist Theory.Lois McNay - 2003 - Feminist Theory 4 (2):139-148.
    Much contemporary work on agency offers only a partial account because it remains within an essentially negative understanding of subject formation. This essay examines the work of Judith Butler and Drucilla Cornell and argues that the negative paradigm needs to be supplemented by a more generative theoretical framework, if feminists are to develop a fuller account of agency. In the negative paradigm, the subject is understood in passive terms as an effect of discursive structures. This tends to overlook ideas of (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   7 citations  
  • Telling feminist stories.Clare Hemmings - 2005 - Feminist Theory 6 (2):115-139.
    This article identifies and analyses the dominant stories that academics tell about the development of Western second wave feminist theory. Through an examination of recent production of interdisciplinary feminist and cultural theory journals, I suggest that despite a rhetorical insistence on multiple feminisms, Western feminist trajectories emerge as startlingly singular. In particular, I am critical of an insistent narrative that sees the development of feminist thought as a relentless march of progress or loss. This dominant approach oversimplifies the complex history (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   39 citations  
  • Trans- Bodies in/of War(s): Cisprivilege and Contemporary Security Strategy.Laura Sjoberg & Laura J. Shepherd - 2012 - Feminist Review 101 (1):5-23.
    This article explores a gendered dimension of war and conflict analysis that has up until now received little attention at the intersection of gender studies and studies of global politics: queer bodies in, and genderqueer significations of, war and conflict. In doing so, the article introduces the concept of cisprivilege to International Relations as a discipline and security studies as a core sub-field. Cisprivilege is an important, but under-explored, element of the constitution of gender and conflict. Whether it be in (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • Gendered Representations in Hawai‘i's Anti-Gmo Activism.Amanda Shaw - 2016 - Feminist Review 114 (1):48-71.
    The aim of this article is to analyse some of the representations of intersectional gender that materialise in activism against genetically modified organisms (GMOs). It uses the case of Hawai'i as a key node in global transgenic seed production and hotspot for food, land and farming controversies. Based on ethnographic work conducted since 2012, the article suggests some of the ways that gender is represented within movements against GMOs by analysing activist media representations. The article shows how gender, understood intersectionally, (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • Who Needs [Sex] When you can have [Gender]?: Conflicting Discourses on Gender at Beijing.Anne Marie Goetz & Sally Baden - 1997 - Feminist Review 56 (1):3-25.
    ‘Gender’, understood as the social construction of sex, is a key concept for feminists working at the interface of theory and policy. This article examines challenges to the concept which emerged from different groups at the UN Fourth World Conference on Women in Beijing, September 1995, an important arena for struggles over feminist public policies. The first half of the article explores contradictory uses of the concept in the field of gender and development. Viewpoints from some southern activist women at (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   3 citations  
  • 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 (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  • Unwarranted and Invasive Scrutiny: Caster Semenya, Sex-Gender Testing and the Production of Woman In ‘Women’s’ Track and Field.Aaren Pastor - 2019 - Feminist Review 122 (1):1-15.
    This article discusses the imbrication of racialising and sexualising scientific practices of gender testing and verification in elite athletics competition, and their intersection with social politics, using as a theoretical frame the feminist, anti-racist work of Hortense Spillers (2003), Judith Butler (1990, 1993a, 1993b, 2004) and Anne Fausto-Sterling (2000), among others. It traces the practice of sex-gender testing of ‘women’ at sanctioned International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF) and International Olympic Committee (IOC) track and field competitions in order to contextualise (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  • Vacant Wombs: Feminist Challenges to Psychoanalytic Theories of Childless Women.Myra J. Hird - 2003 - Feminist Review 75 (1):5-19.
    This paper concerns a theoretical struggle to situate childless women within contemporary feminist debates about gender, the body and sexuality. Although psychoanalytic theory offers a compelling approach to the body, a Freudian account of childless women has largely escaped investigation. This paper will provide such an analysis, arguing that competing interpretations of psychoanalytic theory reveal a salient tension in the interpretation of gender identification. On the one hand, some theorists focus on a social development model of gender identification. This model (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • Surviving difference: Endocrine-disrupting chemicals, intergenerational justice and the future of human reproduction.Roxanne Mykitiuk & Robyn Lee - 2018 - Feminist Theory 19 (2):205-221.
    Endocrine-disrupting chemicals have been identified as posing risks to reproductive health and may have intergenerational effects. However, responses to the potential harms they pose frequently rely on medicalised understandings of the body and normative gender identities. This article develops an intersectional feminist framework of intergenerational justice in response to the potential risks posed by endocrine-disrupting chemicals. We examine critiques of endocrine disruptors from feminist, critical disability and queer standpoints, and explore issues of race and class in exposures. We argue that (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • Category anxiety and the invisible white woman: Managing intersectionality at the scene of argument.Barbara Tomlinson - 2018 - Feminist Theory 19 (2):145-164.
    Feminists may overlook the way that our practices of reading and writing serve as discursive technologies of power, particularly if we fail to acknowledge the dominance of the invisible subject position of the (middle-class, heterosexual) white woman. Under such circumstances, specific seemingly neutral rhetorical strategies can serve as potent tools of dominance, infusing the reading situation with strategies of subordination that go unremarked because they are authorised by tradition and convention. I examine here the use of a specific rhetorical device (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  • How the Ethiopian Changed His Skin.D. Selden - 2013 - Classical Antiquity 32 (2):322-377.
    Aksumite elites electively identified themselves as “black” in relation to the paler integument of other Mediterranean peoples. Prior to the fourth century CE, the proper noun Aithiopía referred to the area of northern Sudan. Aksum, however, deliberately appropriated the Greek term for its own geopolitical purposes, partly as a way to write itself both into the grand narratives of Graeco-Roman history, where “Ethiopians” recurrently figure as morally “blameless,” as well as—with their conversion to Christianity—into Old and New Testamental eschatologies that (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • A ‘Beautiful half hour of being a mere woman’: The Feminist Subject and Temporary Solidarity.Lucy Freedman - 2018 - Historical Materialism 26 (2):221-241.
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • The smiling philosopher: Emotional labor, gender, and harassment in conference spaces.Liz Jackson - 2019 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 51 (7):693-701.
    Conference environments enable diverse roles for academics. However, conferences are hardly entered into by participants as equals. Academics enter into and experience professional environments differently according to culture, gender, race, ethnicity, class, and more. This paper considers from a philosophical perspective entering and initiating culturally into academic conferences as a woman. It discusses theories of gender and emotional labor and emotional management, focusing on Arlie Hochschild’s foundational work, and affect in gendered social relations, considering Sara Ahmed’s theorization of the feminist (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   7 citations  
  • Mental Heath as a Weapon: Whistleblower Retaliation and Normative Violence.Kate Kenny, Marianna Fotaki & Stacey Scriver - 2019 - Journal of Business Ethics 160 (3):801-815.
    What form does power take in situations of retaliation against whistleblowers? In this article, we move away from dominant perspectives that see power as a resource. In place, we propose a theory of normative power and violence in whistleblower retaliation, drawing on an in-depth empirical study. This enables a deeper understanding of power as it circulates in complex processes of whistleblowing. We offer the following contributions. First, supported by empirical findings we propose a novel theoretical framing of whistleblower retaliation and (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   8 citations  
  • Engendering Harm: A Critique of Sex Selection For “Family Balancing”.Arianne Shahvisi - 2018 - Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 15 (1):123-137.
    The most benign rationale for sex selection is deemed to be “family balancing.” On this view, provided the sex distribution of an existing offspring group is “unbalanced,” one may legitimately use reproductive technologies to select the sex of the next child. I present four novel concerns with granting “family balancing” as a justification for sex selection: families or family subsets should not be subject to medicalization; sex selection for “family balancing” entrenches heteronormativity, inflicting harm in at least three specific ways; (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   4 citations  
  • Classic Media review of Hedwig and the Angry Inch. [REVIEW]Shelley M. Park - 2015 - Queer Studies in Media and Popular Culture 1 (1):125-28.
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • Derrida and Beyond.Tina Chanter - 2017 - philoSOPHIA: A Journal of Continental Feminism 7 (1):67-77.
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • What's the matter with discourse? : An alternative reading of Karen Barad's philosophy.Andersson Ingrid - unknown
    The theoretical movement known under the heading of posthumanism has entered the academic field. Posthumanisms most prominent feature is to retrieve the concept of matter into the analytical framework. Matter is understood to be under-theorized within the social sciences as a result of the permeative focus upon language and discourse. A prevailing understanding of posthumanism that has been used within educational science and philosophy thus consists of moving the searchlight from language/discourse onto matter. Notably, these scholars are turning to the (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • Reproducing the Motherboard: The Invisible Labor of Discourses that Gender Digital Fields.Heather Greenhalgh-Spencer - 2016 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 36 (1):33-48.
    Within the digital workforce, women are disappearing. While there are many factors that could be ‘blamed’ for this phenomenon, this article takes issue with the sexist and patriarchal discourses that are deployed within the digital workforce. In many ways, sexist discourses are taken for granted within the digital workplace; and in that way, the discourses themselves are rendered invisible through a lack of concerted uncovering of the ways that these sexist discourses produce—and reproduce—women as sexual objects and outsiders in this (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark