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  1. The humanism of critical theory: The Frankfurt School’s ‘realer humanismus’.Alice Nilsson - 2023 - Philosophy and Social Criticism.
    Theodor Adorno has been quoted as responding to the Humanist Union stating ‘I might possibly be willing to join if your club had been called an inhuman union, but I could not join one that calls itself “humanist”’. Adorno’s opposition to forms of humanism (both liberal and Marxist) which posit the existence of our humanity is reflected in readings of The Frankfurt Institute’s history such as that produced by Martin Jay. While this is the case, one of Adorno’s highly admired (...)
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  • A Queer Sex, or, Can Feminism and Psychoanalysis Have Sex without the Phallus.Lili Hsieh - 2012 - Feminist Review 102 (1):97-115.
    This paper deals with the wrought relationship between psychoanalysis and feminism, broadly defined. Tracing the trajectory in which psychoanalysis leads feminism from sexuality to sexual difference then to the Phallus and the ideology of femininity, the paper takes on these ‘f-words'—femininity and ‘f-allus’, Freud and Foucault—to foreground an unacknowledged challenge of Judith Butler by Toril Moi in 1999. In this paper, I read Freud closely and demonstrate that although Freud's theory of cure is obscured by the turn to the Phallus (...)
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  • Thinking Feminism with and against Bourdieu.Terry Lovell - 2000 - Feminist Theory 1 (1):11-32.
    This article argues that a positive engagement between Bourdieu’s sociology of practice and contemporary feminist theory would be mutually profitable. It compares Bourdieu’s account of the social construction of the human subject through practice with Butler’s account of subjectivity as performance. While the one, through the concept of habitus, tends towards an ‘overdetermined’ view of subjectivity in which subjective dispositions are too tightly tied to the social practices in which they were forged, the other pays insufficient attention to the social (...)
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  • The Concept of ‘Difference’.Michèle Barrett - 1987 - Feminist Review 26 (1):29-41.
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  • We are Sweden Democrats because we care for others: Exploring racisms in the Swedish extreme right.Anders Neergaard & Diana Mulinari - 2014 - European Journal of Women's Studies 21 (1):43-56.
    During the last decades there has been an upsurge in research on xenophobic populist parties, mirroring their political successes. In the Swedish context, characterised by neoliberal restructuring, issues of ‘race’, citizenship and belonging have been important elements of the public debate. These issues have unfolded in parallel with the presence of a neo-Nazi social movement and the emergence of two new parliamentary parties in which cultural racism has been central. Research has especially focused on the xenophobic content and how to (...)
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  • ‘Divided We Stand’: Sex, Gender and Sexual Difference.Henrietta Moore - 1994 - Feminist Review 47 (1):78-95.
    This article was originally presented as a paper, and since much of what it discusses turns on problems of position, location, self-representation and representativity, I have decided to leave it, as far as is possible, in its original form. Extensive use of the first person pronoun is frowned on in the contexts in which I am used to working, but I have deliberately retained it in this text to try and convey a sense of particularity, of myself speaking in a (...)
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  • What Really Matters?: The Elusive Quality of the Material in Feminist Thought.Anne Witz & Momin Rahman - 2003 - Feminist Theory 4 (3):243-261.
    The concept of the ‘material’ was the focus of much feminist work in the 1970s. It has always been a deeply contested one, even for feminists working within a broadly materialist paradigm of the social. Materialist feminists stretched the concept of the material beyond the narrowly economic in their attempts to develop a social ontology of gender and sexuality.Nonetheless, the quality of the social asserted by an expanded sense of thematerial – its ‘materiality’ – remains ambiguous. New terminologies of materiality (...)
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  • (1 other version)‘Returning to Manderley’—Romance Fiction, Female Sexuality and Class.Alison Light - 1984 - Feminist Review 16 (1):7-25.
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  • Women and Mental Health: A Feminist Review.Erica Burman & Liz Bondi - 2001 - Feminist Review 68 (1):6-33.
    This article contextualizes some of the more specifically focused articles in this Special Issue of ‘Women and Mental Health’ by reviewing general historical and political currents structuring contemporary discussions around questions of models, treatment and provision for women within British mental health services. We highlight some particularities of the current British context (in relation to other national scenes) in terms of the forms and expressions of feminist activity around mental or emotional distress. While not absolute mirrors of each other, resonances (...)
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  • Significant Others: Lesbianism and Psychoanalytic Theory.Diane Hamer - 1990 - Feminist Review 34 (1):134-151.
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  • Thin is the Feminist Issue.Nicky Diamond - 1985 - Feminist Review 19 (1):45-64.
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