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  1. Perpetuating gender stereotypes in the classroom: a teacher perspective.Colette Gray & Helen Leith - 2004 - Educational Studies 30 (1):3-17.
    This paper discusses findings from a study funded by the Equality Commission for Northern Ireland (NI) to explore the promotion of gender equity in the classroom and the extent to which initial teacher training and in-service courses address gender issues. Data from a questionnaire survey of 344 teachers and the qualitative dimensions of the study suggest that teachers are generally aware of gender stereotypes in the classroom and that, despite their lack of training in gender issues, where appropriate, most attempt (...)
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  • Rethinking Power.Amy Allen - 1998 - Hypatia 13 (1):21 - 40.
    This paper argues that feminists have yet to develop a satisfactory account of power. Existing feminist accounts of power tend to have a one-sided emphasis either on power as domination or on power as empowerment. This conceptual one-sided-ness must be overcome if feminists are to develop an account complex enough to illuminate women's diverse experiences with power. Such an account is sketched here.
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  • Existencialismo y filosofía. Escritos sobre Simone de Beauvoir.Leandro Sánchez Marín - 2024 - Medellín: Ennegativo Ediciones / Politécnico Colombiano Jaime Isaza Cadavid.
    Los ensayos aquí reunidos buscan ampliar el marco teórico de los estudios sobre Simone de Beauvoir en lengua castellana. Además, tienen como propósito fundamental ofrecer a sus posibles lectores algunas ideas para pensar problemas diversos en contextos muy específicos. Algunos de estos trabajos simplemente quieren acercar una mirada general sobre la figura de Beauvoir y sus principales preocupaciones teóricas, otros se sumergen en campos novedosos donde el análisis conceptual busca dar respuesta a problemas urgentes en medio de preocupaciones académicas. Esperamos (...)
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  • Worthy widows, welfare cheats: Proper womanhood in expert needs talk about single mothers in the united states, 1900 to 1988.Lisa D. Brush - 1997 - Gender and Society 11 (6):720-746.
    Single mothers spark what Nancy Fraser calls “needs talk,” the language for translating daily life into professional practice and social policy. The author analyzes expert needs talk in 709 case vignettes, published in the United States between 1900 and 1988, in which experts turn single mothers into “file persons,” the basic unit of bureaucratic welfare management. The author shows how expert needs talk in these sources determines single mothers' worthiness for philanthropic or government support according to their conformity with historically (...)
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  • Violence, Vulnerability, Precariousness, and Their Contemporary Modifications.Morny Joy - 2020 - Sophia 59 (1):19-30.
    This paper is a survey of a number of women scholars who, during the last 20 years, have made extremely valuable contributions to the meanings and interpretations of the terms ‘violence,’ ‘vulnerability,’ and ‘precariousness.’ Each scholar has proposed in-depth insights that demonstrate that the terms they have examined can be reconfigured in more constructive and less definitive ways. In their respective pertinent observations, they have challenged the existing negative theories that associate violence with weakness and vulnerability with anger. Even though (...)
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  • (1 other version)Gender: Still a Useful Category of Analysis?Joan Wallach Scott - 2010 - Diogenes 57 (1):7-14.
    This paper traces the history of uses of the word “gender”. It suggests that though “gender” has been recuperated and become commonplace, many issues persist around the way “women” and “men”, and the power relations between them, are defined and are evolving. Provided it still allows us to question the meanings attached to the sexes, how they are established and in what contexts, gender remains a useful, because critical, analytical category.
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  • Coyote Politics: Trickster Tales and Feminist Futures.Shane Phelan - 1996 - Hypatia 11 (3):130 - 149.
    This essay is a first attempt at thinking through the ways in which Native American Coyote stories can illuminate options for lesbian and feminist politics. I follow the metaphors of trickery and shape-shifting common to the stories and recommend the laughter they evoke as we engage in feminist politics and philosophy.
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  • Feminist perspectives on reproduction and the family.Debra Satz - 2008 - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
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  • From industrial to digital citizenship: rethinking social rights in cyberspace.Federico Tomasello - 2023 - Theory and Society 52 (3):463-486.
    Growing social inequalities represent a major concern associated with the Digital Revolution. The article tackles this issue by exploring how welfare regulations and redistribution policies can be rethought in the age of digital capitalism. It focuses on the history and enduring crisis of social citizenship rights in their connection with technological changes, in order to draw a comparison between the industrial and the digital scenario. The first section addresses the link between the Industrial Revolution and the genesis of social rights. (...)
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  • Trope analysis of women’s political subjectivity: Women secretaries and the issue of sexual harassment in Latvia.Ieva Zake - 2001 - Feminist Theory 2 (3):282-310.
    The article focuses on the narratives of women secretaries regarding their work experiences in private business in Latvia, and aims at understanding the barriers that prevent the formation of women’s political subjectivity in Latvia, by looking at why sexual harassment does not become a political issue for working women in Latvia. Using Hayden White’s theory of trope analysis, the article analyses the dominant tropes and the political results of their use in secretaries’ articulations and narratives about their experiences of sexual (...)
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  • Historicising Historical Theory’s History of Cultural Historiography.Alison Melissa Moore - 2016 - Cosmos and History 12 (1):257-291.
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  • Breastfeeding policies and the production of motherhood: a historical–cultural approach.Dagmar Estermann Meyer & Dora Lúcia De Oliveira - 2003 - Nursing Inquiry 10 (1):11-18.
    Breastfeeding policies and the production of motherhood: a historical–cultural approach This paper revisits some of the aspects that allow us to situate historically the process that has been called the ‘politicization of women's breasts’. It is part of a broader research project being undertaken in Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil, which is studying information from the educational material used in the National Campaign for the Incentive of Breastfeeding. The methodological approach used is cultural analysis, and its theoretical basis is informed (...)
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  • Using Gender to Undo Gender: A Feminist Degendering Movement.Judith Lorber - 2000 - Feminist Theory 1 (1):79-95.
    Women’s status in the Western world has improved enormously, but the revolution that would make women and men truly equal has not yet occurred. I argue that the reason is that gender divisions still deeply bifurcate the structure of modern society. Feminists want women and men to be equal, but few talk about doing away with gender divisions altogether. From a social constructionist structural gender perspective, it is the ubiquitous division of people into two unequally valued categories that undergirds the (...)
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  • Beards, Breasts, and Bodies: Doing Sex in a Gendered World.Raine Dozier - 2005 - Gender and Society 19 (3):297-316.
    Gender is commonly thought of as dependent on sex even though there are occasional aberrations. Interviews with female-to-male trans people, however, suggest that sex and sex characteristics can be understood as expressions of gender. The expression of gender relies on both behavior and the appearance of the performer as male or female. When sex characteristics do not align with gender, behavior becomes more important to gender expression and interpretation. When sex characteristics become more congruent with gender, behavior becomes more fluid (...)
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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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  • The Ethic of Love by Iris Murdoch.Daniela Alegría - 2019 - Eidos: Revista de Filosofía de la Universidad Del Norte 31:64-90.
    RESUMEN La filósofa irlandesa Iris Murdoch propone una teoría moral basada en el amor. Esta "ética del amor" se constituye a partir de la atención amorosa y la imaginación. De acuerdo con Murdoch, teorías morales como la kantiana presentan importantes problemas al considerar la moralidad como un asunto de "algoritmos morales". Las éticas dominantes desde la modernidad hasta nuestros días se han centrado en la universalidad, la imparcialidad, los principios morales, etcétera. Murdoch apunta a que la moralidad tiene que ver, (...)
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  • (1 other version)Reflections on Feminist Scepticism, The “Maleness” of Philosophy and Postmodernism.Maureen Milligan - 1992 - Hypatia 7 (3):166-172.
    Bordo is concerned with what she calls apostmodem “theoretics of heterogeneity” that questions the validity of historical and cultural analyses “along gender-tines.” It also challenges the validity of feminist analyses concerning the “maleness” of philosophy. Not surprisingly, this has precipitated debate between postmodernists and those alarmed by its implications for feminist work. At issue is the epistemological and political capacity of feminism to analyze social power and dominance through an analysis of gender.1.
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  • The Use and Abuse of Simone de Beauvoir: Re-Evaluating the French Poststructuralist Critique.Elaine Stavro - 1999 - European Journal of Women's Studies 6 (3):263-280.
    For many years poststructuralist feminists have denounced Simone de Beauvoir as a `universal humanist' who denies sexual difference and inscribes woman in a masculine discourse. Returning to the original exchanges between de Beauvoir and the French feminists of difference, where this dismissive attitude began, it is seen that de Beauvoir circulates in their discourse as representative of a bygone eraan embodiment of all that has been surpassed. Their criticisms of de Beauvoir prove for the most part, glib and disingenuous and (...)
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  • The Politices of Production: Technology, Markets, and the Two Cultures of American Industry.Philip Scranton - 1995 - Science in Context 8 (2):369-395.
    The ArgumentAs the American economy became more complex and differentiated in the post-1850 decades, so too did the demand for manufactured products, creating wide markets for both mass-produced standard goods and batch-produced specialties among consumers and producers alike. These developments conditioned the emergence of distinctive work cultures within the two broad spheres of manufacturing, as well as distinct approaches to technological selection and use, labor, marketing, and management. As the mass production dynamic has been well documented, this essay focuses principally (...)
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  • (1 other version)Chandra Mohanty and the Revaluing of "Experience".Shari Stone-Mediatore - 1998 - Hypatia 13 (2):116 - 133.
    Joan Scott's poststructuralist critique of experience demonstrates the dangers of empiricist narratives of experience but leaves feminists without a meaningful way to engage nonempiricist, experience-oriented texts, texts that constitute many women's primary means of taking control over their own representation. Using Chandra Mohanty's analysis of the role of writing in Third World feminisms, I articulate a concept of experience that incorporates poststructuralist insights while enabling a more responsible reading of Third World women's narratives.
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  • Feminist political philosophy.Noëlle McAfee - 2010 - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
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  • Intersections between analytic and continental feminism.Georgia Warnke - 2008 - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
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  • Familial hegemony:: Gender and production politics on Hong Kong's electronics shopfloor.Ching Kwan Lee - 1993 - Gender and Society 7 (4):529-547.
    Drawing on Burawoy's framework of “factory regimes” and concepts of power and practice from Foucault and de Certeau, this article depicts a production regime of “familial hegemony” found in a Hong Kong electronics factory. It suggests that the social construction of gender has to be inserted into a theory of production politics if the specific forms and processes of this hegemonic regime are to be explained. In this particular case, ethnographic data capture how an everyday culture of familialism, built around (...)
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  • ‘Carrying on a Long Tradition’: Second-Wave Presentations of First-Wave Feminism in Spare Rib c. 1972—80.Krista Cowman - 2010 - European Journal of Women's Studies 17 (3):193-210.
    The close relationship between feminism and history has resulted in peaks in the production of feminist histories which coincide with high levels of feminist activity. In many instances, feminists have conceived the research and writing of history as a political act in itself. This article investigates some of the contradictions and omissions which can arise when feminism attempts to engage with its own past. Though a close examination of the coverage of the suffrage movement in the British feminist periodical Spare (...)
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  • Re-reading the Second Sex: Theorizing the Situation.Elaine Stavro - 2000 - Feminist Theory 1 (2):131-150.
    In this re-reading of The Second Sex, the author argues that Beauvoir transgressively employs Sartre’s universal binary categories of Being and Nothingnessin her effort to account for the economic, political, cultural and psychological conditions of women’s situation. In doing so, she challenges Sartre’s theory of radical ontological freedom and concretizes his abstract philosophic voice, thereby avoiding their rationalist and voluntarist implications. Contesting Beauvoir’s feminist critics, who saw her as emotionally and philosophically dependent on Sartre and her work as an amalgam (...)
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  • Contemporary criticism on the representation of female travellers of the Ottoman harem in the 19th century: A review.Aimillia Mohd Ramli - 2011 - Intellectual Discourse 19 (2).
    A common problem that needs addressing in the study of narratives concerning the Orient and the Ottoman harem in the 19th century, through an emphasis on gender, is the popular belief amongst certain groups in post-colonial and feminist scholarships that writings by women on these subjects are the alternative to hegemonic imperial discourse. Post-colonial and feminist critics whose research deals with women travel writers to the Middle East and North Africa—Sara Mills, Reina Lewis, Billie Melman, Susan Meyer and Shirley Foster—have (...)
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  • The Power and the Pleasure? A Research Agenda for “Making Gender Stick” to Engineers.Wendy Faulkner - 2000 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 25 (1):87-119.
    This article seeks to open up a new avenue for feminist technology studies—gender-aware research on engineers and engineering practice—on the grounds that engineers are powerful symbols of the equation between masculinity and technology and occupy significant roles in shaping new technologies. Drawing on the disparate evidence available, the author explores four themes. The first asks why the equation between masculinity and technology is so durable when there are such huge mismatches between image and practice. The second examines this mismatch in (...)
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  • Historical Representations and the Gendered Battleground of the 'Past': A Study of the Canterbury Heritage Museum.Barbara Read - 1996 - European Journal of Women's Studies 3 (2):115-130.
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  • 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 (...)
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  • The Impact of Gender on Religious Studies.Morny Joy - 2010 - Diogenes 57 (1):93-102.
    The theme of gender in religion has not been dealt with homogenously given the many research areas that feed into the discipline of religious studies. This paper reviews the different uses of "gender" over the last 20 years. It notes that, though there is no single definition of the word, "gender" as a term has had a very great impact on the way women have formulated their demand for equality of treatment and renegotiated or even raised new claims as regards (...)
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  • The Social Construction of Gender and Technology: A Process With No Definitive Answer.Elisabeth Sundin - 1995 - European Journal of Women's Studies 2 (3):335-353.
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  • Deconstruction of gender and women’s agency: A proposal for incorporating concepts of feminist theory into historical research, exemplified through changes in Berlin’s Poor Relief Policy, 1770–1850.Dietlind Hüchtker - 2001 - Feminist Theory 2 (3):328-348.
    The article discusses Berlin’s Poor Relief Policy from the late 18th century to the mid-19th century, posing the question: how can premises of theoretical and political feminist discussion be put into practice? In analysing the shift in poor relief, I have taken up three essential aspects: (1) power relations must be examined in a context that cannot be reduced simply to the opposition between ruler and subject or men and women; (2) when does gender become a principle of social order?; (...)
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  • Guardians and Protectors: The Volunteer Women of the Donbas Conflict.Christina Olha Jarymowycz - 2020 - Feminist Review 126 (1):106-122.
    How does war reconfigure women’s social roles and status? This article investigates how women’s volunteering during conflict can challenge gendered divisions within society and transform the binary of masculine protector and feminine protected. When the Donbas conflict erupted in Ukraine in 2014, women assumed central roles as civilian volunteers who aided populations affected by violence. They gained a high level of social status in the context of a weak state, distrusted by its populace. Based on ten months of fieldwork and (...)
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  • Gender and professional identity in psychiatric nursing practice in Alberta, Canada, 1930–75.Geertje Boschma, Olive Yonge & Lorraine Mychajlunow - 2005 - Nursing Inquiry 12 (4):243-255.
    This paper examines gender‐specific transformations of nursing practice in institutional mental health‐care in Alberta, Canada, based on archival records on two psychiatric hospitals, Alberta Hospital Ponoka and Alberta Hospital Edmonton, and on oral histories with psychiatric mental health nurses in Alberta. The paper explores class and gender as interrelated influences shaping the work and professional identity of psychiatric mental health nurses from the 1930s until the mid‐1970s. Training schools for nurses in psychiatric hospitals emerged in Alberta in the 1930s under (...)
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  • 1968: from Co-determination to Co-worker. the Power of Language.Bo Stråth - 2002 - Thesis Eleven 68 (1):64-81.
    The focus of this article is the deep transformation of labour markets and working life in the wake of `1968', where the class language culminated in slogans like co-determination, Mitbestimmung and autogestion, and in the development of new practices like sit-ins, work-ins, factory occupations and so on. The massive criticism expressed in the new language posed a major challenge not only to organized capital, but also for organized labour, i.e. the trade unions. However, the shop floor protests were quickly followed (...)
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  • Engendering the United Nations: The Changing International Agenda.Laura Reanda - 1999 - European Journal of Women's Studies 6 (1):49-68.
    The unprecedented expression of concern by the UN over the oppression of women in Afghanistan in October 1996, and the apparent subsequent retreat of the organization in May 1998, exemplify both the higher visibility of gender issues in international relations, and the inherent constraints in putting the new policies into practice. The article analyzes how the conceptual evolution of UN approaches to social and economic development and human rights has led to recognition of the centrality of women's empowerment for the (...)
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  • A natureza dinâmica dos direitos humanos: a crítica de Rawls ao universalismo Moral.Sanja Ivic - 2010 - Trans/Form/Ação 33 (2).
    Human rights do not represent an absolute truth. Otherwise, they would represent ideology, which is contradictory to the basic idea of human rights itself. Consequently, there is a need for redefinition of the main presuppositions of modern conception of human rights represented in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. This paper argues that Rawls’s conception of human rights is significant for the refiguration of human rights. It.
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  • Twenty Years of Feminist Philosophy.Ann Ferguson - 1994 - Hypatia 9 (3):197 - 215.
    This paper provides an overview of twenty years of feminist philosophy in Northamerica. The professionalization of feminist theory that has occurred through the mainstreaming of feminist philosophy creates a danger of a gap between theory and practice that creates the danger of co-optation. Three stages of feminist philosophizing are outlined, including the radical critique, gender difference and difference/post-modernist stages. The last stage, it is argued, leads to an conceptual impasse about feminist strategies for social change.
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  • The multiple jeopardy of race, class, and gender for aids risk among women.David M. Quadagno, Allen Imershein, Philippa Levine, Joseph Byers, Dianne F. Harrison, K. G. Wambach & Marie Withers Osmond - 1993 - Gender and Society 7 (1):99-120.
    This article focuses on the ways that sexual risk behaviors are related to race, class, and gender among low-income, culturally diverse women in South Florida. Data concerning sexual risk and gender are presented in terms of race and class variations. Results indicate that, in general, these women have a high degree of knowledge about acquired immune deficiency syndrome, a quite contemporary awareness of women's gendered subordination, and a lack of trust in heterosexual relationships. Attitudes, beliefs, and knowledge, however, are not (...)
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  • Gendering Creolisation: Creolising Affect.Joan Anim-Addo - 2013 - Feminist Review 104 (1):5-23.
    Going beyond the creolisation theories of Brathwaite and Glissant, I attempt to develop ideas concerning the gendering of creolisation, and a historicising of affects within it. Addressing affects as ‘physiological things’ contextualised in the history of the Caribbean slave plantation, I seek, importantly, to delineate a trajectory and development of a specific Creole history in relation to affects. Brathwaite's proposition that ‘the most significant (and lasting) inter-cultural creolisation took place’ within the ‘intimate’ space of ‘sexual relations’ is key to my (...)
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  • An Introduction from the Guest Editor.Catherine Davies - 2005 - Feminist Review 79 (1):1-4.
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  • The structure of knowing : Existential trust as an epistemological category.Hildur Kalman - 1999 - Acta Universitatis Umensis 145.
    This thesis investigates the structure of knowing, and it argues that existential trust is an epistemological category. The aim of the dissertation is to develop a view according to which all human activity is seen as an activity of a lived body, and in which the understanding of the structure of such activity is regarded as central for the solution even of epistemological problems. This view is not rooted in any one philosophical tradition, but circles around activity of the lived (...)
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  • (1 other version)Reflections on Feminist Scepticism, The "Maleness" of Philosophy and Postmodernism.Maureen Milligan - 1992 - Hypatia 7 (3):166 - 172.
    Bordo is concerned with what she calls a postmodern "theoretics of heterogeneity" that questions the validity of historical and cultural analyses "along gender-lines." It also challenges the validity of feminist analyses concerning the "maleness" of philosophy. Not surprisingly, this has precipitated debate between postmodernists and those alarmed by its implications for feminist work. At issue is the epistemological and political capacity of feminism to analyze social power and dominance through an analysis of gender.
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  • Maria Eriksson Baaz and Maria Stern: Sexual Violence as a Weapon of War? Perceptions, Prescriptions, Problems in the Congo and Beyond: Zed Books, London, 2013, 168 pp, £21.99, ISBN: 978-1-780-32163-9.Jennifer Lander - 2014 - Feminist Legal Studies 22 (3):307-310.
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  • The unholy alliance of sex and gender.Marilyn Friedman - 1996 - Metaphilosophy 27 (1-2):78-91.
    Several decades ago, feminists differentiated between the biologically given basis of sex identity (sex) and the socially constructed cultural practices anchored by sex identity (gender). In recent years, many feminists have challenged that distinction, arguing that biological sex is as much a social construct as are the practices comprising gender. I survey two examples from biological studies of sex identity that, by contrast (I maintain), warrant saving the concept of biologically given sex identity. The result is not antithetical to feminism, (...)
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  • Generations at war or sustainable social policy in ageing societies?Thomas Lindh, Bo Malmberg & Joakim Palme - 2005 - Journal of Political Philosophy 13 (4):470–489.
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  • Women's History in Britain: An Overview.June Purvis - 1995 - European Journal of Women's Studies 2 (1):7-19.
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  • Social Movement Literature and U.S. Labour: A Reassessment.Keith Mann - 2014 - Studies in Social Justice 8 (2):165-179.
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  • Social Justice and Modern Capitalism: Historiographical Problems, Theoretical Perspectives.Mark Bevir & Frank Trentmann - 2001 - The European Legacy 6 (2):141-158.
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  • A Body Worth Defending: Immunity, Biopolitics, and the Apotheosis of the Modern Body, by Ed Cohen. Durham and London: Duke University Press, 2009.Jacqueline Stevens - 2011 - Political Theory 39 (3):432-436.
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