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Theorizing Feminisms: A Reader

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"What is sexist oppression?" "What should be done about it?" Organized around these questions, Theorizing A Reader provides an overview of theoretical feminist writing about the quest for gender justice. Incorporating both classic and cutting-edge material, the reader takes into account the full diversity of women, highlighting the effects of race, ethnicity, nationality, class, sexuality, and religion on women's experience.
Theorizing Feminisms is organized into four sections and includes fifty-four essays. The first section introduces several basic concepts commonly employed when thinking about sexism--oppression, social construction, essentialism, intersectionality, gender, race, and class--and also raises questions about the perspective and legitimacy of the theorist. The second section surveys three approaches that attempt to characterize in a general way the source of injustice toward humanist feminism ("the sameness approach"), gynocentric feminism ("the difference approach"), and dominance feminism. Offering an alternate perspective, the third section introduces two "localizing" approaches, grounded in postmodernism and identity politics, respectively. Skeptical of theories that attempt to analyze social phenomena across history and culture, authors in this section challenge, rather than answer, the text's organizing questions. The final section explores the relationship of feminist
theory to three liberatory projects--postcolonialism, neo-materialism, and queer theory--that do not characterize themselves as feminist, yet take gender as a significant category of analysis. Each section opens with an introduction and each essay is followed by helpful study questions. The majority of the essays are presented in their entirety.
Theorizing Feminisms underscores the strong connection between feminist theory and practice by including essays that illustrate important political inspirations or applications of each theoretical approach. It also presents versions of the same approach from various points in history, revealing feminist theory to be dynamic and evolving, rather than static. Ideal for interdisciplinary courses in feminist theory, this volume will also serve as an invaluable reference for current and future generations of theorists.

592 pages, Paperback

First published November 24, 2005

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Elizabeth Hackett

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Profile Image for Laurel Perez.
1,401 reviews49 followers
February 1, 2016
Well, this has been a roller coaster of emotions. While difficult to read as a human being, this reader provides some serious background and examples of the many (though not all) feminisms. I expect to return to this text a lot, and appreciate that the theories here, while complicated, are accessible, and spur important conversations, some of which are long past, and perhaps too many that are still of high issue today, worldwide.
Profile Image for Esmé J.
157 reviews9 followers
September 25, 2019
I used this textbook in a class taught by the editor, Dr. Hackett. I think that the structure in which the editors separated the readings into chapters on "sameness," "difference," and "dominance" approaches to feminism is very useful. I enjoyed many of the essays, however I wish there had been a few more contemporary texts and texts written by trans authors.
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