This major new book explores the peculiar place of feminism in contemporary culture.
aeoA comprehensive and lively exploration of feminism in the contemporary world. aeo Examines the shifts in feminist thinking from the emergence of womana s Liberation through to the present day. aeo Provides a vigorous defence of feminism but criticizes some of more a fashionablea accounts of gender relations.
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Preface. Introduction: Why Feminism?. 1. Generations of Feminism. 2. Gender to Queer, and Back Again. 3. Genes and Gender: The Return to Darwin. 4. Psychic Life and its Scandals. 5. Gender Anxieties at the Limits of Psychology. 6. Cautionary Tales: Between Freud and Feminism. 7. Only Contradictions on Offer: Feminism at the Millennium. Notes. Index.
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This book explores the peculiar place of feminism in contemporary culture. For some, feminism is the favorite scapegoat for multiple social ills; for others, the greatest success story of the closing century. The Janus face of feminism in the media reflects competing images of women's lives today. In one picture, feminism has changed our cultural landscape and empowered masses of women. In another, deepening global inequalities, assaults on welfare, and renewed paternalistic and "workfare" rhetorics have successfully undermined precisely those goals for which the women's movement in the 1970s fought so vigorously. Feminists themselves hold sharply opposing views on the success or failure of three decades of women's activism. Why Feminism? looks at the shifts in feminist thinking from the brash emergence of Women's Liberation at the close of the 1960s, to the diverse and discordant feminisms of recent decades. Outlining the rise of feminist scholarship inside the academy, with its often ambiguous relations to women's activism, it asks whether and how feminism might still inspire a broadly transformative and progressive politics. Looking, in particular, at feminism's troubled relations with psychology and psychoanalysis, it examines the rise of new evolutionary theory, the impact of queer theorizing on gender categories, controversies over memory and trauma, and increasing anxieties about men and masculinity. Why Feminism? illustrates the continuing provocation and significance of feminist inquiry, laying out its potentialities and pitfalls for the century ahead.
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'Why Feminism? remakes the case for a dynamic feminism that rejects pessimism and becomes once again a "movement of transformation", able to liberate both sexes from the tyrannies of labour, of fear and, of course, gender. She looks at younger women struggling to Have It All, and the fears daily expressed for and about men and boys, and believes she just might have a few suggestions. It's a grim comment on the times that so few powerful people want to know.' The Guardian 'Her thesis is immediately engaging in its refusal to apply itself to the red herrings: Is feminism still relevant? Are men in crisis? Is feminism dead? Who cares? ... We've become used to texts that are saturated with easy-access pop-cultural reference points. But Segal is good at asking the right questions of the right people ... it's liberating to read a book that makes no apology for dignifying the Women Question with a serious academic inquiry.' The Guardian 'Lynne Segal is one of the most capacious readers of feminism and sexuality studies I have ever encountered. Rooted in a socialist feminism and open to new theory, she brings forward the best of the former tradition and sets it into a dynamic and provocative dialogue with contemporary scholarship and activism, including psychoanalysis in both its social and clinical dimensions. Her writing is marvellously clear, to the point, and trenchant. And she brings us all into a critical conversation that we sometimes did not know we could have. The passion, intelligence, and intellectual candour of this book are exemplary.' Judith Butler, Maxine Elliot Professor of Rhetoric and Comparative Literature, University of California at Berkeley 'Lynne Segal brings her unique capacity for clarity and wit, along with her courage of the intellect, to bear on the key paradox faced by feminists: how to hold on to what being a woman means, while contesting the cultural and social meanings given to 'femininity'. This is a book which travels between disciplines with remarkable erudition, providing concise and intelligent accounts of the context of debates in women's studies, queer theory, sociobiology, psychoanalysis and psychology. It is as illuminating on genetics as it is on gender.' Sheila Rowbotham, University Research Fellow in Sociology, Manchester University 'In this provocative history of the changing face and fortunes of feminism since the 1970s, Lynne Segal gives us a vivid account both of feminist debate and its increasingly conservative context. Rejecting the dualistic thinking which pits activism against theory, Segal argues persuasively both for the reinvigoration of feminism's political will and its continuing exploration of subjectivity and difference.' Cora Kaplan, University of Southampton 'An ambitious and timely assessment of the shifts in feminist thinking over the last half century, taking in queer theory, post-structuralism, and psychotherapy. She rocks.' Libby Brooks, The Guardian 'She writes in an engaging and accessible manner, and I enjoyed reading this book.' The Psychologist 'In a strong argument for socialist feminism, Lynne Segal engages with an impressive breadth of literature and analyses inter- and intradisciplinary debates encompassing biology, sociology, psychology, psychoanalysis, as well as gender, feminist and queer theory ... Her wide-ranging, clear and incisive accounts of theoretical developments are always to be welcomed and provide an indispensable guide to diverse strands of feminist thought.' Journal of European Area Studies 'How very useful her book will be to those who want to learn about the debates as they have developed and continue. It is extraordinarily knowledgeable.' Radical Philosophy 'It provides an excellent introduction (and more) to what are arguably the most important debates and practices relating to gender across, within and between the global, national, local, interpersonal and intraperson 'levels' at the present time.' Feminist Theory 'Segal's book provides an engaging discussion of the historical and contemporary issues for feminist activism and for general feminist scholarship.' Feminism & Psychology
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780745623467
Publisert
1999-11-13
Utgiver
Vendor
Polity Press
Vekt
544 gr
Høyde
236 mm
Bredde
160 mm
Dybde
29 mm
Aldersnivå
UU, P, UP, 05, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
296

Forfatter

Biographical note

Lynne Segal is Professor of Psychology and Gender Studies at Birkbeck College, University of London.