16 research outputs found
How is Feminist Philosophy Nonideal Theory
Feminist, and other liberatory, moral and political philosophies are widely understood as nonideal theories. But if feminism is just a set of first-order normative commitments, it is unclear why it should produce action-guiding philosophy. I argue that feminist philosophy characteristically takes oppressive salience idealization (OSI) to undermine the means-end consistency of normative theories. OSI involves characterizing the world in ways that give undue weight to the interests and perspectives of the dominant. Our ability to respond to the normative problems our actual world faces us with is undermined by OSI, especially at the levels of problem-framing and selection
Dekolonialer Feminismus, UnterdrĂŒckung und HandlungsfĂ€higkeit: Eine Antwort auf HĂ€nel und Schuppert, Jugov, Reibold und MĂŒller
Ich habe Decolonizing Universalism mit der Absicht geschrieben, eine groĂe Frage zu beantworten â vielleicht die gröĂte normative Frage, die die transnationale feministische Wissenschaft beschĂ€ftigt: Wie können wir gleichzeitig Feministinnen und Antiimperialistinnen sein? Anders ausgedrĂŒckt: Gibt es eine normative Position, die eine grĂŒndliche Kritik des Imperialismus ermöglicht, ohne in sexistischen oder patriarchalen Apologetismus zu verfallen? In diesem Buch entwickle ich eine solche Position. In dieser Antwort versuche ich, einige der von HĂ€nel und Schuppert, Jugov, MĂŒller und Reibold aufgeworfenen Fragen zu beantworten und meine Argumente gegen ihre kritischen Anmerkungen zu verteidigen
Transnational Feminisms, Nonideal Theory, and âOtherâ Womenâs Power
Postcolonial and transnational feministsâ calls to recognize âotherâ womenâs agency have seemed to some Western feminists to entail moral quietism about womenâs oppression. Here, I offer an antirelativist framing of the transnational feminist critiques, one rooted in a conception of transnational feminisms as a nonideal theoretical enterprise. The Western feminist problem is not simple ethnocentrism, but rather a failure to ask the right types of normative questions, questions relevant to the nonideal context in which transnational feminist praxis occurs. Instead of asking which forms of power are gender-justice-enhancing, Western feminists are fixated on contrasting âotherâ cultures to an idealized Western culture. A focus on ideal theorizing works together with colonial epistemic practices to divert Western feminist attention from key questions about what will reduce âotherâ womenâs oppression under conditions of gender injustice and ongoing imperialism. Western feminists need to ask whether âotherâ womenâs power is resistant, and answering this question requires a focus on what Amartya Sen would call âjustice enhancementâ rather than an ideal of the gender-just culture. I show how a focus on resistance, accompanied by a colonialism-visibilizing hypothesis and a normative vision that allows multiple strategies for transitioning out of injustice, can guide Western feminists toward more appropriate questions about âotherâ womenâs power
Global Gender Justice and The Feminization of Responsibility
This paper morally evaluates the phenomenon Sylvia Chant calls "the feminization of responsibility," wherein women's unrecognized labor subsidizes international development while men retain or increase their power over women. I argue that development policies that feminize responsibility are incompatible with justice in two ways. First, such policies involve Northerners extracting unpaid labor from women in the global South. Northerners are obligated to provide development assistance, but they are transferring the labor of providing it onto women in the global South and expecting them to do it for free. Second, development policies that feminize responsibility increase women's exposure to sexist domination. These two problems are present irrespective of whether policies that feminize responsibility improve women's basic well-being.