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Feminism

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How would you define it as an ideology? What comes to mind when you think of the word 'feminism' ... Enlightenment writers such as Rousseau and Jefferson. Some ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Feminism


1
Feminism
  • The Search for Equality

2
What is Feminism?
  • How would you define it as an ideology?
  • What comes to mind when you think of the word
    feminism?

3
Text definition
  • An ideology that opposes the political,
    economic, and cultural relegation of women to
    positions of inferiority.
  • Simply put, feminism affirms womens equality
    with men, and rejects patriarchy.

4
What does patriarchy mean?
  • In the text
  • the rule of men as a social group over women as
    a social group, and
  • a system based on sexual hierarchy, with men at
    the top and women below.

5
Examples of denial of equality
  • Economically
  • Women paid less than men throughout the world.
    In U.S., pay gap about 75 (controlling for all
    other factors).
  • Women represent the majority of the worlds poor.

6
Examples of denial of equality
  • Politically
  • Globally, only 23 women ever elected head of
    state (only 6 served in 1995).
  • Also underrepresented in legislatures.
  • Political institutions dont provide equal
    protection equal access to the vote.

7
Examples of denial of equality
  • Politically
  • in U.S.

8
Examples of denial of equality
  • Educationally
  • Girls denied education in many countries 2/3 of
    the worlds illiterate adults are women, higher
    in some places.
  • Under certain regimes, females punished for
    seeking an education (as under the Taliban).

9
Examples of denial of equality
  • Access to basic health care food
  • Females less likely to receive adequate nutrition
    or health care.
  • Females subjected to female genital mutilation
    (FGM) in some cultures.

10
Examples of denial of equality
  • Violence
  • Femicide, the murder of women because they are
    women.
  • Outside the home, women vulnerable to assault and
    rape.
  • In the home, women beaten and even murdered by
    husbands or boyfriends, family members, and
    in-laws (dowry deaths).
  • Female babies much more likely to be subjected to
    infanticide in some cultures that value sons.

11
Feminisms roots in liberalism
  • In many ways similar to liberalism emphasis on
    equality, on personal autonomy (the right and
    ability of individuals to make decisions for
    themselves), on the importance of democratic
    processes, on the right of revolution against
    tyranny.

12
Female subordination
  • Womens inferiority to men legitimated
    historically by
  • Enlightenment writers such as Rousseau and
    Jefferson
  • Some religious traditions
  • Aristotle (classical Greece)
  • Western democracies in the 19th early 20th
    centuries

13
U.S. Historical Trends
  • First wave of feminism abolition movement.
    Mid-19th century
  • Second wave of feminism suffrage movement. Late
    19th to early 20th c.
  • Third wave of feminism equal legal rights
    political participation. Mid to late 20th
    century.

14
Types of feminisms
  • Liberal feminism
  • Radical feminism
  • Diversity feminism

15
Liberal feminism
  • Shared with liberalism these ideas
  • Human equality
  • Human rationality
  • Importance of individual rights

16
Early liberal feminists
  • Mary Wollstonecraft
  • Lucretia Mott
  • Elizabeth Cady Stanton
  • Susan B. Anthony
  • Wollstonecraft

17
Mary Wollstonecraft
  • Mary Wollstonecraft in the late 18th century used
    classical liberal arguments in favor of womens
    rights
  • Women are human beings, rational and capable of
    self-determination and liberty.
  • Patriarchy distorts womens personalities so
    that they seem to be the worst stereotypes (vain
    shallow).

18
Modern liberal feminists
  • Betty Friedan
  • Gloria Steinem
  • Working within the
  • existing democratic
  • system.
  • Seeing patriarchy as hurting men as well as
    women.

19
Liberal feminist views
20
Radical feminisms
  • Multiple types of radical feminisms, but they all
    share a common critique of liberal feminism for
    accepting the status quo economic and social
    structures.
  • The status quo operates with the male model as
    the norm (e.g., seeing the world as competitive
    and aggressive).

21
Types of Radical Feminisms
  • Socialist feminists argue that patriarchy
    capitalism are linked both exploitive.
  • Lesbian feminists criticize societys definition
    of heterosexuality as normal, all other
    sexualities as deviant.
  • Anti-pornography feminists argue that pornography
    fosters violence against women. Liberal
    feminists, in contrast, emphasize 1st amendment
    free speech rights.

22
Diversity feminism
  • The needs and perspectives of non-Anglo,
    non-Western, and non-affluent women must be
    considered. Liberal feminism ignores different
    perspectives.
  • Womens issues change across cultures and across
    time no single feminist voice or viewpoint.

23
Feminism as an emerging ideology
  • Impacts include
  • New thinking about public policy priorities.
  • The gender gap in U.S. politics.
  • New thinking about traditional assumptions
    regarding gender roles.
  • Opens new areas of study in social science.

24
Feminism as an emerging ideology, continued
  • Impacts include
  • New thinking about war war crimes.
  • Realization that rape can be a weapon of war.
  • New studies of impact of war on children.
  • Sudanense
  • refugee
  • camp
  • 2005

25
Another emerging ideology
  • Environmentalism
  • Next slide presentation.
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