-
1
-
-
0003701791
-
-
Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press
-
A useful overview of this variety and complexity can be found in I. Whelehan, Modern Feminist Thought (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 1995).
-
(1995)
Modern Feminist Thought
-
-
Whelehan, I.1
-
3
-
-
0040952179
-
The Possibility of Judgment: Moralizing and Theorizing in International Relations
-
See K. Hutchings, 'The Possibility of Judgment: Moralizing and Theorizing in International Relations', Review of International Studies, 18:1 (1992), pp. 51-62.
-
(1992)
Review of International Studies
, vol.18
, Issue.1
, pp. 51-62
-
-
Hutchings, K.1
-
4
-
-
0003501158
-
-
Bloomington and Indianapolis: Indiana University Press
-
I do not mean by this that there is a necessary connection between feminism and the ethic of care. Rather, my point is that the ethic of care is the most significant ethical theory which has emerged as a product of specifically feminist analysis. Many feminists argue that feminism fits better with alternative ethical traditions, from deontology to pragmatism-but these traditions are not specifically feminist in origin. Throughout this article I will use the term 'feminist ethics' as a shorthand for the particular trajectory of feminist thinking with which I am concerned. A broader sense of the scope of feminist ethics as such can be found in: E.Browning Cole and S. CoultrapMcQuin (eds.), Explorations in Feminist Ethics (Bloomington and Indianapolis: Indiana University Press, 1992);
-
(1992)
Explorations in Feminist Ethics
-
-
Browning Cole, E.1
CoultrapMcquin, S.2
-
8
-
-
25444521547
-
Ethic of Care and Feminist Ethics
-
D. Bubeck, 'Ethic of Care and Feminist Ethics', Women's Philosophy Review, 18 (1998), pp. 22-50.
-
(1998)
Women's Philosophy Review
, vol.18
, pp. 22-50
-
-
Bubeck, D.1
-
10
-
-
0002016826
-
The Feminist Standpoint: Developing the Ground for a Specifically Feminist Historical Materialism
-
S. Harding (ed.), Milton Keynes: Open University Press
-
The idea of a feminist standpoint derives from Hartsock's appropriation of Marx's analysis of capitalism as being based on the standpoint (serving the objective interests) of the oppressed class. According to Hartsock, the exploitative character of capitalist relations of production becomes clear when understood from the vantage point of the proletariat. Similarly, the patriarchal character of relations of reproduction as well as production under capitalism is revealed from the standpoint of the women who bear the brunt of those relations (N. Hartsock, 'The Feminist Standpoint: Developing the Ground for a Specifically Feminist Historical Materialism' in S. Harding (ed.), Feminism and Methodology (Milton Keynes: Open University Press, 1987), pp. 157-80. Ruddick argues that maternal thinking, located as it is in the marginalized and denigrated sphere of caring labour, provides a standpoint from which the absurdity of both strategic military and just-war thinking becomes evident.
-
(1987)
Feminism and Methodology
, pp. 157-180
-
-
Hartsock, N.1
|