Thursday, October 27, 2016

Empowering Beyond Feminism

Here are some comments from my Women Gender Studies for this semester:

Empowering Beyond Feminism

Admitting women to a patriarchal world of higher education opened the topic of women to study and research. Prevailing hegemony presumed that knowledge came from men, was about men, and women were merely a limb on the tree. A new focus on women validated uniqueness and awareness of gender issues. Writing in Women’s Voices, Feminist Visions, Susan M. Shaw and Janet Lee note, “WGS is generally associated with feminism as a paradigm for understanding self and society (13)”. Feminism now expresses intersections of gender across diverse identities of race and class. 

Shaw and Lee say, “Patriarchy…shapes how women and men think about the world…and their relationships with one another (15)”. The first wave of feminism emerged to give women a voice in political matters affecting them.  Nineteenth century suffragettes stumped for equality and, by 1920, finally won the right to vote in America.  A second wave of feminism was directed at inequality in the workplace and family, with special emphasis on sexuality and reproductive freedom. However, injustices affecting women, and those who identified as women, were world-wide issues. The intersections of post-modernism, LGBT voices and multiracial awareness resulted in a third wave of feminist activism. Thanks to the Internet and economic globalization, women across the world are connected against institutional male inequality. (17)  Diverse perspectives and motivations contribute, even as they complicate, political progress.

1. Beverly Guy-Sheftall describes the strides that women’s studies have made in the forty years. Efforts to mainstream into male dominated curriculum have come a long way to balance gender in the academic establishment. Heightened awareness and sensitivity in a predominately male society produce advocacy for women of color and the poor.  Black women’s studies, incorporating intersectional analysis into topics of women and gender, contributed to the third wave. (31)

2. Bonnie Thornton Dill says, “We wanted feminist theory to incorporate the notion of difference… (32)”. If girls are stereotyped as not able to do math, they will be limited to lower status opportunities. If blacks are stereotyped as less intelligent than whites, then they will be steered to non-academic opportunities.  Intersectionality means that gender depends on elements of race, class, etc. which reinforces a classism of white privilege. (32)

3. Bell hooks defines feminism as “…a movement to end sexism, sexist exploitation, and oppression (37)”. America’s white/male/power balance shifted when white women gained agency. While they made gains in the workplace, they were still allied with the system which left women of color struggling. (39)  She thinks that sexism, not men, is the real problem. Although patriarchy is sexist, this does not make feminism anti-male or feminists man-haters.

4. C.V. Harquail writes, “When it comes down to distinguishing between women and feminists, we need to separate marketing and politics (43)”. The essay proposes a model of Facebook for women.  She says, “Feminist design of a product is a political action….intended to change power relationships and advance social change… (44)”. Faced with challenges stirred up by technology, the male (technology) can be subverted by designing women who are determined to reflect feminist priorities.

           

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