Feminist theory in pursuit of the public : women and the "re-privatization" of labor

Bibliographic Information

Feminist theory in pursuit of the public : women and the "re-privatization" of labor

Robin Truth Goodman

(Education, politics, and public life / series editors, Henry A. Giroux, Susan Searls Giroux)

Palgrave Macmillan, 2010

1st ed

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. [241]-252) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Feminist Theory in Pursuit of the Public argues that feminism needs to develop a theory of the public. It responds to a moment when feminism's impetus to reconstitute the private sphere left a huge gap in its political thinking on the public. This inattention to the public is particularly worrisome now when the nation-state and its publics seem to have diminishing power and compromised democratic agency. The waning of power in the public sphere diminishes the influence that citizens can have in deciding on the conditions of life, and therefore minimizes the changes that feminists can envision or enact in the social field to work towards equality, access, deliberation, participation, just distribution, rights, and authority for women.

Table of Contents

Feminism and the Retreat from the Public The Habermasian Public Sphere: Women's Work Within the Critique of Instrumental Reason Beirut Fragments : The Crumbling Public Sphere, Language Privatization, and the Reprivatization of Women's Work Adorno Faces Feminism: Interiority, or Modern Power and the Liquidation of Private Life Baghdad Burning : Cyborg Meets the Negative

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