Reproducing the Cultural, Racial and Embodied Other: a Feminist Response to Canada's Partial Ban on Sex Selection

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Reproducing the Cultural, Racial and Embodied Other: a Feminist Response to Canada's Partial Ban on Sex Selection ARTICLES (NOT) REPRODUCING THE CULTURAL, RACIAL AND EMBODIED OTHER: A FEMINIST RESPONSE TO CANADA'S PARTIAL BAN ON SEX SELECTION Maneesha Deckhal I. INTRODUCTION Western feminist attention to reproductive rights and their repercussions for female bodies has primarily concentrated on gender issues shaped by sexism.2 Other equality dimensions of reproductive issues have been less quick to appear within femi- nist discussions and thus within larger debates about the ethics of a particular reproductive practice. When we think of what "re- productive rights" signifies, many of us think of the right to "choose" abortion, which has been a priority for white, middle- class women, rather than forced sterilization or treatment or the right to access to abortion services, which disproportionately af- fect low-income and racialized women as well as women with dis- 1. Assistant Professor, Faculty of Law, University of Victoria. This Article has benefited from its presentation at the Feminist Legal Theory Workshop on Genetic Manipulation and Enhancement Technologies, Emory Law School, January 27-28, 2006, the Feminism & Law, Diversity & Law, and Health Law & Policy Workshop Series, University of Toronto Faculty of Law, February 25, 2005, and the Canadian Journal of Women and the Law Junior Scholars Feminist Workshop, May 3, 2005. I wish to thank the organizers and participants at these workshops for their comments as well as Shannon Elliott and Layli Antinuk for research assistance. 2. An important element of postcolonial analysis is to interrogate liberal legal- ism's adoption of the West/non-West binary and the corresponding assumptions of superiority and inferiority that attach to it. See, e.g., RATNA KAPUR, EROTIC JUS- TICE: LAW AND THE NEW POLICS OF POSTCOLONIALISM 23 (2005). In using the terms "West" and "non-West," "Western" and "non-Western," I do not mean to entrench this dichotomy, but rather to locate sex selection as an issue influenced adversely by this paradigm. UCLA WOMEN'S LAW JOURNAL [Vol. 16:1 abilities.3 Even with respect to analyses of the abortion debate in the West, feminists have focused on ensuring legal access to abor- tion as a fundamental right for women and precondition for their personhood, by highlighting the perils of criminalizing it. They have not, despite the sullied roots of the pro-choice movement in race-based and eugenics campaigns, 4 also included as central a story about racism or classism, for example, in structuring that access.5 Feminists need to provide more responses to reproduc- tive rights and regulation that examine the intersectional aspects of various reproductive issues. This Article attempts to provide such an analysis by applying an intersectional feminist perspec- tive to pre-implantation sex selection. By "intersectional femi- nist perspective," I mean a feminist perspective that does not prioritize gender over other socially constructed differences such as disability, culture, race, age, class, etc., but instead understands all these social constructs as interactively constitutive of women's experiences of autonomy, agency and injustice.6 Pre-implantation sex selection is a category that refers to several procedures. It can refer to various techniques used to manipulate the sex chromosomes to increase the chance that an egg, once fertilized, will be a zygote of a certain sex. It can also refer to selecting embryos created in vitro for implantation into a woman's womb on the basis of the embryo's sex. The issue of pre-implantation sex selection is a current one because of the Ca- 3. See generally Angela Davis, Racism, Birth Control and Reproductive Rights, in FEMINIST POSTCOLONIAL THEORY: A READER 353 (Reina Lewis & Sara Mills eds., 2003); Dorothy E. Roberts, Punishing Drug Addicts Who Have Babies: Women of Color, Equality, and the Right of Privacy, 104 HARV. L. REV. 1419 (1991); Sunera Thobani, From Reproduction to Mal(e) Production: Women and Sex Selection Tech- nology, in MISCONCEPTIONS: THE SOCIAL CONSTRUCTION OF CHOICE AND THE NEW REPRODUCTIVE AND GENETIC TECHNOLOGY 138, 149 (Gwynne Basen, Margrit Eichler & Abby Lippman eds., 1994) (analyzing the colonial assumptions about cul- tural differences that informed gendered debates about reproductive technologies in Canada). 4. Margaret Sanger, widely viewed as the founder of the pro-choice movement in the United States, distanced herself from her Marxist roots and adopted race- based arguments supporting the role of abortion in quelling non-white reproduction and maintaining white superiority. See, e.g., Davis, supra note 3, at 358-61. 5. For an influential example of feminist analysis that does attend to race and class, see DOROTHY ROBERTS, KILLING THE BLACK BODY: RACE, REPRODUCTION, AND THE MEANING OF LIBERTY (1997). 6. See generally Kimberl6 Crenshaw, Demarginalizingthe Intersection of Race and Sex: A Black Feminist Critique of AntidiscriminationDoctrine, Feminist Theory and Antiracist Politics, 1989 U. CHI. LEGAL F. 139; see Kimberl6 Crenshaw, Map- ping the Margins: Intersectionality, Identity Politics, and Violence Against Women of Color, 43 STAN. L. REV. 1241, 1244 (1991). 20071 SEX SELECTION nadian federal government's recent initiative on this bioethical issue. In March 2004, Canada finally legislated in the realm of assisted reproduction after a decade or more of public inquiries, consultations, and attempted legislation, enacting the Assisted Human Reproduction Act ("the Act"). 7 Section 5 of the Act pro- hibits reproductive-related technologies, including pre-implanta- tion sex diagnosis for sex selection and pre-conception sex selective techniques. In this Article, I undertake a feminist critique of this provi- sion from an intersectional point of departure. While I do not endorse sex selection, I argue that the current partial prohibition is problematic from an intersectional feminist perspective and that feminist support for the provision must therefore be tenta- tive at best. In Part II of this Article, I explain the scope of the Act's prohibition and the types of procedures it targets. In Part III, I map the intersectional dimensions of pre-implantation sex selection. Building from this discussion, Part IV then provides a critique of the provision as a compromised route to a feminist vision of women's equality. The aim of this section is to caution against an embrace of this provision as a "victory for women" for feminists who are against sex selection. Lastly, Part V offers a brief comparison of the Canadian provision with the current reg- ulatory scheme (or absence thereof) in the United States. The paper does not engage the debate of whether a total ban on sex selection would be ethically problematic from a feminist or gen- der equality perspective and, if so, whether the general right to reproductive freedom should be curtailed on this one dimension. 8 7. Assisted Human Reproduction Act, R.S.C., ch. 2 (2004) (Can.). 8. Some argue that it is impossible for feminists to be both pro-choice and anti- sex-selective abortion. One could argue that the same feminist principles could un- derlie both positions. A feminist sensibility entails a commitment to ending the sub- ordination, exploitation, and oppression of women. Many feminists believe that the denial of abortion rights is a glaring manifestation of the oppression of women, thus motivating them to adopt a pro-choice stance. Feminists also view the preference for males over females as sexist, whether that preference takes place in decisions regarding admission to universities, hiring for particular jobs, or, as is the case here, what children to bring into this world. See, e.g., Lynne Marie Kohm, Sex Selection Abortion and the Boomerang Effect of a Woman's Right to Choose: A Paradoxof the Skeptics, 4 WM. & MARY J. WOMEN & L. 91, 115-17 (1997) (discussing the responses of various feminist organizations); April L. Cherry, A Feminist Understanding of Sex-Selective Abortion: Solely a Matter of Choice?, 10 Wis. WOMEN'S L.J. 161, 212- 222 (1995) (arguing that liberal feminist understandings of a woman's right to choose in all situations do not lead to feminist results when that choice expresses a desire for males over females in reproduction). 4 UCLA WOMEN'S LAW JOURNAL [Vol. 16:1 A skeptic might assert that opposition to sex-selective abortion is fundamen- tally condescending to women and therefore cannot be reconciled with a feminist pro-choice position. Just as feminists criticize governments for not trusting women to make the decision to abort by regulating these decisions, the skeptic might claim that a ban on sex-selective abortion holds women's decision-making capacities in the same poor regard. Moreover, the ban condescendingly tells women what values they should hold with respect to having children, and it uses the coercive power of the law to ensure that they do not fall victim to their false consciousnesses by abort- ing female fetuses they may not wish to have. It is true that preventing sex-selective abortion constrains the reproductive choice of women, but to the extent that the choice to abort female fetuses violates the ethic of equality, it may be reasonably curtailed under feminist logic. Hence, feminist opposition to sex selective abortion does not necessarily contradict feminist arguments supporting the right to abortion. Rather, it explicitly recognizes the same principles that these pro-choice arguments typically underscore - the devaluation of female personhood and the oppression of females. Although the logic can be consistent, the agency/cnoice concern is one of the problematic aspects of the provision, which I explore later in this paper. For gender equality arguments against sex selection, see DRUCILLA CORNELL, THE IM- AGINARY DOMAIN: ABORTION, PORNOGRAPHY & SEXUAL HARASSMENT 86-88 (1995); Dorothy C. Wertz & John C. Fletcher, Sex Selection Through PrenatalDiag- nosis: A Feminist Critique, in FEMINIST PERSPECTIVES IN MEDICAL ETHIcs 240 (Helen Bequaert Holmes & Laura M. Purdy eds., 1992); Elisabeth Boetzkes, Sex Selection and the Charter,7 CAN. J.L.
Recommended publications
  • Feminist Periodicals
    The Un vers ty of W scons n System Feminist Periodicals A current listing of contents WOMEN'S STUDIES Volume 26, Number 4, Winter 2007 Published by Phyllis Holman Weisbard LIBRARIAN Women's Studies Librarian Feminist Periodicals A current listing of contents Volume 26, Number 4 (Winter 2007) Periodical literature is the cutting edge ofwomen's scholarship, feminist theory, and much ofwomen's culture. Feminist Periodicals: A Current Listing of Contents is published by the Office of the University of Wisconsin System Women's Studies Librarian on a quarterly basis with the intent of increasing public awareness of feminist periodicals. It is our hope that Feminist Periodicals will serve several purposes: to keep the reader abreast of current topics in feminist literature; to increase readers' familiarity with a wide spectrum of feminist periodicals; and to provide the requisite bibliographic information should a reader wish to subscribe to a journal or to obtain a particular article at her library or through interlibrary loan. (Users will need to be aware of the limitations of the new copyright law with regard to photocopying of copyrighted materials.) Table of contents pages from current issues ofmajorfeministjournalsare reproduced in each issue ofFeminist Periodicals, preceded by a comprehensive annotated listing of all journals we have selected. As publication schedules vary enormously, not every periodical will have table of contents pages reproduced in each issue of FP. The annotated listing provides the follOWing information on each journal: 1. Year of first publication. 2. Frequency of pUblication. 3. Subscription prices (print only; for online prices, consult publisher). 4. Subscription address.
    [Show full text]
  • Conceiving Cuba Reproduction, Women, and the State in the Post-Soviet Era 1St Edition Download Free
    CONCEIVING CUBA REPRODUCTION, WOMEN, AND THE STATE IN THE POST-SOVIET ERA 1ST EDITION DOWNLOAD FREE Elise Andaya | 9780813565194 | | | | | Conceiving Cuba: Reproduction, Women, and the State in the Post-Soviet Era Victoria Puiu. The country of 3. Dependencies and other territories. Analyses of recent fertility changes in Albania. So when a suitor from a neighbouring community came to ask for her hand two years ago, she married him. Accepted : 21 December Published : 17 February Additional details. It is also gratifying to be among a cohort of women striving to Conceiving Cuba Reproduction gender parity Women Ukrainian politics, she says. Demography, 36 2— The nutrition fertility link: An evaluation of Women evidence. Anthropology and Archeology of Eurasia, 36 245— I am assuming that they do not want to see me on stage. Traditionally, Kazakh women are expected to marry young and start a family, but expectations are changing fast in this petro-fuelled, go-getting society. Population geography perspectives on the Central Asian republics. Free delivery Arrives by Thu, Oct Abortion and mental health Beginning of human personhood Beginning of pregnancy controversy Abortion-breast cancer hypothesis Anti-abortion violence Abortion under communism Birth control Crisis pregnancy center Ethical aspects of abortion Eugenics Fetal rights Forced abortion Genetics and abortion Late-term abortion Legalized abortion and crime effect Libertarian perspectives on abortion Limit of viability Malthusianism Men's rights Minors and abortion Natalism One-child policy Paternal rights and abortion Prenatal development Reproductive rights Self-induced abortion Sex-selective abortion Sidewalk counseling Societal attitudes towards abortion Socialism Toxic abortion Unsafe abortion Women's rights.
    [Show full text]
  • Preimplantation Genetic Diagnosis: Disease Control Or Child Objectification?
    View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by Saint Louis University School of Law Research: Scholarship Commons Saint Louis University Public Law Review Volume 22 Number 2 The Protection of Children's Rights Article 14 Under International Law (Volume XXII, No. 2) 2003 Preimplantation Genetic Diagnosis: Disease Control or Child Objectification? Rebecca Knox Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarship.law.slu.edu/plr Part of the Law Commons Recommended Citation Knox, Rebecca (2003) "Preimplantation Genetic Diagnosis: Disease Control or Child Objectification?," Saint Louis University Public Law Review: Vol. 22 : No. 2 , Article 14. Available at: https://scholarship.law.slu.edu/plr/vol22/iss2/14 This Student Panel on Children and Health Law is brought to you for free and open access by Scholarship Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Saint Louis University Public Law Review by an authorized editor of Scholarship Commons. For more information, please contact Susie Lee. SAINT LOUIS UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF LAW PREIMPLANTATION GENETIC DIAGNOSIS: DISEASE CONTROL OR CHILD OBJECTIFICATION? I. INTRODUCTION With the advances in assisted reproduction technology (ART), parents now have more choices regarding how and when they start a family. In vitro fertilization (IVF) has been available for some time now as a way to help infertile individuals conceive. However, difficulty conceiving is not the only problem parents may encounter. Some may also face the probability of having a child afflicted with genetic disease. In the past, amniocentesis1 and chorionic villous sampling (CVS)2 were performed on fetuses to detect genetic disease or defects.
    [Show full text]
  • Full List of Lead Terms and Cross References
    BIOETHICS THESAURUS 2011 ABORTED FETUSES ALTERNATIVE THERAPIES ABORTIFACIENTS ALTERNATIVES ABORTION ALTRUISM ABORTION ON DEMAND ALZHEIMER DISEASE Abortion, Induced Use ABORTION AMBULATORY CARE Abortion, Spontaneous Use MISCARRIAGE AMERICAN INDIANS ACADEMIC MEDICAL CENTERS AMNIOCENTESIS Access to Health Care Use HEALTH CARE AMYOTROPHIC LATERAL SCLEROSIS DELIVERY ANALOGY ACCESS TO INFORMATION ANCIENT HISTORY ACCOUNTABILITY ANENCEPHALY Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome Use AIDS ANESTHESIA ACTIVE EUTHANASIA Aneuploidy Use CHROMOSOME ADDICTION ABNORMALITIES ADMINISTRATORS ANIMAL BEHAVIOR ADOLESCENTS ANIMAL CARE COMMITTEES ADOPTION ANIMAL CLONING ADULT CHILDREN ANIMAL EUTHANASIA ADULT STEM CELLS ANIMAL EXPERIMENTATION ADULTERY ANIMAL GROUPS ADULTS ANIMAL ORGANS Adult-Onset Genetic Disorders Use LATE-ONSET ANIMAL PRODUCTION DISORDERS ANIMAL RIGHTS ADVANCE CARE PLANNING ANIMAL TESTING ALTERNATIVES Advance Directive Adherence Use ADVANCE Animal Use Alternatives Use ANIMAL TESTING DIRECTIVES and DIRECTIVE ALTERNATIVES ADHERENCE ANIMAL WELFARE ADVANCE DIRECTIVES Animals, Genetically Modified Use ADVERSE EFFECTS GENETICALLY MODIFIED ANIMALS ADVERTISING Animals, Transgenic Use GENETICALLY ADVISORY COMMITTEES MODIFIED ANIMALS AFRICAN AMERICANS ANONYMOUS TESTING AGE FACTORS Antenatal Diagnosis Use PRENATAL DIAGNOSIS AGED Antenatal Injuries Use PRENATAL INJURIES AGGRESSION ANTHROPOLOGY AGING APO-E GENES AGRICULTURE APTITUDE Ahliyah Use COMPETENCE ARAB WORLD AIDS ARABS AIDS SERODIAGNOSIS ARTIFICIAL FEEDING ALCOHOL ABUSE ARTIFICIAL INSEMINATION ALLIED
    [Show full text]
  • Under Western Eyes Revisited: Feminist Solidarity Through
    “Under Western Eyes” Revisited: Feminist Solidarity through Anticapitalist Struggles Author(s): Chandra Talpade Mohanty Reviewed work(s): Source: Signs, Vol. 28, No. 2 (Winter 2003), pp. 499-535 Published by: The University of Chicago Press Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.1086/342914 . Accessed: 11/04/2012 00:27 Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at . http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected]. The University of Chicago Press is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Signs. http://www.jstor.org Chandra Talpade Mohanty “Under Western Eyes” Revisited: Feminist Solidarity through Anticapitalist Struggles write this essay at the urging of a number of friends and with some trepidation, revisiting the themes and arguments of an essay written I some sixteen years ago. This is a difficult essay to write, and I undertake it hesitantly and with humility—yet feeling that I must do so to take fuller responsibility for my ideas, and perhaps to explain whatever influence they have had on debates in feminist theory. “Under Western Eyes” (1986) was not only my very first “feminist stud- ies” publication; it remains the one that marks my presence in the inter- national feminist community.1 I had barely completed my Ph.D.
    [Show full text]
  • Análise Espacial Das Notificações De Covid-19 Em Passos/Mg
    REVISTA DOS SEMINÁRIOS DE INICIAÇÃO CIENTÍFICA ANÁLISE ESPACIAL DAS NOTIFICAÇÕES DE COVID-19 EM PASSOS/MG Prof. Dr. José de Paula Silva 1 Aguimar Xavier de Carvalho Filho 2, Graciele de Souza Medeiros 2, Junia Jabace Soares Maia 2, Lucas Gabriel Calabrez Barbosa 2 1 Professor da Faculdade Atenas 2 Acadêmicos de Medicina da Faculdade Atenas Artigo Original FACULDADE ATENAS Email: [email protected] Introdução das formas adotadas para a compreensão da No mês de março de 2020 a Organização disseminação foi o uso de modelos de análise Mundial da Saúde (OMS), realizou o comuni- espacial, inclusive durante os estágios iniciais cado, declarando o surto de coronavírus (SAR- da pandemia, pois permitiria prever surtos lo- S-CoV-2) o agente causador da COVID-19, cais e desenvolver políticas de saúde coletiva como uma pandemia global. A grande preocu- com vistas a redução dos impactos da pande- pação eram os níveis de disseminação, sen- mia8. Dentre as formas de abordagem espacial do na época realizado o pedido, para que os o geoprocessamento dos casos de Covid-19 países tomassem medidas com o objetivo de permite a representação dos dados e informa- conter o vírus1. Entre as medidas sugeridas, ções espaciais utilizando os Sistemas de Infor- foram realizadas as recomendações com vistas mações Espaciais, que permitem a análise da a redução do fl uxo de pessoas, pois existe uma distribuição espacial, buscando a posteriori a relação entre a distância social e a velocida- otimização de recursos e utilização de serviços de de disseminação do vírus2. Nesse ínterim, de saúde9. Um dos conceitos básicos da aná- tornou-se consensual o princípio do isolamento lise é a dependência espacial.
    [Show full text]
  • |||GET||| Abortion After Roe Abortion After Legalization 1St Edition
    ABORTION AFTER ROE ABORTION AFTER LEGALIZATION 1ST EDITION DOWNLOAD FREE Johanna Schoen | 9781469621180 | | | | | Where is abortion legal? Everywhere. But ... Les Parisiennes: how the women of Paris lived, loved and died in Abortion after Roe Abortion after Legalization 1st edition s. Scientifically, many physicians argued that quickening was largely irrelevant because after fertilisation a new human life would take shape if no one interrupted its development. The medical terms " embryo " and " fetus " are seen by some anti-abortion advocates as dehumanizing[16] [17] while everyday terms such as Abortion after Roe Abortion after Legalization 1st edition or "child" are viewed as sentimental by some pro-abortion advocates. A bill was introduced that would allow abortion only if two doctors certified that the woman's health was in danger. But still, they did it, and the violinist is now plugged into you. View Inside. The Abortion Dilemma limitations except the spousal notification feature. She has massive financial incentive to keep abortion legal. Some pro-abortion rights advocates argue that it should be illegal for governments to regulate abortion any more than other medical practices. Retrieved 22 November The appropriate terms Abortion after Roe Abortion after Legalization 1st edition which to designate the human organism prior to birth are also debated. It divides churches, political parties and even families. House of Representatives. Safe abortion - apps. Project MUSE promotes the creation and dissemination of essential humanities and social science resources through collaboration with libraries, publishers, and scholars worldwide. Sign up to our free newsletter. A deep respect for the sanctity of human life meant that many right-to-life activists saw euthanasia and abortion as similar crimes against innocent life.
    [Show full text]
  • Feminist Periodicals
    The Un vers ty of W scons n System Feminist Periodicals A current listing of contents WOMEN'S STUDIES Volume 25, Number 2 Summer 2005 Published by Phyllis Holman Weisbard LIBRARIAN Women's Studies Librarian Feminist Periodicals A current listing of contents Volume 25, Number 2 (Summer 2005) Periodical literature is the cutting edge ofwomen's scholarship, feminist theory, and much ofwomen's culture. Feminist Periodicals: A Current Listing of Contents is published by the Office of the University of Wisconsin System Women's Studies Librarian on a quarterly basis with the intent of increasing public awareness of feminist periodicals. It is our hope that Feminist Periodicals will serve several purposes: to keep the reader abreast of current topics in feminist literature; to increase readers' familiarity with a wide spectrum offeminist periodicals; and to provide the requisite bibliographic information should a reader wish to subscribe to a journal or to obtain a particular article at her library or through interlibrary loan. (Users will need to be aware of the limitations of the new copyright law with regard to photocopying of copyrighted materials.) Table ofcontents pages from currentissues ofmajor feministjournals are reproduced in each issue ofFeminist Periodicals, preceded by a comprehensive annotated listing of all journals we have selected. As publication schedules vary enormously, not every periodical will have table of contents pages reproduced in each issue of FP. The annotated listing provides the fOllowing information on each journal: 1. Year of first publication. 2. Frequency of publication. 3. U.S. sUbscription price(s). 4. Subscription address. 5. Current editor. 6.
    [Show full text]
  • WMST 302-01 Selected Topic: Global Feminism
    WMST 302-01 Selected Topic: Global Feminism Fall 2003 Tuesdays, 5:30-8:00pm, S/C 209 Professor Sally McWilliams Montclair State University Office hours: by appointment "[A]s feminists we need to attend both to issues within particular nations and to urgent transnational or international issues if we are to achieve greater justice within particular nations, and greater global justice in an increasingly interdependent world." --Uma Narayan, Dislocating Cultures 39. Course Overview: The contours, complexities, and contributions of global feminism demand our attention. We will begin our analysis of global feminism by exploring the different geographic, historical, political, economic, and social spaces women inhabit. We will analyze the conditions that promote and inhibit activism around women’s lives taking into account how gender is defined, deployed, and deconstructed. From this space of local praxis we will see how cross-cultural and transnational connections are built. This look at local/global relations will help us understand the shifting connotations for the term "feminism" and what it means to speak about "global feminism." Our work is to examine how local and transnational feminisms that attend to the kalideoscopic range of factors--class, migration, sexual politics, race, religion, geopolitics, to name only a few--comment on, critique, challenge, and in many cases creatively change the day-to-day situations women confront in this era of globalization. Objectives: 1) interrogate the definition of feminism from various geographic
    [Show full text]
  • Philosophy, Gender and Feminism - En-Cours-2021-Lfial1390 Lfial1390 Philosophy, Gender and Feminism 2021
    Université catholique de Louvain - Philosophy, Gender and Feminism - en-cours-2021-lfial1390 lfial1390 Philosophy, Gender and Feminism 2021 5 credits 30.0 h Q1 Teacher(s) Botbol Mylene ;Luyckx Charlotte (compensates Botbol Mylene) ; Language : French Place of the course Louvain-la-Neuve Main themes This course studies some of the central issues in the relationship between philosophy and feminist questions, through a selection of topics such as the deconstruction of the history of philosophy from the point of view of gender, feminist perspectives on autonomy, the body and personal identity, feminist epistemology, issues of ethics and political philosophy relating to injustices and inequalities of gender. Without necessarily aiming to be exhaustive, the course will introduce various philosophical approaches to the topic of gender (analytical, continental, Marxist, liberal, pragmatist, postcolonial, ecofeminist, ethics of care, etc.), their points of convergence as well as their disagreements. The course will be based on a selection of texts from authors who have made a significant contribution to these questions, for example : Condorcet and Sophie de Grouchy, Mary Wollstonecraft, John Stuart Mill, Edith Stein, Simone de Beauvoir, Carol Gilligan, Hélène Cixous, Carole Pateman, Claudia Card, Julia Kristeva, Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, Marilyn Friedman, Martha Nussbaum, Susan Moller Okin, Nancy Fraser, Eva Kittay, Donna Haraway, Iris Marion Young, Anne Phillips, Seyla Benhabib, Chandra Talpade Mohanty, Geneviève Fraisse, Judith Butler and
    [Show full text]
  • International Studies: Perspectives on a Rapidly Changing World (First Edition) 1St Edition Download Free
    INTERNATIONAL STUDIES: PERSPECTIVES ON A RAPIDLY CHANGING WORLD (FIRST EDITION) 1ST EDITION DOWNLOAD FREE Greta Uehling | 9781516513796 | | | | | History of abortion The Liberty Bell. The plant, as the chief export of Cyrenewas driven to extinctionbut it is suggested that it might have possessed the same abortive properties as some of its closest extant relatives in the family Apiaceae. First Grade Social Studies Worksheets and Printables Set sail through history and geography with these first grade social studies worksheets! Who Is Mae Jemison? The Political Quarterly : — Karn, a man from Toronto, in cautioned women who thought themselves pregnant not to use the pills he advertised as "Friar's French Female Regulator" because they would "speedily restore menstrual secretions. Ina woman confessed to having used diachylon to induce a miscarriage. Research in Higher Education, 48 5— For regional delivery times, please check When will I receive my book? From the s, and the spread of second-wave feminismabortion and reproductive rights became unifying issues among various women's rights groups in Canada, the United States, the Netherlands, Britain, Norway, France, Germany, and Italy. Segers, M. A Christian view of abortion. Heikkinen, H. April Learn how and when to remove this template message. Such folk remedies, however, varied in effectiveness and were not without the risk of adverse effects. Journal of Women's History 23 : Communities of practice toward expertise: Social foundation of university instruction. Leerstijlen en sturen van leerprocessen in het hoger onderwijs: Naar procesgerichte instructie in zelfstandig denken [Learning styles and learning processes in higher education: Towards process oriented International Studies: Perspectives on a Rapidly Changing World (First Edition) 1st edition in independent thinking; in Dutch].
    [Show full text]
  • CAL DISCOURSE TV Grytsenko National Academy
    УДК 141:304.444 INTERSECTION OF FEMINISM AND MULTICULTURALISM IN PHILOSOPHI- CAL DISCOURSE T.V. Grytsenko National Academy of Pedagogical Sciences of Ukraine, Kyiv, Ukraine Summary. This study focuses on exploration of valuable works of Uma Narayan, which represent a shift from Western models of feminism towards multicultural, postcolonial and transnational feminism. Since its con- ceptualization, feminism has developed from orientation solely on Western understanding of feminist and cultural concerns to analysis and critique of complex issues of gender and cultural essentialism and awareness of interrela- tion of major political concepts with race, ethnicity, social class, and gender in different cultural settings. Key words: Uma Narayan, the West, the Third World, India, feminism, multiculturalism. Introduction Feminist scholarship is becoming more and more complex and dynamic phenomenon in our global, postcolonial, and multicultural world. Although there is a lot of work done by Western feminist scholars in developing feminist theory, such contemporary feminists as Uma Narayan have made a shift from Western models of feminism towards multicultural, transnational and postcolonial feminism. In order to address the Westernization of feminist discourse and to develop a deeper understanding of the phenomenon of feminism in the Third World, the analysis of intersection of feminism and multiculturalism is needed. This paper focuses on exploration of the works of Uma Narayan that has had a huge influence on feminist and multicultural theories. Her feminist scholarship has a great impact on develop- ment of feminism from orientation solely on Western understanding of gender and cultural concerns to analysis and critique of complex issues of gender and cultural essentialism and awareness of interrelation of major political concepts with race, ethnicity, social class, and gender in different cultural settings.
    [Show full text]