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Index
Cover Page The Routledge Companion to Feminist Philosophy Routledge Philosophy Companions Title Page Copyright Contents Notes on Contributors Introduction
Aims of this Companion Engaging the Past Mind, Body, and World Knowledge, Language, and Science Intersections Ethics, Politics, and Aesthetics Some Thanks and a Note about Usage
Part I Engaging the Past
1 Feminist Methods in the History of Philosophy, or, Escape from Coventry
The Philosophical Imaginary and the Héloïse Complex The Man of Reason Written in Invisible Ink Women, Reason, and Democracy
2 Feminism and Ancient Greek Philosophy
Binary Logic Terminology and the Question of Origin Was Plato a Feminist? Plato’s Cave and the Chora Aristotle In Conclusion
3 Dao Becomes Female: A Gendered Reality, Knowledge, and Strategy for Living
Introduction Dao as Cosmic Mother and Female Body Femininity as a Way to Know Dao The Female Mode: The Ultimate Power and Strategy Final Remarks
4 Feminism, Philosophy, and Culture in Africa
Introduction: Contextualizing Theories and Practices Feminism as Engagement The State of Affairs: A Brief Overview The Language Gap Gender Alone Cannot Explain All Injustice Women’s Silence and the Reproduction of Patriarchal Ideology Conclusion
5 Feminist Engagement with Judeo-Christian Religious Traditions
A Brief History of Feminist Religious and Theological Critique The Attraction of Religion: Michèle Le Doeuff on Possibilities and Pitfalls Framing a Practical Feminist Philosophy of Religion Thinking Again About Religion and Feminism Religious Plurality and Feminist Flourishing Conclusion
6 Early Modern Feminism and Cartesian Philosophy
Introduction Poullain Astell
7 Feminist Engagements with Social Contract Theory
Introduction The Classic Social Contract Theorists The Political Social Contract: Carole Pateman The Ethical Social Contract: Jean Hampton Are Feminist Perspectives on the Social Contract Compatible?
8 Feminism and the Enlightenment
The Plurality of the Enlightenment Equality, Difference, and Human Rights: Olympe de Gouges and Condorcet Education, Equality, and Independence: Mary Wollstonecraft in Context Feminist Engagements with the Enlightenment
9 Feminist Engagements with Nineteenth-Century German Philosophy
Introduction Hegel and German Idealism: Being and Thinking Nietzsche, the Eternal Feminine, and Truth as a Woman Women’s Voices in the Nineteenth Century
10 Introducing Black Feminist Philosophy
Introduction The Multistability of Oppression Possessing Negative Socio-Epistemic Status Conclusion: Towards a Politics of Spatiality
11 Feminist Pragmatism
Classical Pragmatism and Feminist Recovery Projects Feminist Pragmatism or Pragmatist Feminism? Historical Connections Contemporary Feminist Pragmatism Feminist Pragmatist Futures
12 Feminist Phenomenology
Phenomenology as Method Lived Experience and Pathologies of the Social Critical Phenomenology and Hesitation
Part II Body, Mind, and World
13 The Sex/Gender Distinction and the Social Construction of Reality
Introduction The Construction of Ideas and Concepts Social Construction and Illusion The Social Construction of Objects The Social Construction of Kinds Conclusion
14 Gender Essentialism and Anti-Essentialism
Introduction What Is at Stake? Worth of the Debate?
15 Embodiment and Feminist Philosophy
Introduction Historical Starting Points Contemporary Alternatives Phenomenology of Human Embodiment Bodies as Instruments and Expressions The Limits of Naturalism
16 Materiality: Sex, Gender, and What Lies Beneath
Matter, Materialism, Materiality New Materialism Sex, Gender, Mattering Conclusion
17 Feminism and Borderlands Identities
Feminist Thought on the Inner Diversity of the Self Social Conflict, Borderlands Identities, and Feminism Intersectionality within and Borderlands Identities Types of Identities and Identity Formations Identity Schemes: The Social Sources and Formation of Borderlands Identities Borderlands Identities and Social Change: Negotiating Identity Claims in Changing Times The Special Challenges and Potential of Borderlands Identities
18 Personal Identity and Relational Selves
Care Ethics and the Relational Self Anti-Individualism in Philosophy of Mind Personal Identity and Lived Experience Social Construction and Narrative Self-Constitution Conclusion
19 Psychoanalysis, Subjectivity, and Feminism
Introduction Subjectivity and Subject Positions The Unconscious, Sublimation, and Meaning
Part III Knowledge, Language, and Science
20 Rationality and Objectivity in Feminist Philosophy
Starting Places Objectivity Naturalized, Situated Rationality Situated, Naturalized Wherefore Concepts, Ideals, and Theories? Acknowledgment
21 Trust and Testimony in Feminist Epistemology
Feminist Accounts of Trust in Testimony Trust Relations and the Ethical Dimension of Testimony Practices Testimonial Exchanges: Social Identity as a Credibility Marker Correcting for Maladapted Norms of Credibility Trust in Knowledge-Producing Institutions and Communities: The Case of Science Implications of Feminist Analyses of Testimony
22 Epistemic Injustice, Ignorance, and Trans Experience
Epistemic Injustice and Ignorance Trans Experiences and Testimonial Injustice Trans Experiences, Hermeneutical Marginalization, and Hermeneutical Injustice Combatting Epistemic Injustice by Overcoming Conceptual Practical Ignorance
23 Speech and Silencing
Introduction Conceptions of Silencing The Silencing Argument Related Phenomena Acknowledgment
24 Language, Writing, and Gender Differences
Introduction A Language of the Body The Politics of Writing Sexual Difference and Many Languages Mary Daly’s Wickedary Dictionary After Sexual Difference and Écriture Féminine: Judith Butler’s Performative
25 Philosophy of Science and the Feminist Legacy
Pre-Feminist Philosophy of Science The Birth of Feminist Philosophy of Science Scientific Rationality through Feminist Eyes The Legacy
26 Values, Practices, and Metaphysical Assumptions in the Biological Sciences
Introduction Values and Research Practices Values and Metaphysics Values, Practices, and Metaphysical Assumptions in Neuroscience Values, Practices, and Metaphysical Assumptions in Feminist Evolutionary Psychology Conclusion
27 Feminist Philosophy of Social Science
The Broader Context The Feminist Method Debate Feminist “Community Values” Standpoint Theory
Part IV Intersections
28 The Genealogy and Viability of the Concept of Intersectionality
Genealogy Contemporary Articulations Critiques and Controversies Future of the Concept
29 Critical Race Theory, Intersectionality, and Feminist Philosophy
Introduction Critical Race Theory Intersectionality as a Feminist Response to Race and Racism What’s Critical about Intersectionality? What’s Intersectional about Critical Race Theory? Intersectionality across Time and Multiple Fields Conclusion
30 Native American Chaos Theory and the Politics of Difference
Introduction A Brief Overview of the Native American Worldview The Politics of Difference and Native American Chaos Theory
31 Feminist Theory, Lesbian Theory, and Queer Theory
Introduction Born This Way Not Born a Woman We Are the Same It’s Complicated Queering It Up
32 Through the Looking Glass: Trans Theory Meets Feminist Philosophy
Preliminaries Conceptual Analysis of Gender Categories Trans Embodiment Trans Feminism Conversations
33 Feminist and Queer Intersections with Disability Studies
Feminist, Queer, Crip: Theorizing Disability and Debility Impairment and Disability Sex, Gender, and Disability Minds, Bodies, and Knowledge Dependency, Vulnerability, and Justice Cripping Philosophy
34 Women, Gender, and Philosophies of Global Development
Introduction Were Women Left Out of Development? More Unrecognized Facts about Women’s Poverty The Rise of Development Ethics Feminist Philosophic Issues about Development A Fourth Fact: Inadequate Resources and Competence Requirements for Development Designers, Funders, Managers, and Other Professionals Conclusion
35 Feminist Intersections with Environmentalism and Ecological Thought
Nature, Culture, Feminism Ecofeminism in the Global North: The Goddess, Science, and Deep Ecology Ecofeminism: Discipline and Praxis Changing the World: Food, Care, and Climate
36 Encountering Religious Diversity: Perspectives from Feminist Philosophy of Religion
Introduction Gendering Religious Diversity Feminist Epistemology and Religious Beliefs Materialist Interventions: Religion as Real Abstraction Contextualizing Women’s Religious Subjectivity Conclusion
Part V Ethics, Politics, and Aesthetics
Aesthetics
37 Historicizing Feminist Aesthetics
Art as Political How Is Art Political? Kant’s Aesthetics: Regressive or Progressive? Situating Kant’s Aesthetics in the Context of His Philosophical Project Feminist Philosophers Rework Kant Concluding Remarks
38 Aesthetics and the Politics of Gender: On Arendt’s Theory of Narrative and Action
Dilemmas of Feminist Aesthetics Between Politics and Aesthetics: Action, Narrative, and Gender Intersectionality Life and Narrative Conclusion
39 Feminist Aesthetics and the Categories of the Beautiful and the Sublime
Introduction Beauty The Sublime: Early Developments Kant’s Aesthetics The “Feminine” Sublime Reimagining the Sublime References
Ethics
40 Moral Justification in an Unjust World
Diversity, Inequality, and Moral Justification Epistemic Injustice and Moral Justification Four Necessary Conditions of Inclusive Epistemic Democracy Moral and Political Universalism Case Study: Is Female Genital Cutting (FGC) as Practiced by the Maasai a Violation of Women’s Human Rights? Changing the Mission and Method of Moral Epistemology
41 Feminist Conceptions of Autonomy
Introduction Relational Autonomy and Social Oppression Beyond the Procedural/Substantive Debate: A Multidimensional Theory of Autonomy Conclusion
42 Feminist Metaethics
Introduction Truth in Ethics Moral Skepticism Moral Epistemology Conclusion
43 Feminist Ethics of Care
Early Articulations of Care Ethics Early Feminist Misgivings Regarding Care Ethics Subsequent Developments From an Ethic of Care to a Politics of Care Care in a Global Context Conclusion
44 Confucianism and Care Ethics
Confucianism Care Ethics Is Confucianism a Kind of Care Ethics? Beyond the Question of Whether Confucianism Is a Care Ethics The Path of Comradeship in Caring
45 Feminist Virtue Ethics
Virtue Ethics, Feminist Ethics, and Feminist Virtue Ethics Care Ethics and Virtue Ethics Critical Feminist Eudaimonism Feminist Accounts of Specific Virtues and Vices
46 Feminist Bioethics
Introduction Bioethics and Gender Feminist Critiques of Bioethics Shaping the Field: Feminist Contributions to Bioethics Future Directions for Feminist Bioethics
Social and Political Philosophy
47 Multicultural and Postcolonial Feminisms
Multiculturalism Feminism: Rethinking Liberal Humanism Postcolonial Feminists Unsettle the Humanist Subject Bringing Postcolonial Insights to Philosophy: Selves and Others, Reasons and Emotions Conclusion
48 Neoliberalism, Global Justice, and Transnational Feminisms
Relational Understandings of Harm and Responsibility Naturalized Approaches to Normative Frameworks Feminized Labor as a Justice Concern Conclusion
49 Feminism, Structural Injustice, and Responsibility
What Is Structural Injustice? Responsibility for Structural Injustice Conclusion
50 Latin American Feminist Ethics and Politics
Testimonio and Public Protest Theorizing Women’s Ethical Challenges in History Suffrage and Women’s Rights Modern Women’s Movements and Consciousness-Raising Contemporary Feminist Ethics
51 Feminist Engagements with Democratic Theory
Introduction Democratic Theory in the Twentieth Century The Sea Change in Democratic Theory Discourse Ethics Feminist Responses to Discourse Ethics Conclusion: Deliberation in a Decentralized Public Sphere
52 Feminism and Liberalism
Feminist Critiques of Liberalism Feminist Liberalism Conclusion
53 Feminism and Freedom
Freedom in Theory and Practice: Rights and Privacy, Interdependence and Solidarity The Subject of Freedom and Its Discontents: Contemporary Feminist Philosophies of Freedom Individual Freedom From Women’s Liberation to Feminist Practices of Freedom
54 Feminism and Power
Introduction Power-Over and Power-To Socialist Feminist Approaches Poststructuralist Feminist Approaches Power and Violence Resistance
55 Feminist Approaches to Violence and Vulnerability
Introduction Conceptualizing Violence and Vulnerability Feminism and the Ethics of Political Violence Conclusion
56 Feminist Philosophy of Law, Legal Positivism, and Non-Ideal Theory
Non-Ideal Theory Positivism and the Separation of Law and Morality Feminist Philosophy of Law Sexual Harassment Abortion Conclusion
Index
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