 |
|
| |
|
 |
 |
at Global Oneness Community.
Share your dreams and let others help you with the interpretation!
Dream Sharing Forum
|
 |
Feminism - Perspective: the nature of the modern movement |  | Feminism - Perspective: the nature of the modern movement: Encyclopedia II - Feminism - Perspective: the nature of the modern movement |  | Most feminists believe discrimination against women still exists in North American and European nations, as well as worldwide. But there are many ideas within the movement regarding the severity of current problems, what the problems are, and how best to confront them.
Extremes on the one hand include some radical feminists such as Mary Daly who argues that human society would be better off with dramatically fewer men. There are also dissidents, such as Christina Hoff Sommers or Camille Paglia, who identify ...
See also:Feminism, Feminism - Origins, Feminism - Feminism in many forms, Feminism - Subtypes of feminism, Feminism - Relationship to other movements, Feminism - Effects of feminism in the West, Feminism - Effects on civil rights, Feminism - Effect on language, Feminism - Effect on heterosexual relationships, Feminism - Effect on religion, Feminism - Effect on moral education, Feminism - Effects of feminism in the East, Feminism - Worldwide statistics, Feminism - Perspective: the nature of the modern movement, Feminism - Contemporary criticisms of feminism, Feminism - Famous feminists, Feminism - Books |  | | Feminism, Feminism - Books, Feminism - Contemporary criticisms of feminism, Feminism - Effect on heterosexual relationships, Feminism - Effect on language, Feminism - Effect on moral education, Feminism - Effect on religion, Feminism - Effects of feminism in the East, Feminism - Effects of feminism in the West, Feminism - Effects on civil rights, Feminism - Famous feminists, Feminism - Feminism in many forms, Feminism - Origins, Feminism - Perspective: the nature of the modern movement, Feminism - Relationship to other movements, Feminism - Subtypes of feminism, Feminism - Worldwide statistics, Anarcha-feminism, Anti-racist math, Domestic violence, Equal pay for women, Female roles in the world wars, Feminazi, Feminist history in the United States, Feminist history in the United Kingdom, Feminist history in Latin America, Gendercide, Gender-neutral language, History of feminism, Igbo Women's War of 1929, International Day to Eliminate Violence Against Women, Iranian Women, Islamic feminism, Lesbian feminism |  | |
|  |  | Feminism: Encyclopedia II - Feminism - Perspective: the nature of the modern movement
Feminism - Perspective: the nature of the modern movement
Most feminists believe discrimination against women still exists in North American and European nations, as well as worldwide. But there are many ideas within the movement regarding the severity of current problems, what the problems are, and how best to confront them.
Extremes on the one hand include some radical feminists such as Mary Daly who argues that human society would be better off with dramatically fewer men. There are also dissidents, such as Christina Hoff Sommers or Camille Paglia, who identify themselves as feminist but who accuse the movement of anti-male prejudice.
On the other hand, many feminists question the use of the term feminist to groups or people who fail to recognize a fundamental equality between the sexes. Some feminists, like Katha Pollitt (see her book Reasonable Creatures) or Nadine Strossen (President of the ACLU and author of Defending Pornography [a treatise on freedom of speech]), consider feminism to be, solely, the view that "women are people." Views that separate the sexes rather than unite them are considered by these people to be sexist rather than feminist.
There are also debates between difference feminists such as Carol Gilligan on the one hand, who believe that there are important differences between the sexes (which may or may not be inherent, but which cannot be ignored), and those who believe that there are no essential differences between the sexes, and that the roles observed in society are due to conditioning. There is no consensus among modern scientists on whether inborn differences exist between men and women (other than physical differences such as anatomy, chromosomes and hormones).
In Marilyn French's seminal works analyzing patriarchy and its effects on the world at large--including women, men and children--she defines patriarchy as a system that values power over life, control over pleasure, and dominance over happiness. According to French, "it is not enough either to devise a morality that will allow the human race simply to survive. Survival is an evil when it entails existing in a state of wretchedness. Intrinsic to survival and continuation is felicity, pleasure. Pleasure has been much maligned, diminished by philosophers and conquerors as a value for the timid, the small-minded, the self-indulgent. "Virtue" involves the renunciation of pleasure in the name of some higher purpose, a purpose that involves power (for men) or sacrifice (for women). Pleasure is described as shallow and frivolous in a world of high-minded, serious purpose. But pleasure does not exclude serious pursuits or intentions, indeed, it is found in them, and it is the only real reason for staying alive" Beyond Power This philosophy is what French offers as a replacement to the current structure where power has the highest value--and it is this feminism to which many (women and men) subscribe. However many believe this view is flawed, simply because one who desires power will usually obtain power over one who does not.
Carol Tavris, author of Anger: the Misunderstood Emotion and The Mismeasure of Woman: Why Women Are Not the Better Sex, the Inferior Sex, or the Opposite Sex, maintains that as long as men's experiences are considered to be the default human experiences, women will always face discrimination in North America or elsewhere. She holds that too much emphasis is placed on innate differences between men and woman, and that it has been used to justify the restriction of women's rights. She also argues that it is a fallacy to equate 'equality' with 'sameness'. For example, employment benefits for pregnant women are sometimes called 'special treatment', but -- Tavris argues -- because only women can become pregnant, this viewpoint is wrong. It would only be special treatment, she argues, if both men and women could become pregnant and women received benefits for pregnancy that men did not. (In her book A Fearful Freedom, Wendy Kaminer provides an opposing viewpoint to this argument; she argues that pregnancy leave should not be a special case of employment benefits, but should be treated like any other disability benefits.) She argues that there is a need to view both men's and women's experiences as human experiences, without putting special emphasis on the differences between them.
Other related archives1785, 1792, 1808, 1837, 1848, 1960, 1985, 19th century, 20th century, A Vindication of the Rights of Woman, ACLU, Adrienne Rich, Africa, Aisha, Alice Paul, Alice Schwarzer, Alice Walker, Amazon feminism, Anarcha-Feminism, Anarcha-feminism, Andrea Dworkin, Anne Fausto-Sterling, Anti-racist math, Arlie Russell Hochschild, Assemblies of God, Audre Lorde, Barbara Ehrenreich, Barbara Smith, Bettina Aptheker, Betty Friedan, Black Feminism, Butler, Judith, Camille Paglia, Canada, Carol Gilligan, Carol Tavris, Chandra Talpade Mohanty, Charles Fourier, Chesler, Phyllis, Chopin, Kate, Christian, Christina Hoff Sommers, Cindy Sherman, Conservative, Coredemptrix, Culture Wars, Dianic Wicca, Domestic violence, Donna Haraway, Dorothy Smith, Douglas Hofstadter, Dutch republic, Egalitarian, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Emily Murphy, Emma Goldman, Emmeline Pankhurst, English, English language, Equal pay for women, Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick, Fatima Zahra, Female roles in the world wars, Feminazi, Feminist history in Latin America, Feminist history in the United Kingdom, Feminist history in the United States, Finland, First World War, Fourteen Points, French, French feminism, Friedrich Engels, Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, Gayle Rubin, Gender feminism, Gender-neutral language, Gendercide, George Gilder, Germaine Greer, Gloria E. Anzaldúa, Gloria Steinem, God and gender, Goddess, Gynocentric, Henrietta Muir Edwards, History of feminism, Hélène Cixous, Igbo Women's War of 1929, International Day to Eliminate Violence Against Women, Iranian Women, Irene Parlby, Iris Murdoch, Islam, Islamic feminism, Jane Fonda, Jane Gallop, Jane Gomeldon, Janice Raymond, Jean Bethke Elshtain, Jewish, John Stuart Mill, Judaism, Judith Butler, Kate Chopin, Kate Millett, Katha Pollitt, Kiki Smith, Kristin Luker, Kumari Jayawardena, Lady Mary Wortley Montagu, Lerner, Gerda, Lesbian feminism, Lesbian separatism, List of feminism topics, List of notable feminists, Louise McKinney, Luce Irigaray, Margaret Cho, Margaret Sanger, Marilyn French, Marilyn French's, Marquis de Condorcet, Marriage strike, Martha Stewart, Martin Luther King Jr., Marxist feminism, Mary, Mary Daly, Mary Wollstonecraft, Masculism, Maxine Hong Kingston, Mead, Margaret, Middelburg, Misandry, Misogyny, Mitsuye Yamada, Monique Wittig, Ms., Muhammad, Nadine Strossen, Nellie McClung, Neopagan, Origins of the Family, Private Property, and the State, Paglia, Camille, Paleoconservatives, Pat Buchanan, Phyllis Chesler, Political scientist, Post-structuralism, Postcolonial feminists, Pro-feminist men, Protestant Christianity, Queer theory, RAWA, Radical feminism, Rape, Reconstructionist, Reform, Robin Morgan, Role of women in Judaism, Roman Catholicism, Ruth Behar, SCUM Manifesto, Sandra Cisneros, Sandra Harding, Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis, Seneca Falls, Sex in advertising, Sexual harassment, Simone de Beauvoir, Sisterhood is Powerful, Sojourner Truth, Stephanie Coontz, Susan B. Anthony, Susan Brownmiller, Susan Moller Okin, Susannah Heschel, Sweden, Sylvia Pankhurst, Testosterone poisoning, The Enlightenment, The Subjection of Women, Trafficking in human beings, Trinh T. Minh-ha, United States, Valerie Solanas, Virginia Woolf, Warren Farrell, Welsh Assembly Government, Wendy Kaminer, Wendy McElroy, Western, Wikipedia:Requests for expansion, Womanism, Women's Cinema, Woodrow Wilson, Zaib-un-nissa Hamidullah, abortion, academia, activists, affirmative action, anarcha-feminism, anarchist, anatomy, androcentric, anthropologist, bell hooks, cantors, casual sex, chromosomes, citation needed, civil rights, class, clergy, cohabitation, compassion, contraception, cultural feminism, culture, democracy, difference feminists, discrimination, division of labor, divorce, domestic partnership, ecofeminism, employment laws, equal pay, equity feminism, existentialist feminism, female genital cutting, feminist political parties, first-wave feminists, free speech, gay rights movement, gender, gender egalitarianism, gender feminism, gender identity, gender inequality, gender roles, gender studies, gender-neutral pronouns, glass ceiling, grass-roots, heteronormativity, heterosexual, hierarchies, holistic, homeschooling, hormones, humanism, identity, ideology, incest, individualist feminism, inequality, infidelity, lesbian feminism, liberal feminism, list of notable feminists, marriage, masculism, masculists, material feminism, maternity leave, middle-class, misandry, moral, moral philosophies, mothering, non-sexist language, nuclear power, objectification, oppression, patriarchy, philosophy, political movements, polyamory, polygamy, pop feminism, post-colonial feminism, post-feminist, postcolonial feminism, postmodern feminism, pro-choice, pro-feminism, pro-sex feminism, prostitution, psychoanalytic feminism, public policy, public relations, queer theory, rabbis, race, radical feminism, rape, reform movement, religion, reproductive rights, rights, role, second-wave, second-wave feminists, separatism, separatist feminism, sex, sex-positive feminism, sex-positive feminists, sexual harassment, sexual objectification, sexual revolution, sexual violence, sexuality, silent, social constructs, social relations, social theories, socialist feminism, society, sociologist, spiritual feminism, standpoint feminism, stereotyping, street harassment, the Pill, third-wave feminism, third-world feminism, transfeminism, transgender, transnational feminism, transphobic, transsexual, university, utopian socialist, violence, vote, womanism, women's suffrage
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Perspective: the nature of the modern movement", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
|
|
More material related to Feminism can be found here:
|
|
« Back
|
Search the Global Oneness web site |
|
|
|
|
 |
Sneak-Peek of Global Oneness Community
Hi friend! The Global Oneness Community, the place for information and sharing about Oneness is not really launched yet (you will see there is still some clean up to do) ...but it is now open for a sneak-peek! And if you wish - please register and become one of the very first members to do so! Jonas
Forum Home,
Articles,
Photo Gallery,
Videos,
News,
Sitemap
...and much more!
|