Complete both essays, following the prompts closely. Yes, this is a formal assignment so
your essays should have an introduction with a THESIS STATEMENT, develop main ideas with
supporting quotations, and have a strong conclusion.
Essay 1: Decolonizing Feminism
From its earliest founding, one of the primary tensions in the feminist movement is
between rights/equality versus justice, with rights being focused on the level of the
individual and justice being focused on the level of social systems (consider the
blueberry pie example).
We began with “Decolonizing Feminism” by Maile Arvin, Eve Tuck, and Angie Morrill to
really ground in what the authors pinpoint as the erasure of setter colonialism as a
structure (and not an event), Indigenous peoples and land from feminist theory and the
feminist movement. We also discussed how settler colonialism correlates with the U.S.
developing as a capitalist society and entrenching a heteropatriachal,
heteropaternalistic society, as the authors describe.
To Do:
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ReviewtheFeministWavesslide.Iwanttoreemphasizeapoint:considerthe
fluidity of water. As you see, the feminist approaches (liberal, radical etc.)
developed with the movement and are present in each wave. Note that
“Decolonizing Feminism” was written in 2013, well over a century after the
Declaration of Sentiments in 1848.
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ReviewtheSociologyLive!MarxandAlienationvideoandyourclassnotesfora
very brief refresher on capitalism 101.
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Rereadpp.8-13and21-22(the“land”section)of“DecolonizingFeminism.”
Focus on the key terms: settler colonialism, whitestream feminism,
heteropatriarchy, heteropaternalism, land
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Reviewyour“DeclarationofSentiments”templateandclassnotes,paying
attention to how the sentiments reflect liberal feminisms (rights, equality), how
the grievances were categorized, which people are determined to be suitable to
have the right to vote (remember there were two intersecting issues: abolition
and suffrage!)
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Writeanessaythatdoesthefollowing:(a)discusseswhysettlercolonialismasa
structure and not an event and how early feminist theory and movement
developed into what the authors describe as “whitestream feminism”; (b)
discusses how the Declaration of Sentiments reflect the capitalistic,
heteropatriachal, heteropaternalistic, Indigenous-erasure that the authors of
“Decolonizing Feminism” describe (you’re really connecting the dots here!); and,
what we can learn about rights versus justice by putting “Decolonizing Feminism”
and “Declaration of Sentiments” in conversation. -
Essay 2: Radical Feminist and Marxist-Socialist Second Wave Feminist
Statements -
Reviewing the Feminist Waves slide again, you’ll see radical and Marxist-Socialist
feminist approaches developing in the second wave. Radical feminisms, broadly, focus
on abolishing patriarchy as a structure and system of oppression. Marxist-Socialist
feminist approaches are staunchly anti-capitalist and really center capitalism, and the
dismantling of it, as essential to liberalism. Remember, capitalism is very much focused
at the level of individual and socialism is very much focused at the level of the social
and communal. Here were the big themes you all identified in the “feminist platform
must be….” assignment:
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anti-capitalist
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intersectional (resist “whitestream feminism”, anti-racist, classist, ableist etc.)
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decolonize (setter colonialism, land)
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agentic (freedom to make decisions, including about body)
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prioritize feminist ways of knowing (epistemology)
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not essentialize/romanticize all women as “good” and solution to structural
problems
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not place gender on a binary (man/woman) and understand gender as expansive
These are great, and broadly reflect an ideal feminist platform.
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TheUnhappyMarriageofMarxismandFeminism:TowardsaMore
Progressive Union, Heidi I. Hartmann (1979) (focus on the “Marxism and
the Woman Question,” “Towards a More Progressive Union” sections)
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They each decidedly classic second-wave feminist texts that reflect radical
and Marxist-Socialist ideas, with Hartmann being most explicit.
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Readyourselectedreading,usingtheguidedreadingnotesbelow.
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Writeanessaythatdoesthefollowing:(a)identifiesthreemainideasand
supports them with textual evidence; (b) describes what feminism is, based on
the reading; and, (c) considers how it’s similar or different from what you as a
class already identified. -
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The Unhappy Marriage of Marxism and Feminism: Towards a More Progressive Union,
Heidi I. Hartmann
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Key elements of Marxist thought: bourgeoise, proletariat, alienation
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Why study of capitalism and patriarchy must intersect
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How Marxist feminists felt alienated within the feminist movement
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What is feminism?
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