Standpoint feminism

Standpoint feminism

Standpoint feminism argues that feminist social science should be practiced from the standpoint of women or particular groups of women [Hill Collins, P. (2000): "Black Feminist Thought: Knowledge, consciousness, and the politics of empowerment" (New York: Routledge)] as someWho|date=July 2008 claim that they are better equipped to understand certain aspects of the world. A feminist or women's standpoint epistemology proposes to make women's experiences, instead of men's, the point of departure. [Clough, P. T. (1994): "Feminist Thought" (Cambridge: Blackwell Publishers)]

Overview

As theorized by Nancy Hartsock in 1983, standpoint feminism is founded in Marxist ideology. Hartsock argued that a feminist standpoint could be built out of Marx's understanding of experience and used to criticise patriarchal theories [hartsock, N. (1997): "Comment on Hekman’s "Truth and method: Feminist standpoint theory revisited": Truth or justice?", "Signs" 22(2)] . Hence, a feminist standpoint is essential to examining the systemic oppressions in a society that standpoint feminists claim devalues women's knowledge.Fact|date=July 2008 Standpoint feminism makes the case that because women's lives and roles in almost all societies are significantly different from men's; women hold a different type of knowledge. Their location as a subordinated group allows women to see and understand the world in ways that are different from and challenging to the existing male-biased conventional wisdom [Narayan, U. (1989): "The Project of Feminist Epistemology" in S. Bordo and A. Jaggar eds., "Gender/Body/Knowledge: Feminist Reconstructions of Being and Knowing" (Rutgers: Rutgers University Press) pp.256-272] .

Standpoint feminism unites several feminist epistemologies. Standpoint feminist theorists attempt to criticise dominant conventional epistemologies in the social and natural sciences, as well as defend the coherence of feminist knowledge [Andermahr, S., T. Lovel and C. Wolkowitz (1997): "A Concise Glossary of Feminist Theory" (London and New York: Arnold)] .

Initially, feminist standpoint theories addressed women's standing in the sexual division of labor. Standpoint theorists such as Donna Haraway sought to show standpoint as the "notion of situated knowledge...to counter the apparent relativism of Standpoint theory" [Andermahr, S., T. Lovel and C. Wolkowitz (1997): "A Concise Glossary of Feminist Theory" (London and New York: Arnold)] .

This theory is considered to have potentially radical consequences because of the focus on power and the fact that it challenges the idea of an "essential truth" [Hartsock, N. (1983): "The Feminist Standpoint" in S. Harding and M. B. Hintikka eds., "Discovering Reality" (Holland; Boston; London: D. Riedel Publishing Company) pp.283-310] , especially the hegemonic reality created, passed down and imposed by those in power.

Criticisms

Criticism of standpoint feminism has come from postmodern feminists, who argue that there is no concrete "women's experience" from which to construct knowledge [Benhabib, S. 1994 " [http://www.ed.uiuc.edu/EPS/PES-Yearbook/94_docs/BENHABIB.HTM From identity politics to social feminism: a plea for the nineties] "] . In other words, the lives of women across space and time are so diverse it is impossible to generalize about their experiences. Standpoint feminism has absorbed this criticism, to an extent (see below).

Contemporary standpoint feminism

Many standpoint feminists now recognise that because of the many differences that divide women it is impossible to claim one single or universal "women’s experience" [Narayan, U. (1989): "The Project of Feminist Epistemology" in S. Bordo and A. Jaggar eds., "Gender/Body/Knowledge: Feminist Reconstructions of Being and Knowing" (Rutgers: Rutgers University Press) pp.256-272] . Because sexism does not occur in a vacuum, it is important to view it in relation to other systems of domination and to analyze how it interacts with racism, homophobia, colonialism, and classism in a "matrix of domination" [Hill Collins, P. (2000): "Black Feminist Thought: Knowledge, consciousness, and the politics of empowerment" (New York: Routledge)] .

Contemporary standpoint feminist theory perceives that it is "a relational standpoint, rather than arising inevitably from the experience of women" [Andermahr, S., T. Lovel and C. Wolkowitz (1997): "A Concise Glossary of Feminist Theory" (London and New York: Arnold)] (see difference feminism). Standpoint feminists have recently argued that individuals are both oppressed in some situations and in relation to some people while at the same time are privileged in others. Their goal is to situate women and men within multiple systems of domination [Zinn, M. B. and B. Thornton Dill (1996): "Theorizing Difference from Multiracial Feminism", "Feminist Studies" 22(2) pp.321-331] in a way that is more accurate and more able to confront oppressive power structures. One of the critiques of this stance is that such an intense focus on the many differences between women obliterates the very similarities that might bond women together. If this is that case, trying to create a broad-based feminist community or building consensus on specific policy becomes problematic.

ee also

*Feminism
*Marxism
*Nancy Hartsock
*Cultural feminism

References


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