What is the link between the way in which women are viewed as an aberration within law – such that pregnant women initially had to be compared with sick men to claim unfair dismissal – and the view of women as monstrous within philosophy? This book uses the failure of women to fit within male models of both law and theory as a way to rethink legal questions, including the meaning of equality, freedom, justice and citizenship. This includes concern about the way in which queer theory and critical race theory – as well as issues of class – intersect with feminist theory today. It also raises issues about the relationship between political theory and practice and the productive intersection between debates within law, philosophy and feminism. This collection of essays on feminist legal theory therefore provides an interdisciplinary approach, drawn not only from law and philosophy, but also from cultural and womens studies. Feminism may still be on the margins of both law and philosophy, yet it has the ability to disrupt both. This book moves beyond a feminist critique of existing frameworks to the constructive project of reworking theory from within. It goes beyond debates of traditional jurisprudence to draw its tools from the growing body of work on feminist philosophy – including the writings of Luce Irigaray, Drucilla Cornell and Christine Battersby – which intersect both contemporary continental philosophy and critical legal theory.
Janice Richardson & Ralph Sandland
Feminist Perspectives on Law and Theory [PDF ebook]
Feminist Perspectives on Law and Theory [PDF ebook]
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Language English ● Format PDF ● Pages 284 ● ISBN 9781843140436 ● Editor Janice Richardson & Ralph Sandland ● Publisher Taylor and Francis ● Published 2000 ● Downloadable 6 times ● Currency EUR ● ID 2419531 ● Copy protection Adobe DRM
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