Re-Evaluating Key Debates in Feminist Theory
De som köpt den här boken har ofta också köpt Minority Rule av Ash Sarkar (häftad).
Köp båda 2 för 761 krAn innovative collaboration between academics, practitioners, activists and artists, this timely and provocative book rewrites 16 significant Scots law cases, spanning a range of substantive topics, from a feminist perspective. Exposing power, pol...
Munro's ability skilfully to analyse and critique feminist literature while using it in conjunction with mainstream liberal work on respect produces a further important contribution to this richness and variety, whilst seeking to retain links between theory and practice. However, it is her work on Foucault which may prove to be most enriching. Jill Marshall Journal of Law and Society Vol 35, No 4, December 08 ...a measured engagement and indeed one of the strengths of the book is the elegant way in which it lays out different sides of feminist debate. Munro has a knack for lucid communication of complex ideas and arguments, making the book a particularly attractive tool for teaching...one of the most striking contributions to feminist legal theory is Munro's engagement with anti-essentialism in Chapter 5. This is a strongly original analysis which successfully endeavours to move beyond the political and theoretical stalemate which the anti-essentialist critique of sexbased categories yielded...a welcome and timely intervention into feminist legal theory which provokes and challenges feminist legal scholars to reconsider the nature, direction, achievements and future priorities of feminism in law. It is also a thoroughly accessible and manageable book, to be enjoyed selectively-chapter by chapter-or as a single ordered narrative with which one might well at points disagree but nevertheless find a productive and fruitful read. Joanne Conaghan Feminist Legal Studies (2009) 17: 229-231
Vanessa Munro is a Professor of Law at Nottingham University.
1 The Development and Dilemmas of Feminist Theory 2 Feminism(s), Law and Liberalism(s) 3 On Reform and Reforming Rights 4 Power, Domination and Patriarchy 5 Womanhood, Essentialism and Identity 6 Equality, Respect and Feminist Futures Concluding Remarks