Sunday, March 17, 2019
The Global Feminist and the Transnational Feminist Essay -- Gender Stu
Academic discourse is the means by which new and nonagenarian theories may be applied to a topic in straddle to reach a better understanding or challenge a apprehension raised within the field. It is through disputeing and analyzing these concepts that individual voices may be applied to an academic community, allowing for a wider lens of thought to be picked up and further discussed. Grewal participates in this discourse in her article Womens Rights as tender Rights Feminist Practices, Global Feminism, and Human Rights Regimes in multinationality. This paper shall analyze and discuss how Grewal applies previous theoretical concepts related to feminist discourse in effectuate to offer a Transnationalist Feminist critique to the Global Feminist notion of Womens Rights as Human Rights. First and foremost, what are the concepts of Global feminism and Transnational feminism? Charlotte Bunch explains Global Feminism as something which has...a way of describing the harvest of femin ism(s) around the serviceman... (Bunch 129). The core concept of Global Feminism is that women around the world are united amongst the overarching issue of patriarchy. In this view of feminism, it can be argued, such as theorists Mendoza, Said and Spivak do, that global feminism suffers from a westbound perspective, or as Mendoza says, it produces a global feminism whereby First realism feminists are positioned as saviors of their poor Third World sisters (Mendoza 319). Transnational feminism, as described by Mendoza, can be understood as a view where the term...points to the multiplicity of the worlds feminisms and to the increasing tendency of national feminisms to politicize womens issues beyond the borders of the nation state...the position feminists worldwide have taken a... ...Locations Global and Local, conjecture and Practice, edited by Marianne deKoven, pp 129-146. 2001 New Brunswick Rutgers University PressButler, Judith Excerpt from Introduction to Bodies that occa sion in The Gender/Sexuality Reader Culture, History, Political Economy, edited by Roger N. Lancaster Michaela de Leonardo, pp. 531-542. 1997 RoutledgeGrewal, Inderpal Womens Rights as Human Rights Feminist Practices, Global Feminism and Human Rights Regimes in Transnationality in Citizenship Studies, 33, pp 337-354. 1999 Taylor and Francis Ltd..Mendoza, Breny Transnational Feminisms in Question in Femnist Theory, 33, pp. 295-314. 2002 Sage Publications.Spivak, Gayatri Chakravorty. 1995. Can the Subaltern Speak? in The Post-Colonial Studies Reader, edited by B. Ashcroft, G. Griffiths and H. Tiffin, pp. 24-28. 1995 New York Routledge
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