Thursday, November 28, 2019
Feminism Essays (719 words) - Feminist Movements And Ideologies
  Feminism    What is feminism? By general definition, feminism is a philosophy in which women  and their contributions are valued. It is based on social, political and  economical equality for women. Feminists can be anyone in the population, men,  women, girl or boys. Feminism can also be described as a movement. A revolution  that includes women and men who wish the world to be equal without boundaries.    These boundaries or blockades are better known as discrimination and biases  against gender, sexual orientation, age, marital status and economic status.    Everyone views the world with his or her own sense of gender and equality.    Feminists view the world as being unequal. They wish to see the gender gap and  the idea that men are superior to women decreased or even abolished. Carol    Gilligan is one woman who has contributed much time and effort to the feminist  theory. Her beliefs and ideas are based upon difference feminism. In this essay    I will tie the ideas and beliefs of Carol Gilligan with information from our  text, the packet read in class and the book, Faces of Feminism. Carol Gilligan  is a lecturer and assistant professor at Harvard University as well as a  psychologist. She has many theories that deal with moral reasoning and  development. In her influential book In a Different Voice, she sets forth the  idea that women make decisions "according to a criteria of ethics of care and  that men make decisions according to an ethic of rights."(3) In her book,    Carol Gilligan also disagrees with Lawrence Kohlbergs' theory, which suggests  that "Few people matured fully in their moral reasoning...but women hardly  ever did."(2) In her opposition Gilligan stated that "women make moral  decisions according to different but equally mature and morally upright  reasoning."(2) She feels that women are different because they posses a  different hereditary set of values and beliefs. This opposition to Kohlberg's  theory was backed by research. Even though there was research done to support    Gilligan, it seemed to have experimenter bias. It was not an open or strong  experiment and it only observed the actions of the white middle class. This did  not give a clear or objective view on the separate criteria of women and men.    The views and ideas on moral reasoning and development set forth by Carol    Gilligan are those of many difference feminists. Difference feminism is just one  type of feminism. It gives a concept that "women should go back to traditional  roles"(3) set by society. It also states that gender is natural and is not  learned by the society in which one lives. Not all Feminists agree with this  theory but there are many feminists, such as Carol Gilligan who agree with this  idea that even though men and women are different, they each have their own  separate place in society. Difference feminism is "successful because it tells  people what they want to hear: women really are different in just the ways that  we always thought. ... And men have power, wealth and control of social  resources because women do not really want them."(3) This idea of difference  feminism sets forth a number of stereotypes. They give feminists and the general  public a skewed view of the theory behind the philosophy. In the book Faces of    Feminism, feminist theorists were asked, "Do women have to be the same as men  to be equal?"(1) The majority of responses were yes. It is believed that in  order for women and men to become equal, society must "unlearn and uncondition"(1)  the gender roles and standards it has established throughout history. Society  and the people in it have set up the basis for gender difference and now many  feminists are breaking down those barriers. Carol Gilligans' position on moral  development and her views as a feminist, suggest that "women's nature is not  something to be replaced, but something to be maintained, indeed celebrated, for  the sake both of women and society."(1) This view is tied in with the general  definition of feminism, that women should be valued for their accomplishments.    Womanhood is important and should be celebrated and praised. On that same note,  maleness must also be celebrated and praised. Throughout history men have  dominated our culture and now through the work of feminists such as Carol    Gilligan, the roles are beginning to shift. There are more women in the  workplace and more men staying at home. This idea of gender reversal goes  against parts of the difference feminist theory.    Bibliography    Tobias, Shelia. Faces of Feminism. Westview Press, Colo 1997. Katha Pollitt.    'Are women morally superior to men?" 1992.    
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