PHIL 2060 Lecture Notes - Lecture 1: Intersectionality, Ageism, Class Discrimination
Document Summary
In a way that is useful to feminist philosophers: article"s main points, 1. Feminism is not one unified philosophical position. Feminism includes many different, and sometimes conflicting, perspectives on a wide range of phenomena. A wide range of perspectives on social, cultural, economic, and political phenomena sex work. The body, class and work, disability, the family, globalization, science, Political and legal rights", the contents of our conscious and unconscious desires: 2. Some scholars appeal to the wave model to describe the american women"s. First wave: mid-19th century to 1920s. concerned with basic political rights. Second wave: late 1960s to early 1970s. Concerned with greater equality across the board in such areas as education, the workplace, and at home. Concerned with explicating the differences among women due to race, ethnicity, class, nationality, and religion. Moreover, even considering only relatively recent efforts to resist male domination in europe and the us, the emphasis on first" and.