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PHL2230

Feminist philosophers

Karen Green

8 points
* 3 hours per week
* Second semester
* Clayton
* Prerequisites: A first-year philosophy sequence or one eight-point women's studies subject

Objectives The aim of the subject is to provide an introduction to the historical development of feminist thought, and to issues in contemporary feminist philosophy.

Synopsis The subject introduces philosophical problems arising from conceptions of sexual equality and difference, and discusses their implications for norms of rationality and morality. It focuses particularly on the work of pioneer feminist philosophers, Christine de Pisan, Mary Wollstonecraft and Simone de Beauvoir and on contemporary theorists such as Carol Gilligan and Luce Irigaray. Their philosophies are discussed in the context of the intellectual currents of their times and will be used to introduce such topics as the influence of liberalism, socialism, psychoanalysis and postmodernism on feminist thought, questions relating to sexual equality and sexual difference, the public and the private, conceptual connections between reason and masculinity, and the implications of sexual difference for moral theory and epistemology.

Assessment Two essays (2500 words each): 40% each
* Examinations (1 hour): 20%
* Optional replacement of one essay by a 2-hour examination: 40%

Prescribed texts

de Beauvoir S The second sex Penguin

Green K The woman of reason Polity, 1995

Wollstonecraft M A vindication of the rights of woman Penguin

Other readings available from the department


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Published by Monash University, Clayton, Victoria 3168
Copyright © Monash University 1996 - All Rights Reserved - Caution
Authorised by the Academic Registrar December 1996