Rosemarie Tong Feminist Theory

1277 Words6 Pages

It is argued that history is not made in the past but in the present. Relate this statement to the development of women’s history; do also pay attention to the challenges the emergence of women’s history as a movement and as a discipline/knowledge field faced from within and from outside.

Human beings all over the world live in a society which is comprised of different individual’s perspectives where every individual has their personal interests differ from one another. Women all over the world were oppressed in the past regarding the inequalities. From this perspective, the essay will generally look at the term Feminism in details. This will be done through illustrating that the role of Feminism redress the imbalances of the past regimes …show more content…

According to Flax, feminist theory has several purposes:to understand the power differential between men and women, to understand women’s oppression—how it evolved, how it changes over time, how it is related to other forms of oppression and how to overcome oppression (Flax 1990: 52). Flax suggests that “feminist theory is intimately related to action: “Feminist theory is the foundation of action and there is no pretense that theory can be neutral” (Flax 1990: 52). Within feminist theory is a commitment to change oppressive structures and to connect abstract ideas with concrete problems for political action (Flax 1990: 52). Marilyn Frye addresses the theme of feminist theory in her essay “The Possibility of Feminist Theory,” where she notes that the “dominant approach to theory in Western philosophy has focused on generalization: enumerative, statistical, and metaphysical generalization, none of which is kind to particulars” (Marilyn Frye, 1983) . Frye argues that or declares that to be what-it-is of a thing, threatening the annihilation of that which does not fit its prescription (Marilyn Frye, 1983). Frye seems suspicious of humanism and “speaking as a human being” for this reason” (Marilyn Frye, …show more content…

This suggests that it is necessarily a struggle to eradicate the ideology of domination that permeates Western culture on various levels as well as a commitment to reorganizing society so that the self-development of people can take precedence over imperialism, economic expansion, and material desires.…A commitment to feminism so defined would demand that each individual participant acquire a critical political consciousness based on ideas and beliefs (Hooks, bell (1984). As Feminism is the struggle to end sexist oppression. Its aim is not to benefit solely any specific group of women, any particular race or class of women. It does not privilege women over men. It has the power to transform in a meaningful way all our lives. (Hooks, bell