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Intersectionality In The Film Where Do We Go Now

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Intersectionality is a term coined by critical race theorist scholar Kimberle Crenshaw in 1989. It is a feminist theory and a methodology for research. The intersectional approach is to critique systems of oppression, build the coalition across cultural borders, analyze socially constructed categories by viewing their interaction and placement within society, and evaluate how oppressive institutions, such as racism, homophobia, classism, xenophobia, are interconnected and cannot be examined separately from one another. Intersectional approach explains how the feminist movement can be more diverse and inclusive.
Intersectionality helps understand how women’s overlapping identities (i.e., race, class, religion, sexuality, and ethnicity) influence …show more content…

They critique formal and abstract principles of Right and Wrong and universal principles for prescribed action and judgment. They argue for the radical redefinition of moral concepts and reasoning and promote moral views (from a feminist perspective) that are congenial to women. They emphasize particularity, connection/relationship, and context. Ethics of care is a feminist theory that hones in on attachment, particularity, inter-subjectivity, individuality, and opinion. In the film “Where Do We Go Now,” the director illustrates the ethic of care by presenting moral issues women in the movie faced in the public world. She appreciates the value and benefits of their ways of caring, loving, thinking, and working. In the movie, the Christian and Muslim villagers have created a temporary peace; however, when peace is vanishing, the village women share a responsibility to solve the religious conflict and distract their men from fighting because they do not want to bury more dead loved bodies. Their thinking and decision reveal their sensibility to relationship and attachment. They possess dignity, courage, and strength. When men make a stupid decision on war, women play a responsible role of keeping peace through bonding together strongly and unshakably. The movie is more likely to describe a matriarchal society, analyzing how women challenge traditional ethics views during the wartime when male dominance is foreclosed by an absence of men. Women in the movie are as morally mature as

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