PHilosophy and sexuality
We end the semester by looking at several theorists who, in their varying ways, develop arguments to the effect that our beliefs, attitudes, and practices of sexuality have complicated psychological, cultural, social, political, and economic roots, oftentimes of which we are unaware. Freud, for example, holds that sexuality manifests itself differently (e.g., is explicitly expressed or is sublimated) to satisfy different social needs. Foucault’s theory of sexuality is usually understood as social and historical, so that our very concepts of sexuality take quite different forms in different historical and social circumstances, and are shaped by various configurations of power.
(a) In your own words, explain what MacKinnon is saying about gender here, relating it as appropriate to the views developed by Foucault in volume 2 of The History of Sexuality.
(b) What follows from MacKinnon’s insight about what an earlier generation called “sexual liberation” for women? If MacKinnon is correct, is removing “the onus placed upon the sexual expressiveness of women” a “hollow victory” because “the sexuality they become freer to enjoy remains the old one that converts women into objects” (MacKinnon, Signs 1982, page 533, quoting the writer and critic Susan Sontag)? Discuss critically, and explain your answer.
APA
MacKinnon’s take on gender
In reading the article, “Feminism, Marxism, Method, and the State: An Agenda for Theory” by Catharine A. MacKinnon (1982), it is clear that the author is agitating of r equality of the female genders in a male dominated society. In other words, MacKinnon is addressing the heated topic of eco-feminism. According to her, the women folk must come to the realization that there is no liberation for them as well as there is no solution to the ecological crisis within the community that whose fundamental model of relationships…………………