PHI-IDC-201 (Gender Ethics): Unit 1: Feminism
Semester: III | Credits: 3 | Full Marks: 100
Table of Contents
Concept of Feminism
**Feminism** is a range of socio-political movements and ethical theories aimed at establishing and achieving political, economic, personal, and social **equality of the sexes**. It generally involves the belief that societies prioritize the male point of view and that women are treated unjustly within these structures, often facing **subjugation and marginalization** in patriarchal societies.
Core Ethical Concern: Feminism ethically addresses the systematic injustice and denial of rights based on gender, highlighting the need for fairness and recognition in social, professional, and personal spheres.
History of Feminism (The Waves)
The history of Western feminist thought is often categorized into sequential 'waves' based on their primary goals.
| Wave | Time Period | Primary Goal/Focus |
|---|---|---|
| First Wave | Mid-19th Century - Early 20th Century | **Political Rights**, specifically the right to vote (**suffrage**), property rights, and contractual rights. |
| Second Wave | 1960s - 1980s | **Personal and Cultural Equality** (the personal is political). Focus on sexuality, reproductive rights, domestic violence, workplace equality, and challenging the nuclear family structure. |
| Third Wave | 1990s - Early 2000s | Challenging the white, middle-class focus of the Second Wave. Emphasis on **Intersectionality** (gender intersecting with race, class, and sexuality) and diverse identities. |
| Fourth Wave | Early 2010s - Present | Focus on digital activism, social media, online harassment, and issues of sexual assault/harassment (e.g., #MeToo movement). |
Types of Feminism
Feminism is diverse, with different schools proposing varied root causes of gender inequality and distinct solutions.
1. Liberal Feminism
- **Root Cause:** Unequal access to **rights** and opportunities due to discriminatory laws and traditions.
- **Goal:** Achieving equality through **legal and political reform** (e.g., equal pay laws, non-discrimination policies). They do not seek to change the fundamental social structure, only to ensure women can compete fairly within it.
2. Radical Feminism
- **Root Cause:** **Patriarchy** itself, which is seen as a fundamental system of power and oppression where men control women's bodies, sexuality, and reproductive capacity.
- **Goal:** Eliminating patriarchy entirely, often through radical restructuring of society or the separation of women from male institutions.
3. Marxist/Socialist Feminism
- **Root Cause:** **Capitalism** and the **private ownership** of the means of production, which reinforces women's subordinate status through unpaid domestic labor and wage inequality.
- **Goal:** Overcoming capitalism and class divisions, integrating women’s reproductive labor into economic analysis.
4. Cultural Feminism
- **Root Cause:** Devaluation of feminine traits (caring, nurturing, cooperation) by patriarchal society.
- **Goal:** **Valuing and celebrating** women's distinct biological and psychological differences and promoting a society based on feminine values rather than masculine hierarchy and competition.
Exam Focus: Distinguishing Solutions
Ensure you can differentiate between the **Liberal solution** (reform the system) and the **Radical solution** (overthrow the system). The distinction lies in whether the primary enemy is *laws* or the *social structure* itself.
Key Takeaway for Unit 1:
Feminism is fundamentally an **ethical project** against subjugation. The different waves reflect shifting priorities (suffrage to sexuality to intersectionality). Know the core premise of **Liberal** (legal equality) vs. **Radical** (patriarchal control) feminism.