基本説明
Includes essential works from the most prominent feminist scholars including Dorothy Smith, Particia Hill Collins, Donna Haraway and more.
Full Description
Leading feminist scholar and one of the founders of Standpoint Theory, Sandra Harding brings together the biggest names in the field--Dorothy Smith, Donna Haraway, Patricia Hill Collins, Nancy Hartsock and Hilary Rose--to not only showcase the most influential essays on the topic but to also highlight subsequent interrogations and developments of these approaches from a wide variety of disciplines and intellectual and political positions.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments ix
Permissions xi
1. Introduction: Standpoint Theory as a Site of 1 (16)
Political, Philosophic, and Scientific Debate
SANDRA HARDING
I. The Logic of a Standpoint 17 (124)
2. Women's Perspective as a Radical Critique 21 (14)
of Sociology
DOROTHY E. SMITH
3. The Feminist Standpoint: Developing the 35 (20)
Ground for a Specifically Feminist Historical
Materialism
NANCY C.M. HARTSOCK
4. Feminist Politics and Epistemology: The 55 (12)
Standpoint of Women
ALISON M. JAGGAR
5. Hand, Brain, and Heart: A Feminist 67 (14)
Epistemology for the Natural Sciences
HILARY ROSE
6. Situated Knowledges: The Science Question 81 (22)
in Feminism and the Privilege of Partial
Perspective
DONNA HARAWAY
7. Learning from the Outsider Within: The 103(24)
Sociological Significance of Black Feminist
Thought
PATRICIA HILL COLLINS
8. Rethinking Standpoint Epistemology: What 127(14)
Is "Strong Objectivity"?
SANDRA HARDING
II. Identifying Standpoints 141(70)
9. History and Class Consciousness as an 143(10)
"Unfinished Project"
FREDRIC JAMESON
10. Choosing the Margin as a Space of Radical 153(8)
Openness
bell hooks
11. Maternal Thinking as a Feminist Standpoint 161(8)
SARA RUDDICK
12. Feminism, Marxism, Method, and the State: 169(12)
Toward Feminist Jurisprudence
CATHARINE A. MACKINNON
13. Labor, Standpoints, and Feminist Subjects 181(14)
KATHI WEEKS
14. U.S. Third World Feminism: The Theory and 195(16)
Method of Differential Oppositional
Consciousness
CHELA SANDOVAL
III. Controversies, Limits, Revisionings 211(80)
15. The Project of Feminist Epistemology: 213(12)
Perspectives from a Nonwestern Feminist
UMA NARAYAN
16. Truth and Method: Feminist Standpoint 225(18)
Theory Revisited
SUSAN HEKMAN
17. Comment on Hekman's "Truth and Method: 243(4)
Feminist Standpoint Theory Revisited": Truth
or Justice?
NANCY C.M. HARTSOCK
18. Comment on Hekman's "Truth and Method: 247(8)
Feminist Standpoint Theory Revisited":
Where's the Power?
PATRICIA HILL COLLINS
19. Comment on Hekman's "Truth and Method: 255(8)
Feminist Standpoint Theory Revisited": Whose
Standpoint Needs the Regimes of Truth and
Reality?
SANDRA HARDING
20. Comment on Hekman's "Truth and Methods 263(6)
Feminist Standpoint Theory Revisited"
DOROTHY E. SMITH
21. Repay to Hartsock, Collins, Harding, and 269(4)
Smith
SUSAN HEKMAN
22. Strange Standpoints, or How to Define the 273(18)
Situation for Situated Knowledge
DICK PELS
IV. Modern or Postmodem? Natural or Only Social 291(84)
Sciences?
23. Feminist Epistemologies for Critical 293(16)
Social Theory From Standpoint Theory to
Situated Knowledge
EERNANDO J. GARCヘA SELGAS
24. Building Standpoints 309(8)
SARAH BRACKE AND MARIA PUIG DE LA BELLACASA
25. Feminist Standpoint as Postmodern Strategy 317(16)
NANCY J. HIRSCHMANN
26. The Subsistence Perspective 333(6)
MARIA MIES AND VANDANA SHIVA
27. Why Standpoint Matters 339(14)
ALISON WYLIE
28. Feminism and the Social Construction of 353(22)
Scientific Knowledge
JOSEPH ROUSE
Index 375