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9.11: Glossary

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    292995
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    AI generated

    The following glossary defines key terms from the source material, "A Late Modern Typology of Democratizing Feminisms," organized in alphabetical order.

    • Bodypolitik: The diverse complexities of differences—such as sex, gender, race, indigeneity, and ability—that constitute the members of a political community.
    • Civic Republican Intersectional Feminism: A variant of feminism that seeks to reconstruct representative democracy as a practice of relational liberty and power-sharing, displacing the hyper-individualism of liberal thought.
    • Difference Politics: A political strategy that renounces gender neutrality to celebrate and re-value traits historically associated with women, such as nurturing and an "ethic of care," as a way to reverse patriarchal values.
    • Displacement: A strategy aimed at deconstructing hegemonic norms and binaries (like male/female) to create space for counter-meanings and more diverse forms of human intelligibility.
    • Diversity Politics: An approach within feminism that focuses on deconstructing traditional categories of analysis to move beyond the false dichotomies of modernist thinking.
    • Equality Politics: A strategy aimed at the inclusion of women into existing political and social structures by asserting their equivalence to men as rational, autonomous individuals.
    • Gender Quotas: Electoral system designs that legally force or encourage the diversification of elected officials to ensure power-sharing and dismantle patriarchal gatekeeping.
    • Intersectionality: A framework coined by Kimberlé Crenshaw to identify the multiple, interlocking systems of oppression and exclusion (such as race, class, and gender) that shape an individual's experience.
    • Liberal Feminism: A theoretical orientation that emphasizes formal equality and gender neutrality, seeking to prove that women are just as capable of rationality and independence as men.
    • Neoliberalism: A political ideology grounded in the belief that the primary goal of democracy is to minimize government interference in the free market.
    • Postmodern Feminism (Deconstructivist): A strand of feminism that views gender as a political category constructed through discourse and power, often rejecting "women" as a stable or useful political category.
    • Reconstructivist Intersectional Feminism: A contemporary variant that uses intersectionality to explicitly displace the white, middle-class woman as the "norm" and reconstruct political-legal categories around the diverse experiences of all womxn.
    • Relational Liberty: A concept of democratic freedom viewed not as the absence of interference, but as a collective praxis of self-government and power-sharing among diverse citizens.
    • Womxn: An alternative spelling used in intersectional feminism to avoid the linguistic inclusion of "man" and "men" and to signal the normative inclusion of trans-women and nonbinary individuals.

    9.11: Glossary is shared under a not declared license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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