Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Contemporary Feminist Criticism - Ellen Messer-Davidow (essay date 2002)


Contemporary Feminist Criticism - Ellen Messer-Davidow (essay date 2002)

Ellen Messer-Davidow (essay date 2002)

SOURCE: Messer-Davidow, Ellen. “Disciplining Women.” In Disciplining Feminism: From Social Activism to Academic Discourse, pp. 19-48. Durham, N.C.: Duke University Press, 2002.

[In the following essay, Messer-Davidow examines the experiences of women within particular academic fields—utilizing essays from Evelyn Fox Keller, Elaine Showalter, Lillian S. Robinson, and Lise Vogel—and asserts that disciplinary discourse itself negates the feminist point of view.]

Disciplines are institutionalized formations for organizing schemes of perception, appreciation, and action, and for inculcating them as tools of cognition and communication.

—Timothy Lenoir, “The Discipline of Nature and the Nature of Disciplines” (1993)

Result: … the subjects … “work by themselves” … with the exception of the “bad subjects” who on occasion provoke...

[The entire page is 15166 words long]

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