Criticism > Twentieth-Century Literary Criticism > Postmodernism - Feminist contributions
Postmodernism - Feminist contributions
Feminist contributions
If feminists have advanced some of the more strident critiques of postmodern social theory on behalf of a politics of material engagement in the cause of freedom and justice, they have also given clear pointers to a way ahead. In resisting "the dangers inherent in a complete decentering of the historical and material" and in their task of "changing the power relationships that underlie women's oppression," feminists offer postmodernist discourse a way of dealing with contradictions which do not decenter their own categories of analysis in such a way that political reform is immobilized. Feminist discourse can move analysis away from the word and toward the world, since, according to Mary Hawkesworth, "feminist accounts derive their justificationary force from their capacity to illuminate existing social relations, to demonstrate the deficiencies of alternative interpretations, to debunk opposing views." It is "precisely because feminists move...
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- Introduction
- Representative Works
- Overviews
-
Criticism
- Richard E. Palmer
- 1. Outgrowing the epistemological self-portrait of modernity
- 2. Postmodernity and the project of going beyond metaphysics
- 3. Transcending objectivism and technological rationality
- 4. A. "New Gnosticism": Ihab Hassan
- 5. The movement beyond Western forms of reality
- 6. Beyond naturalism
- 7. The apostles of "new consciousness"
- 8. New foundations in psychology
- 9. Radical philosophy of language
- 10. Postmodern literary theory
- 1. Hermes: God of the gaps
- 2. Toward a broader conception of hermeneutics
- 3. Toward a new interpretive self-awareness for teachers
- Brian McHale
- John Johnstone
- David H. Hirsch
- Peter L. McLaren and Colin Lankshear
- Decentering the subject
- Decentering the text
- Further criticisms
- Feminist contributions
- Subjectivity and subjects/agency and agenthood: Problems with identity politics in emancipatory research
- Pedagogy in the postmodern age
- Poststructuralist pedagogy versus political pedagogy
- Charles Russell
- Mark Parker
- Richard Bradbury
- John A. McClure
- John M. Unsworth
- Raymond J. Wilson III
- A literature of exhaustion and replenishment
- The zone of the bizarre
- The turn away from psychological depth in character
- Metafiction
- Reuse of earlier forms
- The zone of the bizarre
- Flatness of character
- Metafiction
- Raymond Federman
- Miriam Marty Clark
- Michael Davidson
- Charles Altieri
- Appendix
- Erika Fischer-Lichte
- Further Reading
- Copyright
