Feminism versus Multiculturalism
Top Cited Papers
- 1 June 2001
- journal article
- review article
- Published by JSTOR in Columbia Law Review
- Vol. 101 (5) , 1181-1218
- https://doi.org/10.2307/1123774
Abstract
To posit feminism and multiculturalism as oppositional is to assume that minority women are victims of their cultures. This assumption, as Professor Volpp illustrates in this Essay, is achieved by a discursive strategy that constructs gender subordination as integral only to certain cultures. She traces the origins of the ubiquitous claim that minority and Third World cultures are more subordinating than culture in the West to the history of colonialism, the origins of liberalism, depictions of the feminist subject, and the use of binary logic. Pitting feminism against multiculturalism has certain consequences: It obscures the influences that in fact shape cultural practices, hides the forces besides culture that affect women's lives, elides the way women exercise agency within patriarchy, and masks the level of violence within the United States. Professor Volpp concludes by suggesting a basis for a constructive dialogue beyond the discourse of feminism versus multiculturalism.This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- “Bad Mothers” and the Threat to Civil Society: Race, Cultural Reasoning, and the Institutionalization of Social Inequality in a Venezuelan Infanticide TrialLaw & Social Inquiry, 2000
- Talking "Culture": Gender, Race, Nation, and the Politics of MulticulturalismColumbia Law Review, 1996
- Sex Wars Redux: Agency and Coercion in Feminist Legal TheoryColumbia Law Review, 1995