1 / 21

IR THEORY IR 5001

IR THEORY IR 5001. Iconic images of world politics battlefields, soldiers, guns, F-16s Veiled women, ‘burqa’ War on Terror Taliban’s oppression of women War on Terror, in part, a war on behalf of women and children . Social Imaginary Rescue of women and children ‘other’

ranae
Télécharger la présentation

IR THEORY IR 5001

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. IR THEORYIR 5001

  2. Iconic images of world politics • battlefields, soldiers, guns, F-16s • Veiled women, ‘burqa’ • War on Terror • Taliban’s oppression of women • War on Terror, in part, a war on behalf of women and children

  3. Social Imaginary • Rescue of women and children ‘other’ • Masculine national state (US) pastoral, paternal • Against, Islamic ‘terrorist,’ feminized other • War imagery of enemy • Masculine self/feminized other • Foreign Policy, War, Security, Power, • Nation/State

  4. GENDER / IR • Gendering theory • What is gender? biology? social construct masculinity/femininity performativity language/discourse Inequality Hierarchy Power

  5. What is theory? • Ontology (in)visibility) what we see • Epistemology – claims to know – how we know • Methodology • Axiology? (secularization of knowledge claims)

  6. Gender and IR theory and practice • Objectivity • Rationality • Power – territorial, sovereign • War/conflict • Accumulation • Citizen/humanity • Male knowledge = human knowledge, universal

  7. Distinctions • Warrior/Beautiful Soul • Public/Private • State/Household • Citizens/Men • Classical theory (Rousseau, Hegel, Marx) • Paid work/unpaid labour • Everyday

  8. Patriarchy (rule of father) • Feminist theory • Ungendering theory • Feminist empiricism (including excluded groups) • Standpoint feminism (difference, experience, values) • Postmodern feminism • Postcolonial feminism

  9. Feminism • First Wave 19th and early 20the centuries (suffragist movements, representation) • Second Wave in the 1960s and 70s ‘personal as political’, economic and cultural inequalities • Third Wave 1990s post-structural critique of enlightenment thought, autonomy, rationality, subjectivity

  10. Liberal Feminists • Assumption men and women are equal • Women under-represented • Participation in global politics • Diplomats, military, business, • Access to power • Equal representation

  11. Standpoint Feminism • Essentialism • Male – conflict, war, power • Female – peace, cooperation, fairness • Values • Post-Positivist Feminism • Discourse, performance, unstable not fixed (no single cause of subordination)

  12. Cynthia Enloe: Where are the women • Diplomats wives workers, army bases, sex workers • Ann Tickner : Realism biased to male lived experience (Hans Morgenthau) • Objectivity (culturally defined) • National interest (many sided) • Power as domination? • Politics and morality not distinct • Moral elements • Political realm is not autonomous

  13. Postmodern feminism • Anti essentialist, discourse, language, web of meanings • Freud, Lacan, Foucault, Irigaray • Role of other (hospitality, accountability, empathy, cooperation, affinity) • Gender one node of subjectification, capillary form of power

  14. Postcolonial Feminist IR • Postcolonial feminist IR • Spivak, Mohanty, Bhaba, Said, • ‘The subaltern cannot speak’ • Normalization of white, western, middle class woman as site of feminist struggles • Universalization of feminist theory from western location • Ethnocentric • Internal racism, classism, homophobia

  15. Autonomy, subjectivity, modernity implicit starting point of liberal and radical feminism • Colonial modernity – governmentality • Disciplining of women central to stabilization of colonial conduct of conduct • Women-nation-anti-colonial struggle • Double marginalization (state/nation/labor)

  16. Gender and Power • Territorial/sovereign • Micro-politics • Capillary forms – subjectification • Normalization • Not autonomous but constituted in web of meanings (knowledge) • Resistance

  17. Gender and State • Historical formation of the state • Women in state formation • Revolutionary struggles • Reproductive work of making citizens • Welfare/family • RBJ Walker’s critique – state sovereignty subsumes all difference (race, class, gender) real work of gender/IR to undo principle of state sovereignty

  18. RBJ Walker :Women’s time and women’s place • Modernity/home • Fusion of gender into unitary political identity (state) • Difficulty of location a place from which to speak – all such places socially and historically constructed • Politics of forgetting • Modernity – valorizes the “merely domestic, reproductive nurturing, passive voice of women”

  19. Women and ‘Development’ • Women and ‘Development’ • Modernization theory/difference • Backwardness/lack/absence • Third World Women • Capitalism and Gender • Productive/Unproductive labor • Women as container of backwardness

  20. Globalization and Gender • Global Commodity Chain (IPE- Gary Gerrefi) • Global Care Chain ( Arlie Hochschild maids, nannies, nurses in global division of labor) • Women and flexible accumulation • Structures of Neo-colonial global capitalism

  21. Gendered global division of labor • Service • Peripheral and flexible work force • Feminization of global work force • Security-Human Security-Insecurity Studies • ‘Globalization of mothering’

More Related