feminist perspective on the family Flashcards

1
Q

Feminists have been central in criticising gender roles associated with the traditional nuclear family, especially since the 1950s. They have argued the nuclear family has traditionally performed two key functions which oppressed women:

A

a) socialising girls to accept subservient roles within the family, whilst socialising boys to believe they were superior b) socialising women into accepting the “housewife” role as the only possible/acceptable role for a women.

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2
Q

feminists viewed the function of the family

A

a breeding ground where patriarchal values were learned by an individual, which in turn created a patriarchal society.

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3
Q

Liberal Feminism

Causes of inequality in relationships A combination of two things

A

(1) Mainstream working culture which requires long and inflexible working hours which are still based on the idea of the main breadwinner
2) Men refusing to pull their weight in relationships.

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4
Q

Solutions to Inequality

A

Greater gender equality in the public sphere -achieving equal access to education, equal pay, ending gender differences in subject and career choice won primarily through legal changes.

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5
Q

Marxist Feminism

A

Marxist feminists argue the main cause of women’s oppression in the family is not men, but capitalism.

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6
Q

Marxist feminists argue that women’s oppression performs several functions for Capitalism

A
  1. Women reproduce the labour force – through their unpaid domestic labour, by socialising the next generation of workers and servicing the current workers (their husbands!)
  2. Women absorb anger – Think back to Parson’s warm bath theory. The Marxist-Feminist interpretation of this is that women are just absorbing the anger of the proletariat, who are exploited and who should be directing that anger towards the Bourgeois
  3. Women are a ‘reserve army of cheap labour’ – if women’s primary role is domestic, and they are restricted from working, this also means they are in reserve, to be taken on temporarily as necessary by the Bourgeois, making production more flexible.

4.

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7
Q

Key thinker

A

Fran Ansley (1972) argues women absorb the anger that would otherwise be directed at capitalism. Ansley argues women’s male partners are inevitably frustrated by the exploitation they experience at work and women are the victims of this, including domestic violence.

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8
Q

Marxist Feminism – Solutions to Gender Inequalities within the family

A

For Marxist Feminists, the solutions to gender inequality are economic – We need to tackle Capitalism to tackle Patriarchy. Softer solutions include paying women for childcare and housework – thus putting an economic value on what is still largely women’s work, stronger solutions include the abolition of Capitalism and the ushering in of Communism.

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9
Q

Evaluations of Marxist Feminism

A

One limitation is that this sounds very dated for the 2020s: women today are just as likely to be in paid work as men, and so they no longer act as a ‘reserve army of labour’ for example.

A further limitation is that women’s oppression was clearly in evidence before capitalism – if anything, women are probably more oppressed in pre-capitalist, tribal societies compared to within capitalist societies.

There appears to be a correlation between capitalist development and women’s liberation – suggesting that capitalism has the opposite effect from that suggested by Marxist Feminists.

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10
Q

Radical Feminism

A

Radical feminists argue that all relationships between men and women are based on patriarchy – essentially men are the cause of women’s exploitation and oppression. For radical feminists, the entire patriarchal system needs to be overturned, in particular the family, which they view as root of women’s oppression.

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11
Q

Against Liberal Feminism, they argue that paid work has not been ‘liberating’

A

Instead women have acquired the ‘dual burden’ of paid work and unpaid housework and the family remains patriarchal – men benefit from women’s paid earnings and their domestic labour. Some Radical Feminists go further arguing that women suffer from the ‘triple shift’ where they have to do paid work, domestic work and ‘emotion work’ – being expected to take on the emotional burden of caring for children.

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12
Q

Solutions to gender inequality

A

Radical Feminists advocate for the abolition of the traditional, patriarchal (as they see it) nuclear family and the establishment of alternative family structures and sexual relations.

women only communes, and Matrifocal households. Some also practise political Lesbianism and political celibacy as they view heterosexual relationships as “sleeping with the enemy.”

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13
Q

Evaluations of Radical Feminism

A

In some ways this perspective is less relevant today than in the 1960s – women are much less likely to suffer from the dual burden and triple shift, for example.

In some ways, however, it still seems very relevant. For example, the ME TOO campaign and the Harvey Weinstein scandal both show that harassment and sexual abuse of women remain common.

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