Key Feminist Thinkers Flashcards
What are Simone de Beauvoir’s ideas on human nature? - Key Feminist Thinkers
de Beauvoir believed that women are not naturally caring and nurturing (a gender attribute), instead that this attribute is socialised into women through schooling and parents. Women’s roles and characteristics are determined by men, removing their individual freedoms.
What are Simone de Beauvoir’s views on the state? - Key Feminist Thinkers
de Beauvoir believes that the state should provide freedoms for women throughout provision of education, childcare, abolition services and contraception, as well as that economic liberties should be extended to women.
What are Simone de Beauvoir’s beliefs on society? - Key Feminist Thinkers
de Beauvoir believed women should liberate themselves from existing social structures, such as the nuclear family and marriage, given that these social structures acted to oppress and restrain women.
What were de Beauvoir’s views on the economy? - Key Feminist Thinkers
de Beauvoir believed that economic freedoms could liberate and free women if they were not to be subjected to male controls.
What were bell hooks’ beliefs on human nature? - Key Feminist Thinkers
bell hooks believed that human nature is composed of many different identities, with this being the basis of the belief in intersectionality. Believed that women have been socialised into self-hatred by competing for male attention with others.
What are bell hooks’ views on the state? - Key Feminist Thinkers
bell hooks believed that the state was dominated by white males, therefore meaning it reflects the ideas of the patriarchy and reinforces their dominant position within society.
What are bell hooks’ views on society? - Key Feminist Thinkers
bell hooks believed that full equality was needed in society to eradicate oppression of women, given that if only gender equality were achieved, some women would still be oppressed based on their other identities. Feminism must observe and understand the difficulties facing women from different identities rather than just middle class women.
What are bell hooks’ beliefs on the economy? - Key Feminist Thinkers
hooks thought that women in poverty (reinforced by patriarchal economic methods) would have different grievances to middle class women, and as such these issues should be understood by the entire feminist movement.
What did Sheila Rowbotham believe about human nature? - Key Feminist Thinkers
Rowbotham thought that men do not understand how their own actions are complicit in the oppression of the women around them. The oppression of women is understood in theory, yet not in practice.
What did Rowbotham believe about society? - Key Feminist Thinkers
Rowbotham believed that the oppression of women must be understood in more narrow terms than just capitalism, with wider culture and domestic oppression occurring alongside economic oppression.
What did Rowbotham believe about the economy? - Key Feminist Thinkers
Rowbotham thought that capitalism provides the perfect conditions for the exploitation of women, with socialist revolutions resulting in the most minimal levels of female oppression. Complete equality, including economic, is needed to liberate women from their inferior position as a cheap labour force. Must be provided equal opportunities to men.
What did Perkins Gilman believe about human nature? - Key Feminist Thinkers
Perkins Gilman thought that the doctrine of ‘survival of the fittest’ had been exploited by men to suppress women. Biological differences had resulted in male dominance previously, and that these should become irrelevant.
What did Perkins Gilman believe about the role of modern economics in altering human nature? - Key Feminist Thinkers
Perkins Gilman believed that modern economics could be used as a force through which traditional human nature of male superiority could crumble if equal opportunity were afforded to women.
What did Perkins Gilman believe were issues within society? - Key Feminist Thinkers
Perkins Gilman believed that women and girls are socialised from an early age in domestic and educational settings to accept domestic ‘traditional’ roles and prevent their advancement into wider society.
What solutions did Perkins Gilman see to the issues around society? - Key Feminist Thinkers
Perkins Gilman believed that due to the home working and child caring roles of women being tantamount to slavery, society should ultimately be led by communal living arrangements, destroying the nuclear family.