Intersectional Feminist Theory as a Non-Ideal Theory: Asian American Women Navigating Identity and Power

IF 0.5 3区 哲学 0 PHILOSOPHY Ergo-An Open Access Journal of Philosophy Pub Date : 2023-03-31 DOI:10.3998/ergo.2622
Youjin Kong
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Abstract

This paper develops an account of intersectional feminist theory by critically examining the notion of identity implicitly assumed in major critiques of intersectionality. Critics take intersectionality to fragment women along the lines of identity categories such as race, class, and sexuality. Underlying this interpretation, I argue, is the metaphysical assumption that identity is a fixed entity. This is a misunderstanding of identity that neglects how identity is actually lived. By exploring how Asian American women experience their “Asian” identity in their everyday lives (e.g., the “Asian-as-patriarchal vs. White-as-gender-progressive” stereotype, growing anti-Asian racism amid COVID-19, and Asian-Black feminist solidarities), I demonstrate that Asian identity is not fixed but changing according to how it is related to power. I identify and discuss three characteristic types of the identity-power relationship: manifestation of power-as-oppression through the construction of identity, reproduction of power-as-oppression, and creation of new forms of power, namely resistance and solidarity, through the reconstruction of identity. The lives of multiply-oppressed women (e.g., Asian women) can be understood as the locus at which the identity-power relationship is worked out, that is, the power dynamics of oppression are manifested, reproduced, and resisted through the (re)construction of identity. Building on this analysis and engaging discussions on non-ideal theory in social/political philosophy, I argue that intersectional feminist theory can be best explained as a non-ideal theory in a strong sense: a theory that, by focusing on the lives of the multiply oppressed, presents the intersecting dynamics of oppression as central and theory-guiding.
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作为非理想理论的交叉性女性主义理论:亚裔美国女性身份与权力的导航
本文通过批判性地考察在交叉性的主要批评中隐含的身份概念,发展了交叉性女权主义理论的叙述。评论家们用交叉性来划分女性的身份类别,如种族、阶级和性别。我认为,这种解释的基础是形而上学的假设,即身份是一个固定的实体。这是对身份的误解,忽视了身份的实际生活方式。通过探索亚裔美国女性在日常生活中如何体验他们的“亚洲”身份(例如,“亚洲人是父权vs白人是性别进步”的刻板印象,在COVID-19期间日益增长的反亚洲种族主义,以及亚洲黑人女权主义者的团结),我证明了亚洲人的身份不是固定的,而是根据它与权力的关系而变化的。我识别并讨论了身份-权力关系的三种特征类型:通过身份的建构来表现权力作为压迫,权力作为压迫的再生产,以及通过身份的重建来创造新的权力形式,即抵抗和团结。多重被压迫女性(如亚洲女性)的生活可以被理解为身份-权力关系形成的轨迹,即压迫的权力动态通过身份的(重新)建构得到表现、再现和抵抗。基于这一分析和对社会/政治哲学中非理想理论的讨论,我认为交叉女权主义理论可以被最好地解释为一种强烈意义上的非理想理论:一种通过关注众多受压迫者的生活,将压迫的交叉动态作为中心和理论指导的理论。
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26 weeks
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