What does woman mean? According to two competing views, it can be seen as a sex term or as a gender term. Recently, Jennifer Saul has put forward a contextualist view, according to which woman can have different meanings in different contexts. The main motivation for this view seems to involve moral and political considerations, namely, that this view can do justice to the claims of trans women. Unfortunately, Saul argues, on further reflection the contextualist view fails to do justice to those moral and political claims that motivated the view in the first place. In this article I argue that there is a version of the contextualist view that can indeed capture those moral and political aims, and in addition, I use this case to illustrate a...
Under what conditions can a feminist film historiography be imagined and practised today? How should...
Under what conditions can a feminist film historiography be imagined and practised today? How should...
Critical Terms for the Study of Gender edited by Catharine R. Stimpson and Gilbert Herdt is an unusu...
In this paper, I engage with a recent contextualist account of gender terms (particularly, “woman”) ...
Are words like ‘woman’ or ‘man’ sex terms that we use to talk about biological features of individua...
Within modem feminist debate, the definition of woman has created two different core theories. The...
The debates on, in, and between feminist and trans* movements have been politically intense at best ...
At no other point in human history have the definitions of "woman" and "man," "male" and "female," "...
The construction of gender in the social environment is closely related to external sex. Transwomen ...
Given the centrality of bodily experience to cognitive theory and to the notion of conceptual metaph...
Abstract—The issue of sexist language has been debated within feminist circles since the 1960s. The ...
The construction of woman as object/other in the dominant discourse is an accepted problematic in fe...
In “Amelioration and Inclusion: Gender Identity and the Concept of Woman,” Katharine Jenkins argues ...
Due to the standards and values that characterized our society through history women have had a hidd...
This discussion paper takes as its starting point the marginal existence of men in the seemingly mon...
Under what conditions can a feminist film historiography be imagined and practised today? How should...
Under what conditions can a feminist film historiography be imagined and practised today? How should...
Critical Terms for the Study of Gender edited by Catharine R. Stimpson and Gilbert Herdt is an unusu...
In this paper, I engage with a recent contextualist account of gender terms (particularly, “woman”) ...
Are words like ‘woman’ or ‘man’ sex terms that we use to talk about biological features of individua...
Within modem feminist debate, the definition of woman has created two different core theories. The...
The debates on, in, and between feminist and trans* movements have been politically intense at best ...
At no other point in human history have the definitions of "woman" and "man," "male" and "female," "...
The construction of gender in the social environment is closely related to external sex. Transwomen ...
Given the centrality of bodily experience to cognitive theory and to the notion of conceptual metaph...
Abstract—The issue of sexist language has been debated within feminist circles since the 1960s. The ...
The construction of woman as object/other in the dominant discourse is an accepted problematic in fe...
In “Amelioration and Inclusion: Gender Identity and the Concept of Woman,” Katharine Jenkins argues ...
Due to the standards and values that characterized our society through history women have had a hidd...
This discussion paper takes as its starting point the marginal existence of men in the seemingly mon...
Under what conditions can a feminist film historiography be imagined and practised today? How should...
Under what conditions can a feminist film historiography be imagined and practised today? How should...
Critical Terms for the Study of Gender edited by Catharine R. Stimpson and Gilbert Herdt is an unusu...