Emancipation as Moral Regulation: Latin American Feminisms and Neoliberalism

Hypatia 30 (3):547-563 (2015)
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Abstract

The article argues that feminist emancipation, understood as practices and discourses of self-development and of solidarity as empowerment, has become entangled with the neoliberal project. Indeed, emancipation as self-improvement has become synonymous with moral regulation projects that seek to adapt women to global capitalism. The article explores the relation between emancipation and neoliberal regulation from a situated approach by addressing the experience of Latin American feminisms, with a particular focus on Chile. This approach recognizes by implication that Latin American feminisms are co-extensive, or coeval, with North American and European ones, and are not merely derivative forms

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