Results for ' women’s emancipation'

996 found
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  1.  27
    Women's emancipation and the theology of sex in nineteenth-century russia.L. V. Polyakov - 1992 - Philosophy East and West 42 (2):297-308.
  2.  4
    Beyond Emancipation: Subjectivities and Ethics among Women in Europe's Islamic Revival Communities.Jeanette S. Jouili - 2011 - Feminist Review 98 (1):47-64.
    This article addresses the complex reflections regarding gender relations expressed by women active in the contemporary Islamic revival movements in Europe (especially France and Germany). Much recent research conducted among these groups aims to counter the rather negative accounts prevailing in public discourses on gender and Islam. This literature notably argues that women's conscious turn to Islam is not necessarily a reaffirmation of male domination, but that it constitutes a possibility for agency and empowerment. However, when faced with certain ‘traditionalist’ (...)
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  3.  8
    Kierkegaard's Writings, I: Early Polemical Writings.Søren Kierkegaard - 2009 - Princeton University Press.
    Early Polemical Writings covers the young Kierkegaard's works from 1834 through 1838. His authorship begins, as it was destined to end, with polemic. Kierkegaard's first published article touches on the theme of women's emancipation, and the other articles from his student years deal with freedom of the press. Modern readers can see the seeds of Kierkegaard's future career these early pieces. In "From the Papers of One Still Living," his review of Hans Christian Andersen's novel Only a Fiddler, Kierkegaard (...)
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  4.  7
    The Feminists: Women's Emancipation Movements in Europe, America, and Australasia, 1840-1920.Richard J. Evans - 1979
    This text brings together what is known about liberal feminist and socialist movements for the emancipation of women all over the world in the 19th and early 20th centuries.
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  5.  49
    My Plan for Women's Emancipation and My Plan for Self-Improvement.Deng Chunlan - 1997 - Chinese Studies in History 31 (2):29-33.
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  6. Computational Transformation of the Public Sphere: Theories and Cases.S. M. Amadae (ed.) - 2020 - Helsinki: Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Helsinki.
    This book is an edited collection of original research papers on the digital revolution of the public and governance. It covers cyber governance in Finland, and the securitization of cyber security in Finland. It investigates the cases of Brexit, the 2016 US presidential election of Donald Trump, the 2017 presidential election of Volodymyr Zelensky, and Brexit. It examines the environmental concerns of climate change and greenwashing, and the impact of digital communication giving rise to the #MeToo and Incel movements. It (...)
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  7.  60
    "Separate and Equal"? Mujeres Libres and Anarchist Strategy for Women's Emancipation.Martha A. Ackelsberg - 1985 - Feminist Studies 11 (1):63.
  8.  7
    Socialist Societies Old and New: Progress towards Women's Emancipation?Maxine Molyneux - 1981 - Feminist Review 8 (1):1-34.
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  9.  8
    Book Review: Women’s Emancipation and Civil Society Organisations: Challenging or Maintaining the Status Quo? edited by Christina Schwabenland, Chris Lange, Jenny Onyx, and Sachiko Nakagawa. [REVIEW]Rebekah Burroway - 2018 - Gender and Society 32 (2):274-276.
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  10. Book Review: Women'S Emancipation and Civil Society Organisations: Challenging or Maintaining the Status Quo? [REVIEW]Elva Lynch-Bathgate - 2018 - Feminist Review 118 (1):117-118.
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  11. A Radical Revolution in Thought: Frederick Douglass on the Slave’s Perspective on Republican Freedom.Alan M. S. J. Coffee - 2020 - In Bruno Leipold, Karma Nabulsi & Stuart White (eds.), Radical Republicanism: Recovering the Tradition's Popular Heritage. Oxford, UK: pp. 47-64.
    While the image of the slave as the antithesis of the freeman is central to republican freedom, it is striking to note that slaves themselves have not contributed to how this condition is understood. The result is a one-sided conception of both freedom and slavery, which leaves republicanism unable to provide an equal and robust protection for historically outcast people. I draw on the work of Frederick Douglass – long overlooked as a significant contributor to republican theory – to show (...)
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  12.  2
    Book Review: Women'S Emancipation and Civil Society Organisations: Challenging or Maintaining the Status Quo? [REVIEW]Elva Lynch-Bathgate - 2018 - Feminist Review 118 (1):117-118.
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  13.  39
    A “Quick and Dirty” Approach to Women’s Emancipation and Human Rights?1.Sari Kouvo - 2008 - Feminist Legal Studies 16 (1):37-46.
    During the past decade, women’s and human rights ‘language’ has moved from the margins to the ‘mainstream’ of international law and politics. In this paper, the author argues that while feminists and human rights activists criticise the ‘mainstream’s interpretation of women’s and human rights, ‘we’ do not question what becoming part of the mainstream and the cosmopolitan classes has meant for us. Drawing on examples of how women’s and human rights arguments have been used in the post-conflict (...)
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  14.  13
    Infidel Feminism: Secularism, Religion and Women’s Emancipation, England 1830–1914.Sara Davin - 2015 - The European Legacy 20 (1):82-83.
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  15.  4
    Research on Li Dazhao’s Women’s Emancipation Thought.瑶 穆 - 2022 - Advances in Philosophy 11 (4):592-596.
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  16. Women's Liberation and Human Emancipation.Mihailo Markovic - 1973 - Philosophical Forum 5 (1):145.
     
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  17.  51
    Mobilization without Emancipation? Women's Interests, the State, and Revolution in Nicaragua.Maxine Molyneux - 1985 - Feminist Studies 11 (2):227.
  18.  18
    Golf Day 2005@ Federal Golf Club, Red Hill.Longest Drive Women’S..-Lyn McGuinness, Longest Drive Men’S.-Bill Williams, Best Callaway Score-Njegosh Popvich, Best Accountant-Michael Slaven, Best Lawyer-Les Klekner, Overall Women’S.. Ivana Joseph, Overall Mens-Andy Colquhoun, Kow Chen & Abel Ong - 2005 - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology.
    "Golf day 2005 @ federal golf club, red hill." Ethos: Official Publication of the Law Society of the Australian Capital Territory, (196), pp. 7.
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  19.  6
    Book Review: Infidel Feminism: Secularism, Religion and Women's Emancipation, England 1830–1914. [REVIEW]Canan Tanir - 2017 - Feminist Review 115 (1):183-185.
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  20.  4
    Book Review: Infidel Feminism: Secularism, Religion and Women's Emancipation, England 1830–1914. [REVIEW]Canan Tanir - 2017 - Feminist Review 115 (1):183-185.
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  21.  1
    Marx and Engels Women’s Contemporary Values of Emancipating the Mind.智婕 郑 - 2022 - Advances in Philosophy 11 (3):364-368.
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  22.  19
    Feminist Readings of Early Modern Culture: Emerging Subjects.Frederick G. L. Huetwell Professor of English and Women'S. Studies Valerie Traub, Valerie Traub, Callaghan Dympna, M. Lindsay Kaplan & Dympna Callaghan - 1996 - Cambridge University Press.
    How did the events of the early modern period affect the way gender and the self were represented? This collection of essays attempts to respond to this question by analysing a wide spectrum of cultural concerns - humanism, technology, science, law, anatomy, literacy, domesticity, colonialism, erotic practices, and the theatre - in order to delineate the history of subjectivity and its relationship with the postmodern fragmented subject. The scope of this analysis expands the terrain explored by feminist theory, while its (...)
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  23.  7
    Ironies of Emancipation: Changing Configurations of ‘Women's Work’ in the ‘Mission of Sisterhood’ to Indian Women.Jane Haggis - 2000 - Feminist Review 65 (1):108-126.
    On her arrival in Travancore in 1819 Mrs Mault, as wife of the new missionary, immediately set about establishing a school for convert girls and a ‘lace industry’ to employ convert women. Her actions reflect that pattern of activism and organization historians of gender and imperialism have identified as the ‘mission of domesticity’ conducted by European and North American Christian missionary women to their non-Christian ‘sisters’ in the colonial empires being established by their respective nation-states throughout the nineteenth century. Mrs (...)
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  24. Women’s Enlightenment: Early Feminist Critiques of Kant's Gendered Ideal of Human Progress in 18th-Century Germany and Poland.Olga Lenczewska - manuscript
    This book project reshapes the way we think about Enlightenment: rather than viewing it primarily as the era of the emancipation of human reason, it emphasizes the gendered nature of the Enlightenment ideal of human progress and investigates how this ideal oppressed women. I take a critical look at this ideal from within intellectual debates of the time, examining how the restrictive view of women’s socio-political and educational opportunities was challenged by progressive female German and Polish thinkers of (...)
     
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  25.  4
    Modernization and Emancipation from Above: Women's Studies in Portugal.Erna Kas & Marianne Grünell - 1995 - European Journal of Women's Studies 2 (4):535-545.
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  26.  22
    Women’s Power To Be Loud: The Authority of the Discourse and Authority of the Text in Mary Dorcey’s Irish Lesbian Poetic Manifesto “Come Quietly or the Neighbours Will Hear”.Katarzyna Poloczek - 2011 - Text Matters - a Journal of Literature, Theory and Culture 1 (1):153-169.
    Women's Power To Be Loud: The Authority of the Discourse and Authority of the Text in Mary Dorcey's Irish Lesbian Poetic Manifesto "Come Quietly or the Neighbours Will Hear" The following article aims to examine Mary Dorcey's poem "Come Quietly or the Neighbours Will Hear," included in the 1991 volume Moving into the Space Cleared by Our Mothers. Apart from being a well-known and critically acclaimed Irish poet and fiction writer, the author of the poem has been, from its beginnings, (...)
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  27. Women in the Nationalist Discourse: A Case Study of Tilak's Approach to Women's Education and Emancipation.Parimala V. Rao - 2007 - In Sabyasachi Bhattacharya (ed.), Development of Modern Indian Thought and the Social Sciences. Oxford University Press. pp. 10--241.
  28. Racism in Pornography and the Women's Movement.Representing Women - 1994 - In Alison M. Jaggar (ed.), Living with contradictions: controversies in feminist social ethics. Boulder: Westview Press. pp. 171.
  29.  8
    African women’s theology and the re-imagining of community in Africa.Loreen Maseno - 2021 - HTS Theological Studies 77 (2).
    African women’s theology has a commitment to the emancipation of women covering the several themes such as ecclesiology, hospitality, community, spirituality, sacrifice, ecology and missiology. African women’s theology examines African culture and demonstrates an understanding of women as a distinct group with inherent varieties within this category. Furthermore, African women’s theology incorporates experiences of African women in their perspectives while analysing women’s subordination. This article is a re-imagining of community in African theology. African theology has (...)
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  30.  30
    Reflexivity and women’s agency: a critical realist morphogenetic exploration of the life experience of Sri Lankan women.Lakshman Wimalasena - 2017 - Journal of Critical Realism 16 (4):383-401.
    While the vital contribution of feminist scholarship is acknowledged, it has been criticized for overly relying on the influence of society upon women’s lives. In this paper, I demonstrate the usefulness of also considering the influence of agency upon women’s lives, specifically agential reflexivity. Using the work and life histories of a group of Sri Lankan women, I use Margaret Archer’s morphogenetic approach to show how investigating reflexivity can provide greater insights into the subtleties associated with women’s (...)
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  31.  18
    Negotiating ‘Surrogate Mothering’ and Women’s Freedom.Zairu Nisha - 2022 - Asian Bioethics Review 14 (3):271-285.
    Surrogacy is one of the desired reproductive technologies for family formation, yet surrogate mothers are subjected to unethical treatments and unbalanced power relations in India. Such treatment obscures women’s free decision-making and can be detrimental to their maternal self. Recently, the Surrogacy Act, 2021, has received the President’s approval to regulate surrogacy practices by limiting them for the altruistic motives which have again provoked the burning debates regarding reproductive technologies, women’s emancipation and procreative labour. The paper thus (...)
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  32.  7
    Barriers to Women’s Progress After Atrocity: Evidence from Rwanda and Bosnia-Herzegovina.Marie E. Berry - 2017 - Gender and Society 31 (6):830-853.
    Researchers have recently documented the unexpected opportunities war can present for women. While acknowledging the devastating effects of mass violence, this burgeoning field highlights war’s potential to catalyze grassroots mobilization and build more gender sensitive institutions and legal frameworks. Rwanda and Bosnia-Herzegovina serve as important examples of this phenomenon, yet a closer examination of both cases reveals the limits on women’s capacity to take part in and benefit from these postwar shifts. This article makes two key contributions. First, it (...)
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  33.  10
    Popular Sexual Knowledges and Women's Agency in 1920s England: Marie Stopes's Married Love and E.M. Hull's the Sheik.Karen Chow - 1999 - Feminist Review 63 (1):64-87.
    This article examines popular discourses of women's sexuality in 1920s England and argues that sex manuals like Marie Stopes's Married Life and sex novels like E.M. Hull's The Sheik, despite their adherence to status quo values, were liberating for women through their affirmation of women's sexual subjectivity. Stopes's enormously popular book contributed strongly to a new understanding of women's sexual drives as natural and autonomous. The changing attitudes were reflected in the numbers of postwar women who actively participated in the (...)
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  34.  11
    Feminism and the Cooling of Intimacy. Unintended Consequences of Women’s Movements.Maciej Musiał - unknown
    Numerous diagnoses of contemporary transformations of love and eroticism emphasise the fact that the intimate life has become democratised and liberated. Anthony Giddens argues that personal relationships increasingly become compatible with the model of pure relationship, which means that they are more egalitarian and that both partners are free to choose and to negotiate the shape of their relations. Jeffrey Weeks claims that in “the world that we have won”, women, homosexuals and queers are increasingly considered as equal to heterosexual (...)
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  35.  16
    The Subversive Potential of Women’s Relation to Work.Elsa Galerand & Danièle Kergoat - 2017 - Critical Horizons 18 (1).
    ABSTRACTThis article makes the hypothesis that it is the relation to work, and not work itself, that holds subversive, or even liberating, potential for women. We begin by showing the theoretical convergence between this hypothesis and feminist epistemology. In order to test the hypothesis empirically, we then look at the paradoxical ways in which many women relate to paid work. In order to understand this paradox, we argue that it is necessary to go back to a feminist definition of work (...)
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  36. Similarities and Differences in Postcolonial Bengali Women’s Writings: The Case of Mahasweta Debi and Mallika Sengupta.Blanka Knotková-Čapková - 2012 - Argument: Biannual Philosophical Journal 2 (1):97-116.
    The emancipation of women has become a strong critical discourse in Bengali literature since the 19th century. Only since the second half of the 20th century, however, have female writers markedly stepped out of the shadow of their male colleagues, and the writings on women become more and more often articulated by women themselves. In this article, I focus on particular concepts of femininity in selected texts of two outstanding writers of different generations, a prose writer, and a woman (...)
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  37.  34
    Empowering Women: The Role of Emancipative Forces in Board Gender Diversity.Steven A. Brieger, Claude Francoeur, Christian Welzel & Walid Ben-Amar - 2019 - Journal of Business Ethics 155 (2):495-511.
    This study investigates the effect of country-level emancipative forces on corporate gender diversity around the world. Based on Welzel’s theory of emancipation, we develop an emancipatory framework of board gender diversity that explains how action resources, emancipative values and civic entitlements enable, motivate and encourage women to take leadership roles on corporate boards. Using a sample of 6390 firms operating in 30 countries around the world, our results show positive single and combined effects of the framework components on board (...)
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  38. Under Western Eyes: On Farris's In the Name of Women's Rights.Baraneh Emadian - 2019 - Critique: Journal of Socialist Theory 47 (1):143-158.
    This essay reflects upon the category of femonationalism as theorised in Sara Farris's book, In the Name of Women's Rights: The Rise of Femonationalism, with a focus on her critique of theories of populism. Farris's approach, it is argued, productively pinpoints the exceptional position of Muslim and non-western migrant women in the reproduction of the material conditions of social reproduction in western Europe. However, the force of Farris's Marxist theorisation of femonationalism is partly undermined by the absence of any reference (...)
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  39.  38
    The Historical Grounds of the Turkish Women’s Movement.Osman Senemoğl & Ipek Merçil - 2014 - Human and Social Studies 3 (1):13-27.
    In this article the authors would like to present a history of the Turkish feminist movement. The roots of the feminist movement go back to the last decades of Ottoman Empire in Turkey when westernisation had started to take place. During the firts decade of the Republic many steps were taken to enable women to get involved in public, political and professional life and to encourage more equality in family matters. Women’s emancipation became a significant symbol of modernity. (...)
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  40.  9
    Making the ‘reserve army’ invisible: Lengthy parental leave and women’s economic marginalisation in Hungary.Erika Kispeter & Eva Fodor - 2014 - European Journal of Women's Studies 21 (4):382-398.
    Generous parental leave policies are popular in a number of countries around the world and are usually seen as a sign of the ‘family friendliness’ of the state. Relying on in-depth interviews with mothers on parental leave in Hungary, the authors argue that the context in which the policies are implemented should be examined when evaluating their consequences. In semi-peripheral, resource-poor Hungary lengthy parental leave policies turn women into an invisible ‘reserve army of labourers’. While their employment is mostly unaccounted (...)
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  41.  6
    Redeploying the Abjection of the Pog Gandao ‘Wilful Woman’ for Women’s Empowerment and Feminist Politics in a Mystical Context.Constance Akurugu - 2020 - Feminist Review 126 (1):39-53.
    In this article, I examine the marginalisation and abjection of strongwilled and assertive women in Dagaaba settings in rural north-western Ghana. This is done by paying attention to a local identity category known as pog gandao—‘a woman who is more than a man’. The pog gandao, or what I gloss as the wilful woman, concept is used by men and women locally to stigmatise hard-working and assertive Dagaaba women. Drawing inspiration from the reappropriation and redeployment of queer abjection for the (...)
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  42.  24
    " We all love with the same part of the body, don't we?": Iuliia Voznesenskaia's Zhenskii Dekameron, New Women's Prose, and French Feminist Theory.Yelena Furman - 2009 - Intertexts 13 (1):95-114.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:“We all love with the same part of the body, don’t we?”Iuliia Voznesenskaia’s Zhenskii Dekameron, New Women’s Prose, and French Feminist TheoryYelena Furman (bio)Starting out as a poet who eventually turned to fiction, Iuliia Voznesenskaia was also one of the main figures of the Soviet feminist movement, a fact that makes her biography both unusual and courageous. In the 1970s, Voznesenskaia’s involvement with the dissident movement in Leningrad (...)
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  43.  5
    Finding Freedom: Hegel's Philosophy and the Emancipation of Women.Sara Jane MacDonald - 2008 - McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP.
    G.W.F. Hegel is often vilified for his conservative reactionary philosophy, particularly with respect to the rights of women. Alternatively, tracing a path through G.W.F Hegel's political thought, MacDonald demonstrates that, in fact, the logic of Hegel's argument necessitates the recognition of equal political and civil rights for all human beings. Combining a thoughtful study of Hegel's political thought with close readings of two pivotal works of literature, MacDonald's book shows how the perennial tension between fulfilled, yet diverse, personal lives and (...)
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  44.  9
    Violence and Violation: Women and Secure Settings1.Kate Noble Women & Gill Aitken - 2001 - Feminist Review 68 (1):68-88.
    This article focuses on service provision for women who are involuntarily referred under the UK Mental Health Act (1983) into medium and high security care in England and Wales. We explore how physical and procedural security in such settings is prioritized over relational care (see also Fallon Report, Department of Health, 1999a and NHS Executive, 2000 – Tilt Report). We are not arguing against the importance of protecting the public from the acts of dangerous members of our society. However, we (...)
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  45.  13
    Woman Into Citizen: The World Movement Towards the Emancipation of Women... With an Introd. by Helvi Sipilä.Arnold Whittick - 1979
    Monograph on the historical evolution of women's rights from 1902 to 1978 - describes various campaigns for achieving civil rights for women, rights for political participation, equal opportunities for the woman worker, etc., and considers the contributions made to the emancipation of women by the international alliance of women (interest group), the League of Nations, the UN (role of UN) and other international organizations, the international women's year, etc. ILO mentioned. Bibliography pp. 312 to 314, chronology of major events (...)
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  46.  51
    Women's Rights, Human Rights: International Feminist Perspectives.J. S. Peters & Andrea Wolper - 2018 - Routledge.
    This comprehensive and important volume includes contributions by activists, journalists, lawyers and scholars from twenty-one countries. The essays map the directions the movement for women's rights is taking--and will take in the coming decades--and the concomittant transformation of prevailing notions of rights and issues. They address topics such as the rapes in former Yugoslavia and efforts to see that a War Crimes Tribunal responds; domestic violence; trafficking of women into the sex trade; the persecution of lesbians; female genital mutilation; and (...)
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  47. Ashapurna Devi’s “Women” – Emerging Identities in Colonial and Postcolonial Bengal.Suchorita Chattopadhyay - 2012 - Argument: Biannual Philosophical Journal 2 (1):75-96.
    Ashapurna Devi, a prominent Bengali woman novelist (1909–1995) focused on women’s creativity and enlightenment during the colonial and postcolonial period in Bengal, India. She herself displayed immense will power, tenacity and an indomitable spirit which enabled her to eke out a prominent place for herself in the world of creative writing. Her life spanned both colonial India and independent India and these diverse experiences shaped her mind and persona and helped her to portray the emerging face of the enlightened (...)
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  48.  26
    Emancipation as a Three‐Dimensional Process for the Twenty‐First Century.Diana Coole - 2015 - Hypatia 30 (3):530-546.
    This article elicits two overlapping frameworks in which emancipation has been understood and applied to women. The first distinguishes between a) an original definition grounded in Roman Law and defined as release from slavery and b) an Enlightenment sense in which an emancipatory process is associated with a critical ethos. I derive this latter meaning from an analysis of Kant's and Foucault's respective essays on enlightenment. Although they agree that emancipation is an ongoing critical task, I emphasize two (...)
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  49. Is women's labor a commodity?Elizabeth S. Anderson - 1990 - Philosophy and Public Affairs 19 (1):71-92.
  50. A Women's Place in Education: Historical and Sociological Perspectives on Gender and Education.S. Delamont - 1997 - British Journal of Educational Studies 45 (2):208-209.
     
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