8 found
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Janice G. Raymond [13]Janice Raymond [2]
  1.  27
    Reproductive Gifts and Gift Giving: The Altruistic Woman.Janice G. Raymond - 1990 - Hastings Center Report 20 (6):7-11.
    Reproductive gift relationships must be seen in their totality, not just as helping someone have a child. Noncommercial surrogacy cannot be treated as a mere act of altruism—any valorizing of altruistic surrogacy and reproductive gift‐giving must be assessed within the wider context of women's political inequality.
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  2.  58
    A response to Abrams.Janice G. Raymond - 1984 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 9 (3):319-320.
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  3.  11
    Female Friendship: Contra Chodorow and Dinnerstein.Janice Raymond - 1986 - Hypatia 1 (2):37 - 48.
    The author critiques two widely-used works in Women's Studies for their hetero-relational content and the ways in which they minimize the necessity for affinities between women. Dinnerstein and Chodorow give us in theory what movies such as Kramer vs. Kramer depict in the film. It is not co-parenting and the inclusion of the male in an equal parenting role that will remedy present "sexual arrangements," without first giving attention to women's relations with each other.
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  4.  51
    Medicine as patriarchal religion.Janice G. Raymond - 1982 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 7 (2):197-216.
    This article demonstrates, by use of specific theological paradigms, how medicine functions as religion. In doing so, medicine promotes anti-feminist beliefs, symbols, social memories, and churchly structures. The essay then examines the enhancement of women's health from a feminist philosophical perspective. It argues against fetishizing in health promotion to the extent that everything comes to be regarded as therapeutic. Medicine has advanced the ideology that life itself is a disease to be cured or, at best, prevented. Alternative ethics of health (...)
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  5.  21
    Response.Janice G. Raymond - 1988 - Hypatia 3 (2):139-144.
    This essay is a response to the comments and critique, included in this issue, of Claudia Card and Marilyn Friedman to my book, A Passion for Friends. In this response, I emphasize the crucial distinction between female separation and dissociation from the world, so as to register the difference between the positive and negative separations in which women are engaged. I also expand the discussion of individuality and individualism. The latter has arisen within the context of a feminist liberal campaign (...)
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  6. Sex Trafficking and Prostitution: Human Rights and Health Consequences.Janice G. Raymond & H. Patricia Hynes - 2000 - In Lorraine Dennerstein & Margret M. Baltes (eds.), Women's Rights and Bioethics. UNESCO. pp. 122--135.
  7.  44
    Book review: Claudia card. Lesbian choices. New York: Columbia university press, 1995. [REVIEW]Janice G. Raymond - 1996 - Hypatia 11 (2):185-188.
  8.  15
    Book review: Claudia card. Lesbian choices. New York: Columbia university press, 1995. [REVIEW]Janice G. Raymond - 1996 - Hypatia 11 (2):185-188.