Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W2125653514> ?p ?o ?g. }
Showing items 1 to 79 of
79
with 100 items per page.
- W2125653514 endingPage "136" @default.
- W2125653514 startingPage "105" @default.
- W2125653514 abstract "VER the past decade of theorizing sexuality it seems that two camps have 0 staked out the bulk of the critical territory. One group of thinkers and activists sees sexuality as attacked by scientific discourses, which, often through government institutions, exercise control in the form of “bio-power.” The other set of critics represents violence against sexuality as a matter of phallic prerogative gone wild, unrestrained by a passive, accommodating liberal state. To render the division more succinctly, one might say there are Michel Foucault and Catharine MacKinnon. Whereas Foucault’s central problem is “liberation,” MacKinnon’s is subordination. That is, Foucault does a genealogy of scientiu sextiulis’s false freedom of confession, while MacKinnon attempts to reveal the hidden, but real circumstances of women’s oppression. Foucault plays Nietzsche to MacKinnon’s Marx. Foucault says “The emperor is dead.” MacKinnon responds, “His sword still cuts, and I wish he would put some clothes on.” A betrayed or infinitely deferred “liberation” is not the same as subordination, and the response to false liberation must be fundamentally different from that to oppression. Indeed Foucault and MacKinnon are almost completely at odds, and have come to stand for deep divisions among those theorizing sexual politics. On the one hand, there are those who seek to escape the “power/knowledge” grip of sexual discourse by denying the significance of a sovereign legal authority, and by inviting us to play with patriarchy’s symbols in such a way as to denaturalize them and thus impede any kind of regulation of sexual practices. On the other hand, there are those who insist that radical groups, and then society as a whole, must overtly institutionalize a refusal of gender-based oppression, using the state" @default.
- W2125653514 created "2016-06-24" @default.
- W2125653514 creator A5075174356 @default.
- W2125653514 date "1993-06-01" @default.
- W2125653514 modified "2023-09-25" @default.
- W2125653514 title "Leviticus in America: The Politics of Sex Crimes1" @default.
- W2125653514 cites W2078394161 @default.
- W2125653514 doi "https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-9760.1993.tb00006.x" @default.
- W2125653514 hasPublicationYear "1993" @default.
- W2125653514 type Work @default.
- W2125653514 sameAs 2125653514 @default.
- W2125653514 citedByCount "0" @default.
- W2125653514 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W2125653514 hasAuthorship W2125653514A5075174356 @default.
- W2125653514 hasBestOaLocation W21256535142 @default.
- W2125653514 hasConcept C107993555 @default.
- W2125653514 hasConcept C11413529 @default.
- W2125653514 hasConcept C121332964 @default.
- W2125653514 hasConcept C144024400 @default.
- W2125653514 hasConcept C163258240 @default.
- W2125653514 hasConcept C17744445 @default.
- W2125653514 hasConcept C186229450 @default.
- W2125653514 hasConcept C199539241 @default.
- W2125653514 hasConcept C2776526686 @default.
- W2125653514 hasConcept C2779670817 @default.
- W2125653514 hasConcept C2780980845 @default.
- W2125653514 hasConcept C41008148 @default.
- W2125653514 hasConcept C48103436 @default.
- W2125653514 hasConcept C53813258 @default.
- W2125653514 hasConcept C62520636 @default.
- W2125653514 hasConcept C94625758 @default.
- W2125653514 hasConceptScore W2125653514C107993555 @default.
- W2125653514 hasConceptScore W2125653514C11413529 @default.
- W2125653514 hasConceptScore W2125653514C121332964 @default.
- W2125653514 hasConceptScore W2125653514C144024400 @default.
- W2125653514 hasConceptScore W2125653514C163258240 @default.
- W2125653514 hasConceptScore W2125653514C17744445 @default.
- W2125653514 hasConceptScore W2125653514C186229450 @default.
- W2125653514 hasConceptScore W2125653514C199539241 @default.
- W2125653514 hasConceptScore W2125653514C2776526686 @default.
- W2125653514 hasConceptScore W2125653514C2779670817 @default.
- W2125653514 hasConceptScore W2125653514C2780980845 @default.
- W2125653514 hasConceptScore W2125653514C41008148 @default.
- W2125653514 hasConceptScore W2125653514C48103436 @default.
- W2125653514 hasConceptScore W2125653514C53813258 @default.
- W2125653514 hasConceptScore W2125653514C62520636 @default.
- W2125653514 hasConceptScore W2125653514C94625758 @default.
- W2125653514 hasIssue "2" @default.
- W2125653514 hasLocation W21256535141 @default.
- W2125653514 hasLocation W21256535142 @default.
- W2125653514 hasOpenAccess W2125653514 @default.
- W2125653514 hasPrimaryLocation W21256535141 @default.
- W2125653514 hasRelatedWork W1498557191 @default.
- W2125653514 hasRelatedWork W1798408895 @default.
- W2125653514 hasRelatedWork W181847242 @default.
- W2125653514 hasRelatedWork W194151232 @default.
- W2125653514 hasRelatedWork W196130135 @default.
- W2125653514 hasRelatedWork W1990198476 @default.
- W2125653514 hasRelatedWork W1992684836 @default.
- W2125653514 hasRelatedWork W2034200826 @default.
- W2125653514 hasRelatedWork W2078080949 @default.
- W2125653514 hasRelatedWork W2154042620 @default.
- W2125653514 hasRelatedWork W2317641221 @default.
- W2125653514 hasRelatedWork W2405443547 @default.
- W2125653514 hasRelatedWork W2489885151 @default.
- W2125653514 hasRelatedWork W2504695022 @default.
- W2125653514 hasRelatedWork W2535224059 @default.
- W2125653514 hasRelatedWork W2571423787 @default.
- W2125653514 hasRelatedWork W2623866012 @default.
- W2125653514 hasRelatedWork W569593163 @default.
- W2125653514 hasRelatedWork W577187650 @default.
- W2125653514 hasRelatedWork W643858850 @default.
- W2125653514 hasVolume "1" @default.
- W2125653514 isParatext "false" @default.
- W2125653514 isRetracted "false" @default.
- W2125653514 magId "2125653514" @default.
- W2125653514 workType "article" @default.