Economic Geography
Feminist economic geographies
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Economic and social geography
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Feminist economic geographies Gendered identities, cultural economies and economic change Linda McDowell Thinking and writing personally It is salutary to reflect on changes in the sub-discipline, on why particular types of work and different theoretical perspectives are important at different moments. And, for those of us who have long argued against the notion of the monastic, disembodied intellectual, living on thought and air alone, much like an angel, the circumstances of everyday life that both stimulate new research questions and constrain their exploration must also enter the story. For this reason I have not only outlined changing approaches and research questions but linked them to changes in my own life. Methodological debates about reflexivity have transformed the domain of geography from the days when ‘objectivity’ was paramount and the personal attributes of a scholar were regarded as irrelevant. But feminist scholarship has challenged this assumption. And feminist theory and practice is what has framed my work over the years, as I was influenced by and contributed to the exciting expansion of feminist-inspired work within and beyond geography from the 1960s. From 1968, when I was a new and timid undergraduate, in different ways at different times I have continued to think, read and act within a framework largely influenced by a commitment to moving towards greater equality between men and women in the home, in the workplace and in other arenas of daily and political life. Over the intervening years there has been a remarkable shift in some of these arenas. Feminist geographical scholar- ship is, for example, now visible and vibrant and considerable numbers of women, and men, are involved in exploring geographies of difference, of gender relations in different parts of the world and at different times, publishing in a range of journals as well as in the specialist journal in our discipline – Gender, Place and Culture. The universities have also changed over the last three decades. In Britain in 1968, about 8 per cent of women in my age group had the opportunity of going to university. Now over 40 per cent of the relevant age cohort enter higher educa- tion, and this cohort consists of as many, if not more, young women than young men, although the transfer of a large part of the costs of this education to individuals and their families is regrettable. Among the academic staff too, there is now a more equitable representation of women, although not yet among the highest ranks. But merely counting the different numbers of men and women and celebrating change is not sufficient. What is more important, at least for intellectual effort, has been the transformation of academic discourses – that wholesale critique and dismantling of the theoretical propositions that lay behind the invisibility of women’s lives across the sciences, social sciences and the humanities. As feminist scholars have argued, the ungendered notion of the rational individual in the social sciences and humanities (Pateman and Grosz 1986) and unlocated theory – what Haraway (1991) termed the ‘view from nowhere’ – have excluded women and women’s lives from academic consideration. This view from nowhere in fact reflects the life world of the powerful and excludes daily life, the home and the politics of reproduction from the subject matter of the social sciences and the humanities on the assumption than these are merely trivial and local issues, unimportant in the grander scheme of things, than is the ‘public’ worlds of men. This critique is well known and largely accepted but has diffused into different sub-arenas of geography at differential rates. It has perhaps been in economic geography (and economics) that the impact of feminist scholarship and its methodological consequences has been slowest to be felt. This is not to deny the valiant efforts of a significant number of feminist economists in the US and the UK (see for example Bergman 1990; Blau and Ferber 1992; Donath 2000; Ferber and Nelson 1993; Folbre 1994; Folbre 2001; Folbre and Nelson 2000; Gardiner 1997; Humphries 1995; Jacobsen 1994; Milkman 1987; Milkman and Townsley 1994; Nelson 1992; Waring 1988) who have challenged the assumptions of their discipline and added new substantive issues, such as caring, to its agenda. Download 3.2 Kb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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