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The Ethic of Care, Female Subjectivity and Feminist Legal Scholarship
Authors:Maria Drakopoulou
Affiliation:(1) Kent Law School, Eliot College, University of Kent, Canterbury, CT2 7NS, UK
Abstract:The object of this essay is to explore the central role played by the ‘ethic of care’ in debates within and beyond feminist legal theory. The author claims that the ethic of care has attracted feminist legal scholars in particular, as a means of resolving the theoretical, political and strategic difficulties to which the perceived ‘crisis of subjectivity’ in feminist theory has given rise. She argues that feminist legal scholars are peculiarly placed in relation to this crisis because of their reliance on the social ‘woman’ whose interests are the predominant concern of feminist legal engagement. With the problematisation of subjectivity, the object of feminist legal attention disappears and it is in attempts to deflect the negative political consequences of this that the ethic of care has been invoked, the author argues, unsuccessfully. The essay concludes with suggestions as to how the feminist project in law might proceed in the wake of the crisis of subjectivity and the failure of the ethic of care to resolve it. This revised version was published online in July 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.
Keywords:academic feminism  care  crisis of subjectivity  ethic of care  feminist legal scholarship  Gilligan  relational jurisprudence  subjectitivity  woman  women
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