Crossing Identitarian Lines: Women's Liberation and James Baldwin's Early Essays |
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Authors: | BRIAN NORMAN |
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Affiliation: | 1. Idaho State University , Pocatello, Idaho, USA normbria@isu.edu |
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Abstract: | Since a gender‐free society has never existed historically, feminist thinking that posits the equality of the sexes is inherently Utopian. Feminist Utopian writers, working within the traditional genre of science‐fiction, a genre particularly well‐suited to revolutionary theoretical discussions, have explored three types of feminist utopias: all‐female societies, biological androgyny, and genuinely egalitarian two‐sex societies. This essay examines examples of feminist utopias in each of these three paradigms to determine to what extent they are “abstract” (in Ernst Bloch's terminology), ie. merely wish‐fulfillment fantasies, and to what extent “concrete” and thus viable blue‐prints for future political and social organization. |
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