Read Sex, Culture, and Justice: The Limits of Choice Online
Authors: Clare Chambers
Tags: #Philosophy, #Political, #Political Science, #Political Ideologies, #Conservatism & Liberalism, #Social Science, #Anthropology, #Cultural, #Feminism & Feminist Theory, #Women's Studies, #Gender Studies
rape, 51, 105, 169
rationality, 220–21, 224–28 Rawls, John
on decent peoples, 13 n. 21 equal basic liberty principle, 117 on gender equality, 182–4 original position, 106
on political liberalism, 94–95, 160–62,
164–65
on public reason, 12, 75
See also
justice; liberalism; political liber- alism
Raz, Joseph, 98, 164, 209 n. 16, 234–35,
239–49, 253–54, 256. For disambigua- tion s
ee
perfectionism
recognition, 103–11
redistribution, 108–11, 123.
See also
equality
Redstockings, 60
reflexivity, 52–53, 56, 58, 60–62
reflexive law, 74
relativism, 7, 12, 81, 96.
See also
univer- salism
religion
and children, 141–43
compared with employment, 132–41 and equality, 141–46
and freedom, 141–46
functions of, 134 n. 27
key tenets of, 136, 140–41, 143–46
not subject to the principles of justice, 182 priesthood.
See
Christianity
religious fundamentalism, 107, 112, 163
See also
Christianity; cultures; Hutterite;
Islam; nuns; Sikhism reproduction, 141–2, 178–79, 181, 196 resistance.
See
change
respect, 198–200, 204–5 Richards, Janet Radcliffe, 30 risk, 225–26
Roe v. Wade
, 72–73 Rorty, Richard, 99–100
Routine secular circumcision (
rsc
)
and power, 43–44, 212
compared with
fgm
, 35–37, 178
defined, 35 n. 34
reasons for, 35–36, 40–41
statistics, 34
Royce, Josiah, 162
rsc
.
See
routine secular circumcision Rushdie, Salman, 144
sadomasochism, 51, 204–6, 215–16.
See also
practices, harmful; paternalism; sexu- ality
Santa Clara Pueblos, 147
Scoccia, Danny, 220, 222, 227 n. 50
seat belts, 225
self-harm, 215.
See also
harm; practices, harmful
Sen, Amartya, 166
Senegal, 213–14
sex.
See
feminism, gender, patriarchy, sexu- ality
Sex and the City
, 4, 28–29, 262
sex/gender distinction, 47–50 sexuality
as a capability, 178
controlled by genital cutting, 34–37, 42,
178, 212–13
as the eroticisation of dominance and sub- mission, 49–51, 65, 169.
See also
patri- archy
homosexuality and heterosexism, 106, 109, 204–6, 246–48, 252
transsexualism, 75 n. 110
Shachar, Ayelet, 9, 118, 146–56
Sher, George, 175 n. 31, 256–58
shoes, 1–3, 27–29, 44, 47, 53, 88, 262–63,
266
Sierra Leone, 213
Sikhism, and motorcycle helmets, 203 Skanderowicz, Andrew, 186
slavery, 14, 82, 211, 234–35
smoking, 73, 174–75, 178, 197, 203, 230 n.
57.
See also
health; paternalism; prac- tices, harmful
social construction
and autonomy, 160–61, 168–72, 195, 257–
58, 263–65
and culture, 118–19, 149–50 as ‘‘Death of Man,’’ 85–87
as distinct from coercion, 191
and feminism/gender, 4–13, 24–30, 45–
49, 58–59, 124–26
Foucauldian theories of, 21–33 as implying homogeneity, 111–13 and the influence factor, 123–24 and justice, 39–40, 262–66
and liberalism, 7–13, 30–33, 56, 78–80,
113–14
of preferences, 168–72 and the state, 71–72
three levels of (Hirschmann), 87–93
two aspects of (options and preferences), 93, 159, 172–73, 262–63
socialism, 110
Somalia, 35
South Korea, 35, 38, 41
Spanner case, 204–6
speech, 73.
See also
discourse; language starving.
See
dieting
state
conceptions of, 70–71, 74, 153
neutrality of, 73, 95, 103–4, 106–7, 195 state intervention
accompanying symbolic change, 68 effectiveness of, 76–78
as emancipatory and egalitarian, 68, 70–
79, 113, 129–30
in free choices, 3, 121, 124, 126–27, 161,
263–64
in cultural practices, 14–16, 100, 132–46,
153–57, 183–84, 186 194–201, 229–31,
264–66
involving a balance of harm and benefit, 195–98
liberal wariness of, 22–23, 44, 71–74, 130–
32, 171–72
as nonpaternalist, 207
See also
coercion; paternalism; perfection- ism; totalitarianism
sterilization, 178–9, 181.
See also
reproduc- tion
steroids, 210–11, 216 n. 36.
See also
drug use; exercise, physical
stilettos.
See
shoes
subaltern counterpublics, 110–11
subject, formation of, 24, 30, 32, 44, 52–53,
83, 86–87, 89–93, 220, 263
submission, 45
Sudan, 214
suicide, 215, 217–18
Sunstein, Cass, 73, 75, 117, 144, 220
surveillance, 23–24, 27–28
Swanson, Colleen, 188–89
Swanson, John, 189
Sweden, 41
Taliban, 107, 163, 168 n. 19
tattoos, 178, 215
Taylor, Charles, 53, 95, 107 n. 72
tea drinking, 173–75, 197
Today
program, 248 n. 23
toleration, 14, 97 n. 41
torture, 14
totalitarianism, 124, 131, 136, 220.
See also
coercion; state intervention
United Kingdom
breast implant statistics in, 6, 186 n. 55,
193
British Library, 239 n. 8
censorship in, 205 n. 7, 216 n. 36 Department of Health of, 187–90 employment law in, 134–35 House of Lords of, 204
law on female genital mutilation, 178 n. 39, 216 n. 36
Oxfordshire shoe survey, 2–4 Spanner case, 204–6
United Nations, 176 n. 33, 197 n. 84 United States of America
breast implant statistics in, 6–7, 193 n.76 Catholicism in, 145
cosmetic surgeons in, 185 Declaration of Independence of, 97 domestic violence in, 199
fathers’ movement in, 65 female genital mutilation in, 42
Food and Drug Administration of, 187–88 House of Representatives of, 189 Institute of Medicine, 187–90, 225
multiculturalism in, 15–16
president of, 31
Roe v. Wade,
71–73
routine secular circumcision in, 35–37, 40–42
slavery in, 92
Supreme Court of, 72–73, 147–48 universalism
and liberalism, 8, 12–14, 81, 85–86,
93–101
and multiculturalism, 103, 127
and social construction, 81, 91–93, 243 connection with equality, 97–100 defended by Martha Nussbaum, 170–71 four criteria for universal values, 98 n. 44 required for justice, 5
Van Lenning, Alkeline, 191 n. 72, 196 n. 81 veiling.
See
Islam
Victoria’s Secret, 185 violence
domestic, 73, 91, 128 n. 18, 164, 198–99,
258–59
as not justified by consent, 216 n. 37 symbolic.
See
Bourdieu, Pierre versus power, 31
women discouraged from, 25
See also
rape; sadomasochism
Vogue
magazine, 181
voice, 135–36
Wacquant, Lo¨ıc, 61
Wall, Stephen, 228–29, 234–36, 244
war, 215 n. 33
Webber, Sarah, 42
Weinstock, Isaac, 5–6
well-being, 229, 239–40
White, Stuart, 142–46
Willis, Ellen, 60
Wolf, Naomi, 24–26, 29
Wollstonecraft, Mary, 24
women.
See
feminism; gender; patriarchy
Young, Iris Marion, 84, 101–10, 119, 133 n.
26
Yuracko, Kimberley, 88 n. 20
“Drawing on Catharine MacKinnon, Pierre Bourdieu, and Michel Foucault, Clare Chambers argues that although all our choices are socially constructed, some are more in keeping with the demands of justice, equality, and autonomy than others. Focusing on choices by women in liberal cultures, she detects two troubling features—disadvantage and influence. When both are present, an injustice is likely to be done, warranting state intervention. An incisive, well- written book with a sustained, original argument.”
“Chambers’s refreshing approach has the potential to expand the scope of conventional liberal theory by showing how liberals can (and should) directly meet the challenge of postmodern approaches and by demonstrating that feminist contributions are the well from which most innovations in liberalism are drawn.”
—Avigail Eisenberg, University of Victoria
“This book takes up an important topic in the political philosophy of liberalism: What is the state to do when individuals make choices that are socially constructed and disadvantageous to them? It insightfully and originally bridges the divide between continental and analytic political philosophy, combining the insights of Foucault, Bourdieu, and Butler on one side, and those of Rawls, Raz, Nussbaum, Okin, and others on the other side. The book contributes significantly to the literature of liberalism, autonomy, and feminism.”
—Ann Cudd, University of Kansas
The Pennsylvania State University Press University Park, Pennsylvania www.psupress.org