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-65%Beyond Female Masochismâ
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$8.73The Story
Frigga Haug, one of Germanyâs best-known feminist and Marxist critics, develops here a profound challenge both to womenâs oppression and to what she sees as womenâs âcollusionâ in that oppression. Rejecting the essentialism of much feminist writing today, along with the denial of subjectivity that still permeates Marxism, Haug explores the connections between Marxist theory and the emancipation of women, a project which necessarily involves, as she explains, âdiverting a powerful and long-standing anger into detective work.â
Under the headings of Socialization, Work and Politics, she combines the fruits of these investigations with the influential âmemory-workâ she has pioneered with womenâs collectives, to throw startling new light on a wide range of themes and issues: personal ethics and public morality; daydreams, domesticity and consumerism; privatization, new technologies and the restructuring of the workplace; the evolution of womenâs politics in Germany; the future of socialist feminism in the wake of Communismâs collapse.
Above all, this is a book which strives to find new links between the micro-politics of daily life and the evolving structures of capitalism. âIf we could find out why and when our hopes for life were buried,â Haug argues, âthen we could try to take our history in our own hands.â Beyond Female Masochism provides the materials, and inspiration, to do just that.
Under the headings of Socialization, Work and Politics, she combines the fruits of these investigations with the influential âmemory-workâ she has pioneered with womenâs collectives, to throw startling new light on a wide range of themes and issues: personal ethics and public morality; daydreams, domesticity and consumerism; privatization, new technologies and the restructuring of the workplace; the evolution of womenâs politics in Germany; the future of socialist feminism in the wake of Communismâs collapse.
Above all, this is a book which strives to find new links between the micro-politics of daily life and the evolving structures of capitalism. âIf we could find out why and when our hopes for life were buried,â Haug argues, âthen we could try to take our history in our own hands.â Beyond Female Masochism provides the materials, and inspiration, to do just that.
Description
Frigga Haug, one of Germanyâs best-known feminist and Marxist critics, develops here a profound challenge both to womenâs oppression and to what she sees as womenâs âcollusionâ in that oppression. Rejecting the essentialism of much feminist writing today, along with the denial of subjectivity that still permeates Marxism, Haug explores the connections between Marxist theory and the emancipation of women, a project which necessarily involves, as she explains, âdiverting a powerful and long-standing anger into detective work.â
Under the headings of Socialization, Work and Politics, she combines the fruits of these investigations with the influential âmemory-workâ she has pioneered with womenâs collectives, to throw startling new light on a wide range of themes and issues: personal ethics and public morality; daydreams, domesticity and consumerism; privatization, new technologies and the restructuring of the workplace; the evolution of womenâs politics in Germany; the future of socialist feminism in the wake of Communismâs collapse.
Above all, this is a book which strives to find new links between the micro-politics of daily life and the evolving structures of capitalism. âIf we could find out why and when our hopes for life were buried,â Haug argues, âthen we could try to take our history in our own hands.â Beyond Female Masochism provides the materials, and inspiration, to do just that.
Under the headings of Socialization, Work and Politics, she combines the fruits of these investigations with the influential âmemory-workâ she has pioneered with womenâs collectives, to throw startling new light on a wide range of themes and issues: personal ethics and public morality; daydreams, domesticity and consumerism; privatization, new technologies and the restructuring of the workplace; the evolution of womenâs politics in Germany; the future of socialist feminism in the wake of Communismâs collapse.
Above all, this is a book which strives to find new links between the micro-politics of daily life and the evolving structures of capitalism. âIf we could find out why and when our hopes for life were buried,â Haug argues, âthen we could try to take our history in our own hands.â Beyond Female Masochism provides the materials, and inspiration, to do just that.