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Freedom Fit for a Feminist? On the Feminist Potential of Quentin Skinner's Conception of Republican Freedom
Author(s) -
Lena Halldenius
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
redescriptions
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2308-0914
pISSN - 2308-0906
DOI - 10.7227/r.17.1.5
Subject(s) - hierarchy , power (physics) , sociology , feminist theory , feminism , the republic , gender studies , law , epistemology , political science , philosophy , physics , quantum mechanics
The aim of this paper is to make it credible that there are feminist reasons for being a republican about freedom. In focus is Quentin Skinner’s conception of republican, or “neo-Roman”, freedom. Republican theory in history has not excelled in making poverty, gender hierarchy, and racism within the republic into main sources of concern. So can there be a radical republican theory of liberty fit for a feminist, to make sense of arbitrary power in the every day life of work, households, and local communities, where power is vague and unorganized? Proceeding from three questions – What does freedom mean? Under what circumstances does the issue arise? Why should we care? – I argue that in a feminist republicanism the lived experience of the unfree will have primary and not, as Skinner now suggests, secondary importance. A feminist republican will be particularly concerned not only with what unfreedom is but with what it is like

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