ABSTRACT

Feminism and transgender, as social factions or collective subjectivities, have historically evaded, vilified or negated each other’s philosophy and subjectivities. In particular, separatist feminist theorists have portrayed the two ‘sides’ as consisting of mutually incompatible aims and subjectivities. These portrayals have worked to the detriment of both feminism and transgender.

Third Wave Feminism and Transgender considers what positive outcomes on society in general, and the law as it pertains to gender in particular, may emerge from the identification of and cooperation between third wave feminism and transgender. Challenging the ‘internecine exclusion’ between and within each faction, Davies shows that queer-inspired philosophical third wave feminism promises to be an inclusive social discourse providing a substantial challenge to mutual exclusion. Indeed, this book explores the span of maternal relations, including womanism, ethics of care and semiotic language and subsequently reveals how gender variant people can highlight the gendered operation of conventional ethics.

With a focus on Carol Gilligan and Julia Kristeva as key instigators of a philosophical third wave of feminism, this enlightening monograph will appeal to students and postdoctoral researchers interested in fields such as women’s studies, transgender studies and gender law.

chapter 1|18 pages

Introduction

Potential for a transgender/third wave feminist coalition

chapter 2|22 pages

Explaining trans lives

Silence and secrecy

chapter 3|26 pages

The third wave

Career feminism or quiet revolution?

chapter 4|31 pages

Legal review

The view from somewhere

chapter 5|34 pages

Third wave philosophy

Dialogic negotiation

chapter 6|22 pages

Identity essentialism to subjectivity-in-process

The whole trans person

chapter 7|27 pages

Closed and static texts to open and evolving narratives

Articulation and openness

chapter 8|26 pages

Exclusion to inclusion

Postdifference for ‘Others’

chapter 9|23 pages

Recommendations

Ghosts in the machine