SciELO - Scientific Electronic Library Online

 
vol.26 issue3“A Detour in Longing”: Gender, Sexuality and Lesbian Desire in Carla Trujillo’s What Night Brings and Emma Pérez’s Gulf DreamsGender Justice in Feminist Analysis of Public Policies in Argentina, Brazil and Chile author indexsubject indexarticles search
Home Pagealphabetic serial listing  

Services on Demand

Journal

Article

Share


Revista Estudos Feministas

Print version ISSN 0104-026XOn-line version ISSN 1806-9584

Abstract

HEMMINGS, Clare. A Feminist Politics of Ambivalence: Reading with Emma Goldman. Rev. Estud. Fem. [online]. 2018, vol.26, n.3, e58564. ISSN 1806-9584.  https://doi.org/10.1590/1806-9584-2018v26n358564.

Feminist theory worldwide is confronting - perhaps as it always has done - a series of deep challenges. On the one hand, awareness of gender and sexual inequalities seems high; on the other, co-optation of feminism for nationalist or other right-wing agendas is rife. On the one hand, feminist social movements are in ascendancy, on the other there is a continued dominance of single issue feminism and a resistance to intersectional, non-binary interventions. If we add in the collapse of the Left in the face of radical movements such as those underpinning Brexit and Trump (and the frequent blaming of feminism for fragmentation of that Left) then it is hard to know what to argue, to whom, and for what ends. In the face of such claims it is tempting to respond with a dogmatic or singular feminism, or to insist that what we need is a shared, clear, certain platform. I want to argue instead - with Emma Goldman (anarchist activist who died in 1940) as my guide - that it can be politically productive to embrace and theorise uncertainty, or even ambivalence, about gender equality and feminism.

Keywords : Feminism; ambivalence; Emma Goldman.

        · abstract in Portuguese     · text in English     · English ( pdf )