Record Details

Reconfiguring gendered independence: conceptual struggles in women's organizations

DSpace at University of Victoria

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Field Value
 
Creator Gartside, Crystal Rose
 
Date 2007-12-17T17:14:44Z
2007-12-17T17:14:44Z
2007
2007-12-17T17:14:44Z
 
Identifier http://hdl.handle.net/1828/274
 
Description This research explores how concepts of women’s independence are constituted, through neo-liberal and feminist discourses, by members of a feminist organization for women leaving abuse. Analysis of eight interviews and eight focus groups with organizational members, collected over a four year period, surface contesting discourses about individualism, choice, economic independence, collectivity and structural analyses. These discourses interact to produce complex conceptualizations of women’s independence, and produced new subjectivities for women within the organization. In the data, neo-liberal and feminist influences produced an integration of self-responsibility and collectivity, creating new ways of understanding women’s agency. Knowledge of these changing notions of gendered independence in organizations allows feminists to be strategic and reflexive about feminist political work within changing social and political terrain.
 
Language English
en
 
Rights Available to the World Wide Web
 
Subject feminist
independence
feminist organizations
discourse analysis
UVic Subject Index::Humanities and Social Sciences::Social Sciences::Social service
UVic Subject Index::Humanities and Social Sciences::Social Sciences::Women's studies
 
Title Reconfiguring gendered independence: conceptual struggles in women's organizations
 
Type Thesis
 
Contributor Reitsma-Street, Marge