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Authors: Clare Chambers

Tags: #Philosophy, #Political, #Political Science, #Political Ideologies, #Conservatism & Liberalism, #Social Science, #Anthropology, #Cultural, #Feminism & Feminist Theory, #Women's Studies, #Gender Studies

Sex, Culture, and Justice: The Limits of Choice (43 page)

BOOK: Sex, Culture, and Justice: The Limits of Choice
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.womenpriests.org/.

Williams, Bernard. ‘‘The Idea of Equality.’’ In
Equality: Selected Readings,
ed. Louis

P. Pojman and Robert Westmoreland. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1997.

———, ed.
Obscenity and Film Censorship: An Abridgement of the Williams Report.

Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1981.

Winter, Bronwyn, Denise Thompson, and Sheila Jeffreys. ‘‘The UN Approach to Harmful Traditional Practices.’’
International Feminist Journal of Politics
4, no. 1 (2002).

Wolf, Naomi.
The Beauty Myth.
London: Vintage, 1990.

———.
Promiscuities: A Secret History of Female Desire.
London: Chatto and Win- dus, 1997.

Wollstonecraft, Mary.
A Vindication of the Rights of Woman.
London: Constable and Company, 1996.

Young, Iris Marion. ‘‘Breasted Experience: The Look and the Feeling.’’ In
The Poli- tics of Women’s Bodies: Sexuality, Appearance and Behavior,
ed. Rose Weitz. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003.

———.
Inclusion and Democracy.
Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000.

———.
Justice and the Politics of Difference.
Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1990.

———. ‘‘Reply to Tebble.’’
Political Theory
30, no. 2 (2002).

Yuracko, Kimberley A.
Perfectionism and Contemporary Feminist Values.
Blooming- ton: Indiana University Press, 2003.

INDEX

abortion, 72, 178

Adkins, Lisa, 61–62, 66 advertising

for Clarks shoes, 27

for Dove deodorant, 27–28 for L’Oreal, 28

and social construction, 27–28 by the state, 137, 198

affirmation versus transformation, 108–11 affirmative action, 102–3, 104.
See also
dis-

crimination Afghanistan, 163, 168 n. 19

ageism, 89–90

agency, 46, 56, 67–68, 83–84, 93.
See also

autonomy; change AIDS, 41–42

Allen, Pamela, 62–63

Amish, 15–16 appearance norms

and autonomy, 87–89

and choice, 2–6, 32–33, 191–92

diversity of, 6, 208

and gender, 25–30, 32–33, 87–91, 184–86,

191 n. 72, 210

and power, 22, 25–30, 184–86, 191 n. 72,

208–9

and race, 32–33

See also
breast implants; cosmetic surgery; female genital mutilation; routine secu- lar circumcision

armed forces, 162–4, 215 n. 33, 234–36

Arendt, Hannah, 31

Arneson, Richard, 9, 206–9, 221, 224, 227

n. 50 assimilation

ideal of, 102–3, 107

as re-universalized citizenship, 149–50 transformational, 103–5

association, freedom of, 142–46 autonomy

and culture, 13–17

enhancement of, 230–31

group versus individual, 13–17, 104–5,

108–14, 118

and harmful norms, 173–76, 191–92, 195.
See also
breast implants; female genital mutilation

and irrational first-order goals, 227–28 and irrational second-order goals, 224–27 limitations of, 228–30

as once-in-a-lifetime choice, 235, 254–55 and paternalism.
See
paternalism

and restricted lives, 162–68, 233–39, 243–

53.
See also
nuns; cultures, restrictive role in justice, 102, 110–13, 229

and social construction, 4, 7, 22–23, 30,

32–33, 38, 56, 79, 86–89, 124, 220–21,

263–65

substantive versus content-neutral, 253–56

transformation approach, 209 n. 16, 235–

39, 244, 247–55

first- versus second-order, 160–68, 219,

228, 233–39, 263–64.
See also
political liberalism

See also
choice; liberty; paternalism; per- fectionism; social construction

Ayalah, Daphna, 5–6

balancing strategy, 225–26 Balde´, Lala, 213

Bambara, 34

bank robbing, 218–19 Barry, Brian

on autonomy, 110

on choice, 109, 118–20, 124–25

on exit, 9, 150

on liberal universalism, 94

on multiculturalism, 128–34, 140–41

on paternalism, 203

on state intervention, 130–34, 136–38

Bartky, Sandra Lee, 24, 26–27

basic structure, 182–84 beauty.
See
appearance norms

beauty pageants, 26–27, 87–90

Benhabib, Seyla, 10–12, 86–87, 199 n. 88

Bentham, Jeremy, 23

Berlin, Isaiah, 124, 226–27

Blanchard, Tamsin, 261 body

gendering of, 24–30, 54–56

Michel Foucault on, 21–24, 33–34, 86 Pierre Bourdieu on, 52–56

and power, 26, 33–38, 43

sexist evaluations of, 32–33, 89–91,

205–6, 208–9

See also
appearance norms; breast im- plants; breasts; cosmetic surgery; fe- male genital mutilation; routine secular circumcision

Bordo, Susan, 6, 24, 32–33

Borneo, 48 Bourdieu, Pierre

on change and resistance, 33, 45–46, 56–

69, 79–80

on gender, 46–52, 54–56

on habitus and field, 52–56, 59–60, 66–

70, 82, 84

normative resources of, 81–85 on regulated liberties, 63–66

on symbolic violence, 50–52, 55, 57–58,

60–61, 82–84

Braley, Silas, 188 breast implants

ban of, 191, 194, 196–200, 203–4, 211,

217, 222–28, 257

in girls and young women, 192–94 invention and testing of, 187–88 normalized and normative, 5–7, 39–40,

43, 90–91, 159, 192–94

and pornography, 185–86

as preparation for university and career, 194

removal of, 186–89

replacement of, 187

as requirements for fame and status, 193– 94, 208, 222–24, 227

as requirements for self-esteem, 1, 159,

227

safety of, 187–89

side effects and complications of, 189–91, 223–25

statistics, 6–7, 186 n. 55, 193

UK Department of Health on, 187–90 USA Food and Drug Administration on,

187–88

USA Institute of Medicine on, 187–90, 225

See also
cosmetic surgery

breasts, 5–7, 30, 159.
See also
body; breast implants

Brown University, 184

Bruley, Susan, 63

Butler, Judith, 24, 64, 85–86, 94, 98

Byrne, John, 186

Califia, Pat, 51

Calvinism, 165

Caney, Simon, 229

capabilities, 166–67, 170, 178–79

capital, 52, 55

career.
See
labor, paid Cartland, Barbara, 51 Catholicism.
See
Christianity change

normative justification of, 7, 249

Pierre Bourdieu on, 33, 45–46, 56–69,

79–80

possibility of, 32–33, 56–58, 124

reactionary, 61–66, 82–83 role of the state, 70–80

through consciousness-raising, 57–63 childcare.
See
labor, caring

children

and cultural membership, 147–48 and religion, 141–43

See also
family; labor, caring China, 174

choice

insufficiency of, 39, 119–32, 156–57, 171–

72, 263

and justice, 42–43, 117–18

in liberalism, 2–4, 8–17, 43–44

as normative transformer, 21, 38, 100, 156,

167, 171, 263

role in change, 67–68

and social construction, 28–33, 38–40, 52,

93

See also
autonomy; liberty Christianity

and homosexuality, 246–48, 252

Papal authority in Catholicism, 144, 250,

252

priesthood, 140–46, 182, 249–52

See also
nuns; religion

circumcision.
See
female genital mutilation; routine secular circumcision

coalitions, 75–76

coercion, 14, 28–31, 43, 51, 87.
See also

power, repressive; state intervention Cohen, G. A., 9

Cohen, Jean, 73 n. 93, 74–75, 78, 106 n. 71

communitarianism, 81, 112 conception of the good, choice of, 162 consciousness-raising, 46, 57–63, 70

consent, 51–52, 82–83, 85, 128 n. 18.
See also

choice

contraception.
See
reproduction contracture.
See
breast implants convents.
See
nuns

Cornell, Drucilla, 12–13, 75, 180 n. 41

corseting, 25 cosmetic surgery

case of Myriam Gaona, 1–3

compared to female genital mutilation, 177

as falsification, 90–91

on feet, 261–62, 266

on knees, 40, 227

as normalized and normative, 6, 26,

208–9

and paternalism, 215–17

racial, 32–33

statistics, 193 n. 76

See also
breast implants Cudd, Ann, 128

cultures

and children, 147–48 clashing with liberalism, 95 as contexts of choice, 13–14

diverse appearance norms in, 5 and diversity, 66

equality between, 104–13

equality within, 9–16, 104–5, 127–28,

130–57, 264–65

multiple memberships in, 152

prejudice against non-Western, 176 n. 33,

180 n. 41, 197 n. 84, 203–4

requirements for membership, 129, 147–

48, 155, 179–80

See also
multiculturalism; religion

Davis, Kathy, 177, 192 n. 75, 227

democracy, 75–76

deliberative, 10, 12–13, 75, 110

Denmark, 41

Derlet, Marlene, 62

determinism, 32, 46, 56–58, 84 dieting

compared with cosmetic surgery, 90–91 compared with female genital mutilation,

177, 181, 191

difference between fasting and starving, 166–67, 170

as discipline, 26–27

difference.
See
cultures; diversity; gender; multiculturalism; religion

disadvantage factor

and childcare, 121–22

defined, 120

and exploitation, 122–23

and intervention, 129–30, 157, 263–65

and justice, 118, 120–21, 156–57, 210

See also
equality; influence factor discipline, 22, 26–30

discourse, 40–42, 45, 92–93

discourse ethics, 10–13

discrimination, 119–20, 125, 128–29, 132–

41.
See also
affirmative action diversity

in the context of social construction, 32–33 cultural.
See
cultures

and liberalism, 100–114

divorce, 129, 131, 134–39, 141–43, 151, 153–55,

230.
See also
marriage Dodo’s Dictum, 118–19 Dogon, 34

domination

Iris Marion Young on, 102

masculine.
See
Bourdieu, Pierre; patri- archy

Michel Foucault on, 33–34 normative critique of, 84–85
See also
equality

Dorkenoo, Efua, 34–35

Dow Corning Corporation, 187–89 drug use, 210–11, 215–16

Dryburgh, Heather, 69

Dryzek, John, 10

dueling, 207–8, 221

Dworkin, Andrea, 24, 49 n. 12, 73, 75, 169

Dworkin, Gerald, 160 n. 1, 162, 207, 221 n.

44, 222, 225

Dworkin, Ronald, 9

education

and autonomy, 126–27, 164, 175 and the equality tribunal, 137

harmed by working mothers, 125 nn. 13–14

Egypt, 35

employment.
See
labor, paid employment tribunal, 133–35, 264

Enlightenment, 23

equality

and harmful practices, 217–19 between groups, 104–13

connection with universalism, 97–100 difference versus sameness, 108 equality tribunal, 132–46, 157, 229–31,

264.
See also
state intervention gender.
See
patriarchy

in liberalism, 4–5, 8–13 normative not objective, 92

of opportunity, 38, 132–35, 182–83 in political liberalism, 181–86 required by justice, 33, 215

and state intervention, 71–73, 172, 195

unequal norms, 7, 29–30, 39–40, 89–90,

191–92

within groups, 9–16, 104–5, 127–28,

130–57

engineering, 69

essentialism, 49, 89–90, 92

Ethiopia, 34–35

European Court of Human Rights, 204 euthanasia.
See
suicide

exercise, physical, 24, 26, 90, 210 exit

freedom of exit in liberalism, 9–10

as insufficient for justice, 79, 118, 135–40,

149–50, 156

as a requirement of justice, 112 and voice, 135–36

explantation.
See
breast implants exploitation, 122–23

false consciousness, 29, 82, 87–88, 180 n.

41, 193–94, 220–22.
See also
ideology

family, 54–55, 65, 182–84.
See also
children; labor, caring

fascism, 107 fasting.
See
dieting

fathers’ movement, 65

Feinberg, Joel, 206 n. 7, 209–12, 215–21,

225

female genital mutilation (
fgm
)

compared with routine secular circumci- sion, 35–37

complications of, 177–78, 213–14, 225

ending, 76–77, 194, 208 n. 13, 213–14

as inherently social, 43, 82, 193–94

Martha Nussbaum on, 176–82, 191–92

objections to, 177–82, 184, 186, 191–92,

196–98, 203

reasons for, 34–36, 41–42

women’s experience of, 121 n. 9, 212–15

UK law on, 178 n. 39, 216 n. 36 feminism

and the body, 24–26, 33

and change, 56–58, 67–68, 70–71

cultural, 101

debates within, 76 n. 111

and genealogy, 37–38

and Michel Foucault, 21–22, 33

and Pierre Bourdieu, 46, 56–58 political not moral, 211 sex/gender distinction, 49–50

and social construction, 4, 7–10

and the state, 70–71, 75

and universalism, 5, 85–86

See also
patriarchy

fgm
.
See
female genital mutilation field.
See
Bourdieu, Pierre Firestone, Shulamith, 57, 60

footbinding, 49 n. 12, 174–75, 194 Foucault, Michel

and autonomy, 30–31, 56, 86, 172

on the body, 21–24, 33–34, 86

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