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THE FEMINIST 
PHILOSOPHY 
READER
Alison Bailey and Chris Cuomo
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Published by McGraw-Hill, an imprint of The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 1221 Avenue of the Americas, 
New York, NY 10020. Copyright © 2008. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or 
distributed in any form or by any means, or stored in a database or retrieval system, without the prior written 
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storage or transmission, or broadcast for distance learning.
This book is printed on acid-free paper. 
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ISBN:  978-0-07-340739-5
MHID:  0-07-340739-9
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Credits: The credits section for this book begins on page 881 and is considered an extension of the 
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Bailey, Alison.
  The feminist philosophy reader / Alison Bailey, Chris Cuomo. — 1st ed.
      p. cm.
  Includes bibliographical references and index.
  ISBN-13: 978-0-07-340739-5 (alk. paper)
  ISBN-10: 0-07-340739-9 (alk. paper)
 1.  Feminist theory.  I.  Cuomo, Chris J.  II.  Title.
HQ1190.B34 2008
305.4201—dc22
    2007030064
The Internet addresses listed in the text were accurate at the time of publication. The inclusion of a Web site 
does not indicate an endorsement by the authors or McGraw-Hill, and McGraw-Hill does not guarantee the 
accuracy of the information presented at these sites.
www.mhhe.com
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CONTENTS 
Preface  viii     For Further Reading    80  
Acknowledgments  x Media Resources  80 
   1.     A FEMINIST TURN IN   3.   SEX AND GENDER     83
PHILOSOPHY      1
     Introduction to  The Second Sex   
Simone de Beauvoir Translated 
   2.    OPPRESSION AND 
and edited by H. M. Parshley    87
RESISTANCE     9
  Performative Acts and Gender 
    The Traffi c in Women: Notes 
Constitution: An Essay in 
on the “Political Economy” of Sex  
Phenomenology and Feminist 
Gayle Rubin    13
Theory  
  Oppression
Judith Butler    97
Marilyn Frye    41
  Reconstructing Black Masculinity
    The Master’s Tools Will Never 
bell hooks      107
Dismantle the Master’s House  
     Should There Be Only Two Sexes?  
Audre Lorde    49
Anne Fausto-Sterling    124
  On Psychological Oppression  
  Transgender Butch: Butch/FTM 
Sandra Lee Bartky    51
Border Wars and the Masculine 
  White Privilege and Male Privilege   Continuum  
Peggy McIntosh    61 Judith Halberstam    144
  Playfulness, “World”-Travelling,    Visualizing the Body: Western 
and Loving Perception   Theories and African Subjects  
María Lugones    69 Oyèrónké Oyeˇwùmí    163
iii
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iv  Contents
    For Further Reading    177       American Anthropological 
Association Statement on 
Media Resources  178 
“Race” (1998  )    309
    Some Kind of Indian: On 
   4. SEXUALITIES   179
Race, Eugenics, and 
  This Sex Which Is Not One   Mixed-Bloods  
Luce Irigaray Translated by M. Annette Jaimes    312
  Catherine     Porter  
  Purity, Impurity, and Separation
 with    Carolyn   Burke  183
María Lugones      329
    A Desire of One’s Own: 
  Locating Traitorous Identities: 
Psychoanalytic Feminism 
Toward a View of Privilege- 
and Intersubjective Space  
Cognizant White Character  
Jessica Benjamin    188
Alison Bailey    344
  Sexuality  
  Tiddas Speakin’ Strong: 
  Catherine A. Mackinnon    204
Indigenous Women’s 
  Sex War: The Debate Between  Self-Presentation within 
Radical and Libertarian Feminists   White Australian Feminism   
Ann Ferguson    222    Aileen Moreton-Robinson    355
     Kiss and Tell: Questioning  For Further Reading    371
Censorship
Media Resources    372
Persimmon Blackbridge, 
Lizard Jones, and Susan Stewart    227
   6. POSTCOLONIAL AND   
    Claiming the Right to 
TRANSNATIONAL FEMINISMS  375
Be Queer
    Women Workers and 
Chris Cuomo      241
Capitalist Scripts: 
  Toward a Genealogy of Black Female 
Ideologies of Domination, 
Sexuality: The Problematic of Silence  
Common Interests, and 
Evelynn M. Hammonds    249 the Politics of Solidarity  
    For Further Reading    259   Chandra Talpade Mohanty    379
Media Resources  260    Feminism and Globalization 
Processes in Latin America
   Ofelia Schutte      401
   5. RACE AND RACISM   261
The Prison Industrial Complex  
  Gender & Race: The Ampersand 
  Angela Y. Davis      412
Problem in Feminist Thought  
Elizabeth V. Spelman    265   Sexual Violence as a Tool 
of Genocide
  Mapping the Margins: 
   Andrea Smith      421
Intersectionality, Identity 
Politics, and Violence against    Experiments with Freedom: 
Women of Color   Milieus of the Human  
Kimberlé Williams Crenshaw    279 Aihwa Ong    439
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Contents  v
From A    Critique of Postcolonial  Act, Dependency Work, and 
Reason   Gender Equality  
Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak    450 Eva Feder Kittay    584
For Further Reading    460   Vulnerability by Marriage
Media Resources    461  Susan Orkin      600
    After the Family Wage: Gender 
   7. FEMINIST ETHICAL THEORY     463 Equity and the Welfare State
Nancy Fraser      622
    Moral Orientation and 
Moral Development 
    Difference and Social Policy: 
Carol Gilligan      467
Refl ections in the Context of 
Social Movements
    The Generalized and the Concrete 
Iris Marion Young      638
Other: The Kohlberg-Gilligan 
Controversy and Moral Theory
  Updating the Gendered Empire: 
Seyla Benhabib      478
Where Are the Women in Occupied 
Afghanistan and Iraq?
    Taking Care: Care as Practice 
Cynthia Enloe      649
and Value  
Virginia Held    497 For Further Reading    667
Media Resources    668 
    Confl icted Love  
Kelly Oliver    506    9. FEMINIST EPISTEMOLOGIES    669 
    Separating from Heterosexualism     Purifi cation and Transcendence 
Sarah Hoagland    519 in Descartes’s Meditations  
Susan Bordo    672
  Seeing Power in Morality: 
A Proposal for Feminist      Love and Knowledge: 
Naturalism in Ethics   Emotion in Feminist 
Margaret Urban Walker    539 Epistemology
Alison M. Jaggar      687
  The Moral Powers of 
Victims     How Is Epistemology Political?
Claudia Card    548 Linda Martín Alcoff      705
For Further Reading    565   Taking Subjectivity into 
Media Resources    566  Account
Lorraine Code      718
     8.  FEMINIST POLITICAL 
  “Strong Objectivity” and 
PHILOSOPHIES     567 Socially Situated Knowledge
  Autonomy, Social Disruption,  Sandra Harding      741
and Women
  The Project of Feminist 
Marilyn Friedman      570
Epistemology: Perspectives 
  Taking Dependency Seriously:  from a Nonwestern Feminist
The Family and Medical Leave  Uma Narayan      756
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vi  Contents
  Coming to Understand:    Be-Longing: The Lust for 
Orgasm and the Epistemology  Happiness
of Ignorance Mary Daly      841
Nancy Tuana      765
  Mothers, Monsters, and Machines
For Further Reading    791 Rosi Braidotti      857
Media Resources    792     
  La Conciencia de la Mestiza/ 
Towards a New Consciousness  
  10. FEMINIST ONTOLOGIES     793
Gloria Anzaldúa    870
  The Moral Signifi cance of Birth
For Further Reading    878
Mary Anne Warren      796
Media Resources  879
  A Phenomenology of Fear: 
The Threat of Rape and Feminine  Credits  881
Bodily Comportment     Index  883
Ann J. Cahill      810
  Toward a Feminist Theory 
of Disability
Susan Wendell      826
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This book is dedicated to our Mothers
Bonnie Powers Cuomo
and
Judith Stanton Bailey
(1933–2000)
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PREFACE 
  F
eminism sparked one of the most important and infl uential theoretical 
endeavors of the last fi fty years, and feminist philosophical contributions 
to that effort have been profound. Today the number of scholarly works and 
publications, university courses, conferences, and organizations dedicated 
to feminist philosophy is impressive indeed. In addition to articulating and 
investigating key questions and issues concerning sexism and its vicissi-
tudes, feminist philosophers have brought new insights to nearly every area 
of the discipline of philosophy, from ethics to philosophy of science, from 
political theory to aesthetics to the study of historical philosophical fi gures. 
But twenty years ago, when we were graduate students, we read and as-
sembled photocopied packets of readings for our courses. This was the only 
way to provide students with a thorough survey of the most signifi cant and 
engaging articles in the fi eld. 
  T  oday there are many more textbooks on feminist philosophy, but most 
anthologies focus on specifi c areas of inquiry, such as ethics, political 
theory, or epistemology. After years of reading, teaching, and winnowing 
through the literature, we are now delighted to present a reader that captures 
a few of the more defi ning moments in feminist philosophy, from the earli-
est second wave to the post-9/11 present. Our emphasis is on the fi eld as it 
emerged in the United States Europe, out of both feminist movements and 
academic communities, and most of the essays included here fi rst appeared 
in English. The chapters focus on central issues in feminism, such as the 
meanings of privilege and o ppression, sex, gender, sexuality, race, nation, 
and some of the core areas of philosophy, including ethics, epistemology, 
politics, and ontology. Theoretical methods represented  include analytic, 
viii
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Preface  ix
continental,  psychoanalytic,  postmodern,  and  postcolonial,  and  a  few 
things in between. This volume refl ects the view that feminism’s founda-
tional concerns necessarily include racism, heterosexism, and other forms 
of oppression and injustice. And although this text was also shaped by his-
torical factors, including our own limitations and the hegemonic infl uence 
of Anglophone philosophy and American feminist theory, we hope to have 
presented a pluralist and inclusive reading of what history has provided. 
    The Feminist Philosophy Reader  will introduce some readers to feminist 
theory, and others to the discipline of Philosophy. Brief essays at the begin-
ning of each chapter provide overviews of the general issues and methods 
connecting the various selections. Because the work presented here is both 
practically signifi cant and theoretically sophisticated, we believe students 
at many different levels will fi nd it informative, useful, and perhaps chal-
lenging as well. The table of contents is structured in relation to several 
primary themes, but there is a phenomenal amount of conversation, com-
mon ground, and creative tension among the essays overall. A number of 
innovative courses in feminist philosophy could be built around the text. 
Each chapter also includes a list of resources for further reading and fi lms 
that complement the topics addressed in each section. 
   Writing philosophy is commonly considered a solo pursuit, but that 
impression hides the fact that all philosophy is generated out of historical 
infl uences,  conversations,  communities,  and  cross-pollinations.  Feminist 
philosophy is no exception. In fact, phallocratic and other marginalizing 
traditions in the discipline of philosophy have made it necessary for femi-
nists and other “outsiders” to create and nurture intellectual spaces where 
critical and resistant understandings can develop. It is quite unlikely that 
a volume such as this would have been possible without those spaces, 
including organizations such as the Society for Women in Philosophy, the 
International Association of Women Philosophers, and the National Women’s 
Studies Association, all founded in the 1970s, and still going strong today. 
We are indebted to those legacies of feminist creativity and resistance, and 
the webs of relation, support, and knowledge they have fostered. And we are 
deeply grateful to the authors included in this volume, along with the genera-
tions of feminist intellectuals who comprised their surrounding communi-
ties, and all the contemporary theorists and activists who comprise ours. 
 Alison Bailey and Chris Cuomo 
 July 2007    
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Description:Bailey, Alison. The feminist philosophy reader / Alison Bailey, Chris Cuomo. — 
1st ed. p. cm. Includes  Theories and African Subjects. Oyèrónké Oyewùmí. 163