Without a Word: Teaching Beyond Women's Silence |
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Page 160
... stance accomplished through eye contact . However , as the young woman ' s
question of concern has shown , just as often it is explicitly articulated . In the
feminist classroom such caretaking responses on the part of women toward men
are ...
... stance accomplished through eye contact . However , as the young woman ' s
question of concern has shown , just as often it is explicitly articulated . In the
feminist classroom such caretaking responses on the part of women toward men
are ...
Page 174
130 ) She goes on to point out that : concern for this basic struggle should
motivate feminist thinkers to talk and write more about how we relate to men and
how we change and transform relationships with men characterized by
domination .
130 ) She goes on to point out that : concern for this basic struggle should
motivate feminist thinkers to talk and write more about how we relate to men and
how we change and transform relationships with men characterized by
domination .
Page 176
For many young women the concern about the compatibility of feminist politics
with marriage and family is the concrete realization that making public what our
feminist consciousness reveals about women ' s experiences of patriarchy can ...
For many young women the concern about the compatibility of feminist politics
with marriage and family is the concrete realization that making public what our
feminist consciousness reveals about women ' s experiences of patriarchy can ...
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Contents
Pedagogy and the Question of Silence 2 Experience | 14 |
A Jury of Her Peers 22 Second | 43 |
Implications for Feminist Teaching 59 Anger as | 61 |
Copyright | |
6 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
academy analysis anger articulate asked become begin believe body challenge classroom collective common concern concrete constructed context continue course create culture desire discourse dominant economic engaged example experience expression feel feminist finally forms gender graduate groups hand ideology important individuals intellectual interests issues knowledge language learning lives look male marginalization marked Meagan meaning moment moments mother never offer oppression ourselves particular patriarchy pedagogical phallocentric political position possibilities practices present privilege question reality reflect relations relationship response seemed sense sexual shared silence situation social space speak specific stories struggle subjectivity subordination suggests teacher teaching tell things tion transformative turn understanding violation voices wish woman women writing young