cloth 1-56639-387-6 $89.50, Jan 96, Available
paper 1-56639-388-4 $34.95, Jan 96, Available
312 pp
6x9
1 table
Is a "woman-friendly" state possible? Can women achieve full social citizenship? At a time when backlash against people of color, women, and the poor is accelerating, this account of the experiences of Australian feminists is illuminating: Australian feminists succeeded in making women's issues like child care and domestic violence part of the main stream political agenda. Inside Agitators is the first full-length study of the Australian femocrats published in the United States.
Hester Eisenstein (herself a former femocrat) chronicles the efforts of a cohort of women, feminist bureaucrats, who changed the gender landscapefrom the initial invitation to enter government by Labor in 1973 to the rise of neo-liberalism and the contemporary attack on the public sector. Connecting the femocrats to specifically Australian features of political culture and political economy, this book analyzes the implicit political theory of the femocrats. Eisenstein addresses the issues of strategies for social change, class, race and racism, sexuality and sexual politics, "gendered" experience, and accountability to the women's movement.
This important study explores the possibilities and limits of the contemporary attempt by the women's movement to constitute women as a "gender interest," and to use state power as an instrument for social change.
Excerpt available at www.temple.edu/tempress
Preface and Acknowledgments
Introduction
Part I: The Femocratic Experiment
1. The Australian Social Compact
2. The Early Years
3. Establishing the Feminist Mafia
4. Milestones
Part II: A Distinctive Ideology
5. Using the State
6. Mandarins or Missionaries? Accountability to the Women's Movement
7. A Class-Conscious Agenda
8. Race, Ethnicity, and Racism
Part III: Gendered Experiences
9. Official Feminism and the Politics of Gender
10. Sexual Politics
11. Sisterhood is Fragile
Part IV: The Limits of Reform
12. Roadblocks
13. The Rise of Neo-Liberalism
14. The End of an Era?
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Hester Eisenstein, Professor in the Department of American Studies at the State University of New York at Buffalo, held posts at both the Office of Equal Opportunity in Public Employment and the Education Department in New South Wales, Australia. She is the author of several books, including Contemporary Feminist Thought. |
Political Science and Public Policy
Women's Studies
Women in the Political Economy, edited by Ronnie J. Steinberg.
No longer active.
Women in the Political Economy, edited by Ronnie J. Steinberg, includes books on women and issues of work, family, social movements, politics, feminism, and empowerment. It emphasizes women's roles in society and the social construction of gender and also explores current policy issues like comparable worth, international development, job training, and parental leave.
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