„Ona nie była jedną z nas”. Wokół „feminizmu” Hannah Arendt
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Date
2007
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Wydawnictwo Naukowe WNPiD UAM w Poznaniu
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''She was not one of us''. About Hannah Arendt's ''feminism''
Abstract
Feminists have a problem as they create themselves that which they fight against.
On the one hand they demand that they are perceived through the perspective of femininity and they want to emphasize this femininity. On the other hand, though, they
fight against a stereotypical feminine image. Arendt is different – she does not distin-
guish women because of their gender. In this sense Arendt is neither a feminist nor an
ant-feminist. She does not touch upon the issue of gender at all. She does not claim that
a woman lives at home whereas a man lives in the world, in the public space. Yet she
does claim that the space of the household is the realm of necessity while the public
space – that of freedom. In Arendt’s opinion in the public space are operating people
rather than men or women. Mary Dietz is therefore right in saying that gender loses
significance at the operational level. This concerns both genders. In Arendt’s theory
there exists a single category – that of a citizen. A citizen has no gender at all. He or she
can be a man or woman at home, and not in public. Therefore Arendt cannot be said to
be a feminist or an anti-feminist. She falls beyond these categories as what counts for
her is participation in politics, not gender.
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Środkowoeuropejskie Studia Polityczne, 2007, nr 1, s. 259-280.
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1731-7517