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Talking pomo: An analysis of the post-modern movement, by Steve Mizrach; Information on Michel Foucault, including an archive of writings and lectures; poststructuralism.info - A collaborative website that aims to allow users not only to describe post-structuralist ideas but to create new ideas and concepts based on post-structuralist foundations
Feminist post-structuralist discourse analysis (FPDA) is a method of discourse analysis based on Chris Weedon's [1] theories of feminist post-structuralism, and developed as a method of analysis by Judith Baxter [2] in 2003. FPDA is based on a combination of feminism and post-structuralism.
Like post-structuralism itself, the feminist branch is in large part a tool for literary analysis, but it also deals in psychoanalysis and socio-cultural critique, [3] and seeks to explore relationships between language, sociology, subjectivity and power-relations as they impact upon gender in particular. [4]
Feminist post-structuralist discourse analysis; Field (Bourdieu) Foreclosure (psychoanalysis) Form of life; Foucault–Habermas debate; Four discourses; French post-structuralist feminism; From Bakunin to Lacan
A post-structuralist analysis of the construction of gendered speaker identities of British business leaders within interview narratives. Gender and Language, Vol 2 (2): 193 – 218; doi: 10.1558/genl.v2i2.197
Many post-structural feminists maintain that difference is one of the most powerful tools that women possess in their struggle with patriarchal domination, and that to equate the feminist movement only with equality is to deny women a plethora of options because equality is still defined from the masculine or patriarchal perspective. [28] [29]
Postfeminism (alternatively rendered as post-feminism) is an alleged decrease in popular support for feminism from the 1990s onwards. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] [ 3 ] It can be considered a critical way of understanding the changed relations between feminism, femininity and popular culture.
An example of binary opposition is the male-female dichotomy. A post-structuralist view is that male can be seen, according to traditional thought, as dominant over female because male is the presence of a phallus, while the vagina is an absence or loss. John Searle has suggested that the concept of binary oppositions—as taught and practiced ...