Dependency, subordination, and recognition: On Judith Butler's theory of subjection [Book Review]

Continental Philosophy Review 38 (3-4):199-222 (2005)
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Abstract

Judith Butler's recent work expands the Foucaultian notion of subjection to encompass an analysis of the ways in which subordinated individuals becomes passionately attached to, and thus come to be psychically invested in, their own subordination. I argue that Butler's psychoanalytically grounded account of subjection offers a compelling diagnosis of how and why an attachment to oppressive norms – of femininity, for example – can persist in the face of rational critique of those norms. However, I also argue that her account of individual and collective resistance to subjection is plagued by familiar problems concerning the normative criteria and motivation for resistance that emerge in her recent work in new and arguably more intractable forms, and by new concerns about her conceptions of dependency, subordination and recognition

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Amy Allen
Pennsylvania State University

References found in this work

Bodies and power, revisited.Judith Butler - 2002 - Radical Philosophy 114.
Longing for recognition.Judith Butler - 2010 - In Kimberly Hutchings & Tuija Pulkkinen, Hegel's philosophy and feminist thought: beyond Antigone? New York: Palgrave-Macmillan.

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