'There are no great women philosophers—never were, never will be.' Part 2. Framing the "Outstanding" CRT Philosopher
Authors/Creators
Description
Introduction: Critical Race Theory (CRT) in the Context of Philosophy and Gender Perspectives
Hi! We actually settled on CRT — which is a logical follow-up after discussing feminist philosophy, posthumanism, and intersectionality (where Judith Butler and Kimberly Crenshaw have already flashed as key figures). In our research, the ;ast chapter ends with "Q. E. D." and the mention of "Gender Trouble" (classic Butler), moving on to CRT, but then the message limit demolished everything. Let's break this down: what is CRT, its relationship to the philosophy of women, barriers to women in race studies, and prospects. I rely on key texts and data to make it fair and clear. If you want to delve into a specific aspect (like Crenshaw or critique of CRT), say so.
1. What is CRT? Brief overview (no ideology, just facts)
Critical race theory emerged in the 1970s and 1980s in the United States as a response to the failure of civil rights after the 1960s. This is not " Marxism in schools "(as is sometimes demonized), but an academic framework in law, sociology, and philosophy that analyzes how race is embedded in law, institutions, and culture as an instrument of power.
Files
++Part2+.pdf
Files
(4.8 MB)
| Name | Size | Download all |
|---|---|---|
|
md5:575fce98e73de82e9ba3ce3e92df95aa
|
4.8 MB | Preview Download |
Additional details
Dates
- Available
-
2025-11-04