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3 Feminist Linguistic Determinism
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Published:July 1996
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Abstract
Linguistic creat1v1ty has been celebrated by a number of recent feminist theorists, who extol the virtues of creative play in the texts of literature and society. In this chapter I want to look at the way in which feminists have utilized the insights of poststructuralist theory in order to bolster such a position. But the absorption of poststructuralist claims into feminist theory is problematic. What seems to be at issue is a fundamental conflict between the emancipatory impulses of feminism and the deterministic ethos that ostensibly underlies the poststructuralist theories to which many contemporary feminists are attracted. In much recent feminist theory we find an uneasy merging of conceptions of the (female) subject as a political agent and as a decentred social construct. In some cases, poststructuralist theories of decentred subjectivity are harnessed to drive forward the liberationist claims of feminism. The reasons for this perhaps unlikely alliance, and the problems which arise from it, are instructive.
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