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What's the Difference? Knowledge and Gender in (Post) Modern Philosophy of Religion1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 October 2008

Grace M. Jantzen
Affiliation:
Department of Religions and Theology, University of Manchester, Manchester M13 9PL

Extract

Donna Haraway, in her ‘Manifesto for Cyborgs’, issues a warning that in the postmodern world where grand narratives increasingly fail and subjects are seen to be irremediably fragmented, ‘we risk lapsing into boundless difference and giving up on the confusing task of making a partial, real connection. Some differences are playful; some are poles of world historical systems of domination. Epistemology is about knowing the difference’. Such an account of epistemology, which sees its central task to be a knowledge of the significance of difference and a capacity to discern between innocent and oppressive forms of difference, is perhaps not one that would most readily occur to British philosophers of religion. It is, however, an account which has resonances both with many contemporary continental thinkers and with feminist epistemologists. Notwithstanding the many areas of divergence between and among these groups, on two points at least they converge: that the recognition and discernment of difference has become inescapable for epistemology, and that of the differences which must be dealt with, gender difference has a paradigmatic status.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1996

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References

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27 Luce Irigaray, ‘Divine Women’, in her Sexes and Genealogies.

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