Towards a Marxist Feminist approach to international law

In a conversation with bell hooks in 1996, Stuart Hall recounted his surprise when many feminists during the 1970s became Marxist Feminists: ‘I was more shaken by feminism’s critique of Marxism than they were,’ he confessed.1 He could not see how it was possible to reconcile these two political and...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Nanopoulos, E, Ullrich, L
Format: Book section
Language:English
Published: Oxford University Press 2024
_version_ 1826315027361038336
author Nanopoulos, E
Ullrich, L
author_facet Nanopoulos, E
Ullrich, L
author_sort Nanopoulos, E
collection OXFORD
description In a conversation with bell hooks in 1996, Stuart Hall recounted his surprise when many feminists during the 1970s became Marxist Feminists: ‘I was more shaken by feminism’s critique of Marxism than they were,’ he confessed.1 He could not see how it was possible to reconcile these two political and intellectual movements. While tensions between Marxism and Feminism persist to this day, this chapter seeks to illustrate what a Marxist Feminist approach that builds on and transforms Marxism can add to the study of international law. Building on its recent revival, we sketch how Marxist Feminism can fundamentally reconstruct Marxist analysis of international law by illuminating the gendered and racialized relations of production and reproduction as a key organizing principle of capitalism and its international legal forms and histories. Such a Marxist Feminist perspective, moreover, can radically change how we view women’s relationship to international law. Rather than a tool for liberation that stands outside the economic order, international law emerges as a key social terrain for the struggle against capitalist patriarchy precisely because it operates as a key site of social reproduction.
first_indexed 2024-04-23T23:27:03Z
format Book section
id oxford-uuid:6d65e413-c9cc-4eed-9568-d2756e902a00
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-12-09T03:18:32Z
publishDate 2024
publisher Oxford University Press
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:6d65e413-c9cc-4eed-9568-d2756e902a002024-10-31T11:05:39ZTowards a Marxist Feminist approach to international lawBook sectionhttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_3248uuid:6d65e413-c9cc-4eed-9568-d2756e902a00EnglishSymplectic ElementsOxford University Press2024Nanopoulos, EUllrich, LIn a conversation with bell hooks in 1996, Stuart Hall recounted his surprise when many feminists during the 1970s became Marxist Feminists: ‘I was more shaken by feminism’s critique of Marxism than they were,’ he confessed.1 He could not see how it was possible to reconcile these two political and intellectual movements. While tensions between Marxism and Feminism persist to this day, this chapter seeks to illustrate what a Marxist Feminist approach that builds on and transforms Marxism can add to the study of international law. Building on its recent revival, we sketch how Marxist Feminism can fundamentally reconstruct Marxist analysis of international law by illuminating the gendered and racialized relations of production and reproduction as a key organizing principle of capitalism and its international legal forms and histories. Such a Marxist Feminist perspective, moreover, can radically change how we view women’s relationship to international law. Rather than a tool for liberation that stands outside the economic order, international law emerges as a key social terrain for the struggle against capitalist patriarchy precisely because it operates as a key site of social reproduction.
spellingShingle Nanopoulos, E
Ullrich, L
Towards a Marxist Feminist approach to international law
title Towards a Marxist Feminist approach to international law
title_full Towards a Marxist Feminist approach to international law
title_fullStr Towards a Marxist Feminist approach to international law
title_full_unstemmed Towards a Marxist Feminist approach to international law
title_short Towards a Marxist Feminist approach to international law
title_sort towards a marxist feminist approach to international law
work_keys_str_mv AT nanopoulose towardsamarxistfeministapproachtointernationallaw
AT ullrichl towardsamarxistfeministapproachtointernationallaw