The (im)possibility of feminist critique in authoritarianism: Revisiting Western knowledge-transfer in Russia and Serbia

<p>This thesis proposes <em>a critique of the critique</em> of transnational feminism in post-communist Europe. The critique of transnational feminism asserts that the process is, in essence, a unilateral knowledge-transfer, and as such functions as one among many exercises of Othe...

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Main Author: Bias, L
Other Authors: Sasse, G
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2020
Subjects:
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author Bias, L
author2 Sasse, G
author_facet Sasse, G
Bias, L
author_sort Bias, L
collection OXFORD
description <p>This thesis proposes <em>a critique of the critique</em> of transnational feminism in post-communist Europe. The critique of transnational feminism asserts that the process is, in essence, a unilateral knowledge-transfer, and as such functions as one among many exercises of Othering the West has employed vis-à-vis its Semi-Other since the fall of communism. Using case studies of Russia and Serbia, this research challenges this argument from three angles. </p> <p>First, it shows that it is ahistorical. Transnational feminist encounters occurred in the communist period, and were characterised by Soviet Russian and Yugoslav feminists’ independence and assertiveness. Second, by applying the critical theory framework to over sixty interviews with feminists in Russia and Serbia that were conducted by the author, an empirical examination demonstrates that a critique of knowledge-transfer is marginal in both cases. This acts as a springboard for the third and central claim.</p> <p>Based on a computer-aided, post-Marxist discourse analysis of the interviews, the thesis argues that feminists’ priorities undergo a fundamental shift under authoritarianism. In settings where authoritarian regimes propagate an anti-Western discourse, that relies on anti-gender discourse in attempts at Othering back, the subversion of this hegemonic discourse becomes the priority for feminists on the ground. From this perspective, the argument proposed by critical theory – that transnational feminism is a form of Western domination expressed through knowledge-transfer – resonates with the authoritarian discourse. This is why critique of knowledge-transfer is not only marginal, but rejected in an effort not to become complicit in the authoritarian discourse. As a result, Russian and Serbian feminists focus on formulating alternative signifiers for knowledge-transfer in order to subvert the authoritarian regime. First, they endorse knowledge-transfer but attach positive meanings of agency and empowerment to it. Second, they reframe it as an exchange between equals. Finally, they reject the dichotomous boundaries of West/East associated with it.</p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:dcfb58e1-c60e-4da5-be2f-66c4e86016682024-02-22T08:43:18ZThe (im)possibility of feminist critique in authoritarianism: Revisiting Western knowledge-transfer in Russia and SerbiaThesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:dcfb58e1-c60e-4da5-be2f-66c4e8601668DemocratizationFeminismCivil societyTransnationalismSocial movementsEnglishHyrax Deposit2020Bias, LSasse, GFrazer, E<p>This thesis proposes <em>a critique of the critique</em> of transnational feminism in post-communist Europe. The critique of transnational feminism asserts that the process is, in essence, a unilateral knowledge-transfer, and as such functions as one among many exercises of Othering the West has employed vis-à-vis its Semi-Other since the fall of communism. Using case studies of Russia and Serbia, this research challenges this argument from three angles. </p> <p>First, it shows that it is ahistorical. Transnational feminist encounters occurred in the communist period, and were characterised by Soviet Russian and Yugoslav feminists’ independence and assertiveness. Second, by applying the critical theory framework to over sixty interviews with feminists in Russia and Serbia that were conducted by the author, an empirical examination demonstrates that a critique of knowledge-transfer is marginal in both cases. This acts as a springboard for the third and central claim.</p> <p>Based on a computer-aided, post-Marxist discourse analysis of the interviews, the thesis argues that feminists’ priorities undergo a fundamental shift under authoritarianism. In settings where authoritarian regimes propagate an anti-Western discourse, that relies on anti-gender discourse in attempts at Othering back, the subversion of this hegemonic discourse becomes the priority for feminists on the ground. From this perspective, the argument proposed by critical theory – that transnational feminism is a form of Western domination expressed through knowledge-transfer – resonates with the authoritarian discourse. This is why critique of knowledge-transfer is not only marginal, but rejected in an effort not to become complicit in the authoritarian discourse. As a result, Russian and Serbian feminists focus on formulating alternative signifiers for knowledge-transfer in order to subvert the authoritarian regime. First, they endorse knowledge-transfer but attach positive meanings of agency and empowerment to it. Second, they reframe it as an exchange between equals. Finally, they reject the dichotomous boundaries of West/East associated with it.</p>
spellingShingle Democratization
Feminism
Civil society
Transnationalism
Social movements
Bias, L
The (im)possibility of feminist critique in authoritarianism: Revisiting Western knowledge-transfer in Russia and Serbia
title The (im)possibility of feminist critique in authoritarianism: Revisiting Western knowledge-transfer in Russia and Serbia
title_full The (im)possibility of feminist critique in authoritarianism: Revisiting Western knowledge-transfer in Russia and Serbia
title_fullStr The (im)possibility of feminist critique in authoritarianism: Revisiting Western knowledge-transfer in Russia and Serbia
title_full_unstemmed The (im)possibility of feminist critique in authoritarianism: Revisiting Western knowledge-transfer in Russia and Serbia
title_short The (im)possibility of feminist critique in authoritarianism: Revisiting Western knowledge-transfer in Russia and Serbia
title_sort im possibility of feminist critique in authoritarianism revisiting western knowledge transfer in russia and serbia
topic Democratization
Feminism
Civil society
Transnationalism
Social movements
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