Against RecognitionISBN: 978-0-7456-2932-2
Paperback
240 pages
December 2007, Polity
Other Available Formats: Hardcover
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The idea of recognition expresses the notion that individuality is an intersubjective phenomenon formed through pragmatic interactions with others. By highlighting the intersubjective features of individuality, the idea of recognition has both descriptive and normative content and it has important implications for a feminist account of gender identity.
In this brilliant and original book, Lois McNay argues that the
insights of the recognition theorists are undercut by their
reliance on an inadequate account of power. The idea of recognition
relies on an account of social relations as extrapolations of a
primal dyad of interaction that overlooks the complex ways in which
individuality is connected to abstract social structures in
contemporary society.
Using Bourdieu's relational sociology, McNay develops an alternative account of individual agency that connects identity to structure. By focussing on issues of gender identity and agency, she opens up new pathways to move beyond the oppositions between material and cultural feminisms.