Against RecognitionISBN: 978-0-7456-2932-2
Paperback
240 pages
February 2008, Polity
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Political Studies Review
"Incisive, committed and engaged: this is feminist social theory
at it should be practised. McNay?s critique of theories of
recognition develops her earlier work on agency and incorporates a
powerful and compelling new analysis of the relationship between
embodied identity and gender inequalities."
Henrietta L. Moore, London School of Economics and Political
Science
"Against Recognition presents a carefully argued critique
of recent efforts to represent social and political agency as a
struggle for recognition. Though sympathetic to the aims of
recognition theorists, McNay finds that their paradigm rests on a
reductive conception of power. By way of alternative, she presents
a modified version of Pierre Bourdieu's relational phenomenology,
whose key concepts of habitus, field, and capital are used to
provide a better account of the role that power plays in the
complex interplay between agency and social situation."
Andrew Cutrofello, Loyola University, Chicago