Is it possible to be a de facto feminist? This question is
explored and debated in this book about the phenomenon of people
who support feminist positions but do not call themselves
feminists. The author examines the implications of de facto
feminism on both the level of feminist theory as well as that of
practical politics in the U.S. In a theoretical manner, the author
considers how the problem of abstraction in many of the behavioral
approaches to feminist identity have the unintended consequence of
reinforcing elite depictions of social change. At the level of
practical politics in the U.S., this has left feminism open to the
many polemical attacks that have risen in recent years. The author
asks whether the attempt to bring about beneficial policy can be
rendered ineffective if women do not identify with the feminist
organizations working on their behalf.
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