Feminism as a virus?

If you’re on Twitter, you have to – have to! – follow New Real Peer Review. This account captures the poisonous nature of modern academia by highlighting articles that can only be published in academic journals. Among the nonsense it has identified is the following article:

Breanne Fahs and Michael Karger, “Women’s Studies as Virus: Insitutional Feminism and the Projection of Danger,” Multidisciplinary Journal of Gender Studies Vol. 5 No. 1 (February 2016): 929-957.

The article’s abstract is as follows:

Because women’s studies radically challenges social hierarchies and lacks a unified identity and canon of thought, it often negotiates a precarious position within the modern corporatized university. At the same time, women’s studies offers—by virtue of its interdisciplinary, critical, and “infectious” structure—cutting-edge perspectives and goals that set it apart from more traditional fields. This paper theorizes that one future pedagogical priority of women’s studies is to train students not only to master a body of knowledge but also to serve as symbolic “viruses” that infect, unsettle, and disrupt traditional and entrenched fields. In this essay, we first posit how the metaphor of the virus in part exemplifies an ideal feminist pedagogy, and we then investigate how both women’s studies and the spread of actual viruses (e.g., Ebola, HIV) produce similar kinds of emotional responses in others. By looking at triviality, mockery, panic, and anger that women’s studies as a field elicits, we conclude by outlining the stakes of framing women’s studies as an infectious, insurrectional, and potentially dangerous, field of study. In doing so, we frame two new priorities for women’s studies—training male students as viruses and embracing “negative” stereotypes of feminist professors—as important future directions for the potentially liberatory aspects of the field. – My emphasis

Women’s studies as a virus? Now where have I seen this idea put in action before?

The post Feminism as a virus? appeared first on A Simple Fool.

Source: A Simple Fool

Leave a Reply