RECLAIMING WOMEN’S PERSPECTIVE: FEMINIST ANTHROPOLOGY AND THE ANDROCENTRIC BIAS Cover Image

RECLAIMING WOMEN’S PERSPECTIVE: FEMINIST ANTHROPOLOGY AND THE ANDROCENTRIC BIAS
RECLAIMING WOMEN’S PERSPECTIVE: FEMINIST ANTHROPOLOGY AND THE ANDROCENTRIC BIAS

Author(s): Maja Muhić
Subject(s): Anthropology, Gender Studies, Evaluation research, Sociology of Culture
Published by: Filološki fakultet, Nikšić
Keywords: feminist anthropology; reclaiming; dialogue; subordination; domestic power; identity; binary opposition;

Summary/Abstract: The past few decades have been marked by an increasing discussion on the role of dialogue in anthropology, especially following the anthropological turn of the 80s, when the discipline was looked upon as one “writing a culture” rather than understanding it from the insider’s perspective, while the ethnographer was thought of as the epistemic dictator, incapable of establishing a dialogical relation with his subjects of inquiry. The power relationship was indeed one of the most prominent problems in creating an equal, dialogical setting between the anthropologist and the other culture. This paper aims at revisiting feminist anthropology tracing the elements which constituted it, its original inspiration, and main motifs of action mostly gathered around the strong male bias of the discipline. This bias was predominantly manifested in the monological, androcentric understanding and exploration of cultures.

  • Issue Year: 2019
  • Issue No: 26
  • Page Range: 95-102
  • Page Count: 8
  • Language: English