{"title":"Habermas and the Caring Society: A Trans-disciplinary Feminist Critique","authors":"Casper Lötter","doi":"10.19108/koers.88.1.2544","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Jürgen Habermas’s rationalistic reimagining of a more compassionate society can be imaginatively defended by feminism, and one such legitimate line of criticism would be a feminist reading of this Frankfurt School-inspired project. In this contribution, therefore, I also aim to show ‘how’ and ‘why’ these efforts of Habermas’s could be complemented. The former is an exploration of novel post-structuralist ideas on inclusive ‘both/and’ theory appropriation. I briefly outline the nuanced intellectual history of the Frankfurt School between the first and second generations, which is Habermas’s seminal contribution to this tradition. Carol Gilligan’s ‘ethic of care,’ around which a more caring, responsive society might be (re)constructed, is then applied. Against this backdrop, Lakoff’s and Gerhardt’s proposals for the caring society, based on investigations into the link between authoritarian parenting and capitalism, are taken into consideration. These ideas are supported with an outline of recent progress within neuroscience that demonstrates the benefits of both early emotional nurturing and an appropriate attachment paradigm. It is thus argued that feminism, as part of a richer interdisciplinary methodology, could meaningfully correct and thereafter complement Habermas’s shortcomings, with post-structuralism as the methodological glue that adheres Habermas’s universalistic project with feminists’ emphases on specificity. \n\n\n“One of the things about looking at the world through a feminist lens is [the awareness] that we are already in a dystopia.” — Leni Zumas, author of Red Clocks (2018 ), part of a growing canon of woman-written dystopian fiction.","PeriodicalId":38057,"journal":{"name":"Koers","volume":"52 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-06-23","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Koers","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.19108/koers.88.1.2544","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"Arts and Humanities","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Jürgen Habermas’s rationalistic reimagining of a more compassionate society can be imaginatively defended by feminism, and one such legitimate line of criticism would be a feminist reading of this Frankfurt School-inspired project. In this contribution, therefore, I also aim to show ‘how’ and ‘why’ these efforts of Habermas’s could be complemented. The former is an exploration of novel post-structuralist ideas on inclusive ‘both/and’ theory appropriation. I briefly outline the nuanced intellectual history of the Frankfurt School between the first and second generations, which is Habermas’s seminal contribution to this tradition. Carol Gilligan’s ‘ethic of care,’ around which a more caring, responsive society might be (re)constructed, is then applied. Against this backdrop, Lakoff’s and Gerhardt’s proposals for the caring society, based on investigations into the link between authoritarian parenting and capitalism, are taken into consideration. These ideas are supported with an outline of recent progress within neuroscience that demonstrates the benefits of both early emotional nurturing and an appropriate attachment paradigm. It is thus argued that feminism, as part of a richer interdisciplinary methodology, could meaningfully correct and thereafter complement Habermas’s shortcomings, with post-structuralism as the methodological glue that adheres Habermas’s universalistic project with feminists’ emphases on specificity.
“One of the things about looking at the world through a feminist lens is [the awareness] that we are already in a dystopia.” — Leni Zumas, author of Red Clocks (2018 ), part of a growing canon of woman-written dystopian fiction.
j根·哈贝马斯对一个更富有同情心的社会的理性主义重新构想,可以被女权主义富有想象力地辩护,其中一条合法的批评路线将是女权主义者对这个法兰克福学派启发的项目的解读。因此,在这篇文章中,我还旨在展示“如何”和“为什么”哈贝马斯的这些努力可以得到补充。前者是对后结构主义关于包容性“同时/和”理论挪用的新思想的探索。我简要概述了法兰克福学派在第一代和第二代之间微妙的思想史,这是哈贝马斯对这一传统的开创性贡献。卡罗尔·吉利根(Carol Gilligan)提出的“关怀伦理”(ethical of care)可能会(重新)构建一个更有爱心、更有责任感的社会。在此背景下,Lakoff和Gerhardt基于对专制教育与资本主义之间联系的调查,提出了关爱社会的建议。这些观点得到了神经科学最新进展的支持,这些进展证明了早期情感培养和适当的依恋范式的好处。因此,有人认为,作为更丰富的跨学科方法论的一部分,女权主义可以有意义地纠正并补充哈贝马斯的缺点,后结构主义作为方法论的粘合剂,将哈贝马斯的普遍主义计划与女权主义者对特殊性的强调结合在一起。“从女权主义的角度看世界,其中一件事就是(意识到)我们已经处于一个反乌托邦中。——莱尼·祖玛斯,《红钟》(2018)的作者,这是越来越多的女性撰写的反乌托邦小说的一部分。