1st Edition

Critical Femininities

Edited By Rhea Ashley Hoskin, Karen L. Blair Copyright 2023
    142 Pages
    by Routledge

    142 Pages
    by Routledge

    What would change about our existing world if we re-imagined and re-valued femininity? Critical Femininities presents a multidimensional framework for re-thinking femininity. Moving beyond seeing femininity as a patriarchal tool, this book considers the social, historical, and ideological forces that shape present-day norms surrounding femininity, particularly those that contribute to femmephobia: the systematic devaluation and regulation of all that is deemed feminine.

    Each chapter offers a unique application of the Critical Femininities framework to disparate areas of inquiry, ranging from breastfeeding stigma to Incel ideology, and attempts to answer pressing questions concerning the place of femininity within gender and social theory. How can we conceptualise feminine power? In what ways can vulnerability act as a powerful mode of resistance? How can we understand femininity as powerful without succumbing to masculinist frameworks? What ideological underpinnings maintain Critical Femininities as an emergent field, despite traceable origins pre-dating second-wave feminism?

    As the provocative entries within this volume will certainly generate additional questions for anyone invested in society’s treatment of femininity, this book offers a launching pad for the continued growth of a field that cultivates insight from a feminine frame of reference as a means of rendering visible the taken-for-granted presence of masculinity that remains pervasive within gender theory.

    The chapters in this book were originally published as a special issue of Psychology & Sexuality.

    Introduction: Critical femininities: a ‘new’ approach to gender theory 
    Rhea Ashley Hoskin and Karen L. Blair 
    1. Is there anything “toxic” about femininity? The rigid femininities that keep us locked in  
    Hannah McCann 
    2. Feminine power: a new articulation 
    Bernadette Barton and Lisa Huebner 
    3. Negotiating relationships with powerfulness: using femme theory to resist masculinist pressures on feminist femininities 
    Jocelyne Bartram Scott 
    4. Radical vulnerability: selfies as a Femme-inine mode of resistance 
    Andi Schwartz 
    5. “But where are the dates?” Dating as a central site of fat femme marginalisation in queer communities 
    Allison Taylor
     
    6. Stacys, Beckys, and Chads: the construction of femininity and hegemonic masculinity within incel rhetoric 
    Lauren Menzie 
    7. How is masculinity ideology related to transprejudice in Turkey: the mediatory effect of femmephobia 
    Beril Türkoğlu and Gülden Sayılan 
    8. Breastfeeding, ‘tainted’ love, and femmephobia: containing the ‘dirty’ performances of embodied femininity 
    Lilith A. Whiley, Sarah Stutterheim and Gina Grandy 
    9. T(w)een sexting and sexual behaviour: (d)evaluating the feminine other 
    Antonio García-Gómez 

    Biography

    Rhea Ashley Hoskin, Ph.D., is an interdisciplinary feminist sociologist whose work focuses on femme theory, critical femininities, and femmephobia. Her work examines perceptions of femininity and sources of prejudice rooted in the devaluation or regulation of femininity. Rhea is the Co-Founder of LGBTQ Psychology Canada and an AMTD Global Talent Postdoctoral Fellow at the University of Waterloo and St. Jerome’s University, Canada.

    Karen L. Blair, Ph.D., is Assistant Professor of Psychology at Trent University, Canada; the founder of KLB Research; and Director of the Trent University Social Relations, Attitudes and Diversity Lab. Dr. Blair’s work focuses on LGBTQ Psychology, relationships and health, prejudice, femmephobia, hate crimes and Holocaust education. She is the Co-Founder of LGBTQ Psychology Canada and has been the Chair of the Canadian Psychological Association’s Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity Section since 2014.