Talk:Feminist Book Club for Men: Difference between revisions

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After the introduction, I'd like to have a discussion about this.
Beyond the general discourse, to say feminism is for everyone, this provides a radical intersectionality and functionally describes the organism of the space.
http://www.egs.edu/faculty/donna-haraway/articles/donna-haraway-a-cyborg-manifesto/
If that is unwelcome discourse. I think the epistemological underpinnings "Feminist Book Club for Men," have already set my critical eyes on a what I think will become a larger attempt to avoid--default essentialism. Then, you'd have bring butler into the equation and it could get messy.
Or we could springboard the hacking of our bodies, environment, tools and fire and redirect the question about not misogyny, but a question of who is allowed to speak, why? What is appropriate to do with one's body and mind and why? Why is it that we functionally police each other  just for the very fact we are.
Questions of ontology or being. A border question vacuous to any genology of our body parts.
I'd like to have this kind of discussion.
But, I know there is a significant gender disparity in the tech industry. However, the root cause is pedagogical. The functional creation of how we become to learn from an early age. It's only those few with great courage that escape it.
But again, it's a structural pedagogical issue.
Here is where the disparity happens:
Feminist Reading on Paulo Freire: Freire’s Pedagogy as Feminist Pedagogy
http://www.academia.edu/1546981/Feminist_Reading_on_Paulo_Freire_Freires_Pedagogy_as_Feminist_Pedagogy
Please exclude my grammar.

Latest revision as of 00:57, 9 January 2014