I’d also suggest looking for blogs of people who were active in the feminist movement and left it because of conflicts between the movement (note: not the concept of feminism itself) and other activism, like racial or class or disability or transgender activism, if one wants to hear about issues with feminism-as-a-movement. I can probably even dig up a few examples, if there’s a call for it.
It doesn’t critique feminism in general, and of course doesn’t shed any light on objectification, but that’s an interesting inside critique of a large part of a particular movement. Thanks for the link.
I’d also suggest looking for blogs of people who were active in the feminist movement and left it because of conflicts between the movement (note: not the concept of feminism itself) and other activism, like racial or class or disability or transgender activism, if one wants to hear about issues with feminism-as-a-movement. I can probably even dig up a few examples, if there’s a call for it.
Yes please!
I also just came across this, which is a quote from a book that looks relevant. (More quotes from the same book here.)
Here is the most recent example from my blogroll, and it has links to a few others as well.
It doesn’t critique feminism in general, and of course doesn’t shed any light on objectification, but that’s an interesting inside critique of a large part of a particular movement. Thanks for the link.