Liberal and Radical Feminism
Liberal and radical feminism are two contrasting answers to the question of what causes women's subordination and what would end it, one reformist and rights-based, the other locating the root in patriarchy itself.
Definition
Two currents of feminist thought: liberal feminism, which pursues gender equality within liberal-democratic and market institutions, and radical feminism, which treats patriarchy as the primary system of oppression that those institutions help sustain.
Scope
This topic compares the liberal tradition, which seeks women's full inclusion in existing institutions through equal rights, education, and the removal of legal and customary barriers, with the radical tradition, which holds that patriarchy is a foundational system of male power requiring transformation of sexuality, reproduction, and the family rather than mere reform. It describes the central arguments, representative texts, and the disagreement between them.
Core questions
- Can women's equality be achieved by reforming existing institutions, or do those institutions themselves embody male dominance?
- Is patriarchy a system distinct from and prior to capitalism and law?
- What role do sexuality, reproduction, and the family play in sustaining gender hierarchy?
Key theories
- Equality through equal rights
- The liberal-feminist view that women's subordination stems from exclusion from public life and unequal opportunity, remediable by extending to women the same civil, political, and economic rights and access to education and work that men enjoy.
- Patriarchy as the primary oppression
- The radical-feminist claim that male dominance is the most basic form of social power, expressed through control of women's sexuality and reproduction, and that ending it requires changing these intimate domains rather than only laws and workplaces.
History
Liberal feminism traces back to Enlightenment arguments for women's reason and rights and was reanimated in the United States by Friedan's The Feminine Mystique (1963) and organizations seeking legal equality. Radical feminism emerged from the late-1960s women's liberation movement, with Millett's Sexual Politics and Firestone's The Dialectic of Sex theorizing patriarchy and reframing 'the personal' as political.
Debates
- Reform versus transformation
- Whether equal access to existing institutions suffices for women's liberation, or whether those institutions are so structured by male power that only their transformation will do.
Key figures
- Betty Friedan
- Shulamith Firestone
- Kate Millett
- Mary Wollstonecraft
Related topics
Seminal works
- friedan1963
- firestone1970
- millett1970
Frequently asked questions
- How do liberal and radical feminism differ?
- Liberal feminism seeks equality by reforming existing institutions and extending rights to women; radical feminism holds that male dominance is built into those institutions and into sexuality and the family, so deeper transformation is required.