Feminist Economics: from Market Orthodoxy to the Politics of Wonder
Main Article Content
Abstract
The proposal of the politics of wonder as a feminist methodology and practice is inserted into a dialogue with situated knowledge and diffraction to explain how these approaches have opened up economic science to a deeper analysis that takes women’s experiences into account. Three methodological clues (visibilizing, denaturalizing, historicizing) are suggested as the tools of wonder, with the author explaining how they have been used in feminist economics as a critique of the neoclassical current of thought, and a way of envisioning alternative economic systems.
Article Details
Esta es una publicación bajo la licencia Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC- ND 4.0). Para mayor información sobre el uso no comercial de los contenidos que aquí aparecen, favor de consultar http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
References
Alcoff, Linda. y Potter, Elizabeth. (1993). Feminist Epistemologies. Nueva York y Londres: Routledge.
Arruzza, Cinzia, Bhattacharya, Tithi y Fraser, Nancy. (2019). Feminism for the 99% A Manifesto. Londres: Verso Books.
Atal, Juan Pablo, Ñopo, Hugo y Winder, Natalia. (2009). Nuevo siglo, viejas disparidades: brecha salarial por género y etnicidad en América Latina. Washington: Banco Interamericano de Desarrollo.
Barchiesi, Franco. (2017). The Precariousness of Work in Postcolonial Africa. En Emiliana Armano, Arianna Bove y Annalisa Murgia (comps.), Mapping Precariousness: Subjectivities and Resistance (pp. 13-29). Londres: Routledge.
Barker, Drucilla K., y Feiner, Susan. (2004). Liberating Economics: Feminist Perspectives on Families, Work, and Globalization. Michigan: The University of Michigan Press.
Becker, Gary. (1981). A Treatise on the Family. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
Benería, Lourdes, y Stimpson, Catharine. (1987). Women, Households, and the Economy. New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press.
Bhattacharya, Tithi. (2017). How Not to Skip Class: Social Reproduction of Labor and the Global Working Class. En Tithi Bhattacharya y Liselolete Vogel (comps.), Social Reproduction Theory. Remapping Class, Recentering Oppression (pp. 1- 20). Londres: Pluto Press.
Carrasco, Cristina. (2006). La economía feminista: una apuesta por otra economía. Recuperado el 22 de marzo de 2022 de http://obela.org/system/files/CarrascoC.pdf.
Castañeda Salgado, Martha Patricia. (2008). Metodología de la investigación feminista. Ciudad de México / Guatemala: Centro de Investigaciones Interdisciplinarias en Ciencias y Humanidades, UNAM / Fundación Guatemala.
Eisenstein, Hester. (2009). Feminism Seduced: How Global Elites Use Women’s Labor and Ideas to Explote the World. Londres: Paradigm Publishers.
England, Paula. (2004). El yo divisorio: prejuicios androcéntricos de las hipótesis neoclásicas. En Julie Nelson y Marianne Ferber (comps.), Más allá del hombre económico (pp. 37-53). Madrid: Cátedra.
Federici, Silvia. (2013). Revolución en punto cero / Trabajo doméstico, reproducción y luchas feministas. Madrid: Traficantes de sueños.
Federici, Silvia. (2018). Re-Enchanting the World: Feminism and the Politics of the Commons. Londres: PM Press, Kairos.
Feiner, Susan. (2003). Reading Neoclassical Economics Toward an Erotic Economy of Sharing. En Drucilla Barker y Edith Kuiper (comps.), Toward a Feminist Philosophy of Economics (pp. 180-193). Londres: Routledge.
Ferber, Marianne. (2003). A Feminist Critique of the Neoclassical Theory of the Family. En Karine S. Moe (comp.), Women, Family and Work: Writings on the Economics of Gender (pp. 9-24). Londres: Blackwell.
Flores-Garrido, Natalia. (2015). Androcentrismo y teoría económica, ¿qué tienen que decir las mujeres al respecto? Cuadernos de Economía Crítica, 3, 49-70.
Folbre, Nancy. (2003). Holding Hands at Midnight: The Paradox of Caring Labour. En Drucilla Barker y Edith Kuiper (comps.), Toward a Feminist Philosophy of Economics (pp. 213-230). Londres: Routledge.
Folbre, Nancy. (2010). Greed, Lust and Gender. A History of Economic Ideas. Nueva York: Oxford University Press.
Fraser, Nancy. (2013). Fortunes of Feminism. From State-Managed Capitalism to Neoliberal Crisis. Londres: Verso.
Gago, Verónica. (2020). Feminist International: How to Change Everything. Londres: Verso Books.
Granovetter, Mark. (1985). Economic Action and Social Structure: The Problem of Embeddedness. American Journal of Sociology, 91, 3, 481-510.
Haraway, Dona. (1991). Ciencia, cyborgs y mujeres / La reinvención de la naturaleza. Madrid: Cátedra.
Haraway, Dona. (1997). Modest witness@second-millenium-femaleman@meets-oncomouse: Feminism and technoscience. Nueva York y Londres: Routledge.
Harding, Sandra. (1986). The Science Question in Feminism. Ithaca: Cornell University Press.
Hiriata, Helena, y Kergoat, Danielle. (1997). La división sexual del trabajo: permanencia y cambio. Buenos Aires: Asociación Trabajo y Sociedad.
Hossein, Caroline Shenaz. (2019). A Black Epistemology for the Social and Solidarity Economy: The Black Social Economy. The Review of Black Political Economy, 46(3), 209-229.
Longino, Helen. (2002). The Fate of Knowledge. Princeton y Oxford: Princeton University Press.
Luxton, Meg, y Bezanson Kate (comps.). (2006). Social Reproduction: Feminist Political Economy Challenges Neo-Liberalism. Montreal: McGill-Queen’s University Press.
Marcal, Katrine. (2015). Who Cooked Adam Smith’s Dinner. A Story About Women and Economics. London: Granta Publications.
McDowell, Linda. (2014). Gender, Work, Employment and Society: Feminist Reflections on Continuity and Change. Work, Employment and Society, 28, 5, 825-37.
McRobbie, Angela. (2007). TOP GIRLS? Young Women and the Post-Feminist Sexual Contract. Cultural Studies, 21, 4-5, 718-37.
Mies, Maria, y Bennholdt-Thomsen, Veronica. (1999). The Subsistence Perspective: Beyond the Globalised Economy. Nueva York: Zed Books
Mikell, Gwendolyn (comp.) (1997). African Feminism: The Politics of Survival in Sub-Saharan Africa. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.
Motsemme, Nthabiseng. (2011). Lived and Embodied Suffering and Healing Amongst Mothers and Daughters in Chesterville Township. Johannesburgo: University of South Africa.
Nelson, Julie. (1996). Feminism, Objectivity and Economics. Nueva York: Psychology Press.
Nelson, Julie. (2004). ¿Estudio de la elección o estudio del abastecimiento? El género y la definición de la economía. En Julie Nelson y Marianne Ferber (comps.), Más allá del hombre económico (pp. 23-36). Madrid: Cátedra.
Pérez-Orozco, Amaia. (2005). Economía del género y economía feminista. ¿Conciliación o ruptura? Revista Venezolana de Estudios de la Mujer, 10, 24, 43-64.
Pérez-Orozco, Amaia. (2014). Subversión feminista de la economía. Madrid: Traficantes de sueños.
Picchio, Antonella. (2001). Un enfoque macroeconómico ampliado de las condiciones de vida. Recuperado el 28 de marzo de 2022 de https://www.fundacionhenrydunant.org/images/stories/biblioteca/Genero-Mujer-Desarrollo/enfoque%20macroeconomico%20ampliado.pdf
Tronto, Joan. (2013). Caring Democracy: Markets, Equality and Justice. Nueva York: New York University Press.
Varian, Hal. (1992). Análisis microeconómico. Barcelona: Anthony Bosch.
Watkins, Susan. (2018). Which Feminisms? New Left Review, 109, 5-76.
Weeks, Kathi. (2017). Down with Love: Feminist Critique and the New Ideologies of Work. WSQ: Women’s Studies Quarterly, 45, 3-4, 37-58.