TubbaBlubba
Knave of the Dudes
- Joined
- Jul 9, 2010
- Messages
- 12,942
It's directly related, insofar as critical theory feminism is an outgrowth of postmodernism and Maxism, with its emphasis on subjective experience over systematic and scientific approaches to knowledge and policy. http://people.ucalgary.ca/~rseiler/critical.htm
So I suppose you must mean e.g. Judith Butler? Yeah, the thing is, the Critical Theory of Adorno, Horkheimer etc predated postmodern/poststructuralist thought and was, as a Marxian theory, materialist and structuralist, quite opposite to being based on "subjective experience". The latter is an influence of Focault et al., who were by and large critiquing the former.
The intermingling of these two is something I see in Anglosphere discussions, but not in discussions among people on the European continent (where these systems of thought originated). In fact I suspect that a lot of Frankfurt school thinkers would say that Queer theorists are not very Marxian, and a lot of continental Postmodern thinkers would say they aren't particularly postmodern either (though to me, it certainly seems more postmodern than Marxian). I am personally not a huge fan of the school, anyway, whereas I consider Adorno etc to have had some useful insights. I'd say that the juxtaposing of Postmodernism and Marxism is in anything a peculiarity of the school of thought, not so much a natural combination.
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