Abstract
In this introductory essay, we begin by discussing the attraction and limits of the ‘wave’ metaphor in feminist history and politics, before moving into a wider discussion of feminist subjectivity and agency. We then summarize the key issues, themes and objects/sites for contemporary feminists, before ending with some reflections on the changing character of feminist strategy. We argue that while the wave metaphor has been popular among feminists in many parts of Europe, it does not travel easily across national and regional borders, and should best be understood as a way of framing feminist practice, rather than referring to discreet cohorts of feminists. We can also discern a broader trend whereby preoccupations around the precise character of the feminist subject have given way to more diverse conceptions of feminist subjectivity in which the role of historically excluded constituencies within feminism – queers, lesibian, gay, bisexual and trans* women, black and minority ethnic women and indeed men – are, in some contexts, more visible. This is reflected in the practices of contemporary feminisms, in which the dominant approach is what we might call, following Bice Maiguashca, a ‘principled pragmatism’, characterized by a steadfast opposition to gender inequality alongside a degree of fluidity and flexibility in terms of the strategies and tactics used.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.
Notes
1. For an alternative, see Norwegian scholar Else Wiestad's (Citation1994) concept of 100-year waves.
2. Thanks to Louise Livesey for her thoughts on this.
3. Thank you to Evelien Geerts, Vic Hartgrove and Ellie Kennedy for these observations.
Additional information
Notes on contributors
Jonathan Dean
Jonathan Dean is Lecturer in Politics at the University of Leeds, and is author of Rethinking Contemporary Feminist Politics (Palgrave, 2010).
Kristin Aune
Kristin Aune is Senior Research Fellow at the Centre for Trust, Peace and Social Relations, Coventry University. She is co-author (with Catherine Redfern) of Reclaiming the F-word: Feminism Today, the second edition of which was published by Zed Books in 2013.