Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://anrows.intersearch.com.au/anrowsjspui/handle/1/12254
Record ID: cd85f5a8-652c-4253-9cf9-ba80d677cb6f
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.wsif.2007.11.001<Go
Electronic Resources: to
ISI>://000253647400005
Type: Journal Article
Title: The ideology of choice. Overstating progress and hiding injustice in the lives of young women: Findings from a study in North Queensland, Australia
Other Titles: Women Stud Int Forum
Authors: Baker, J
Year: 2008
Citation: No 1 Vol.: 31
Notes:  The pervasive and popularised concept of a freshly modernised and progressive world for girls and young women has been ushered in by theories of post-industrial individualisation, neo-liberalism and its dovetailing with liberal variants of feminism. Such optimistic notions of new-found freedom for women in Western democracies celebrate the shrinking of imposed constraints and exclusions and the enthusiastic endorsement of individual choice. This article reports on recently completed empirical research in an Australian context which questions just how dramatically the lives of young women have changed. It identifies the role that the lauded concept of choice plays in overstating women's advancement and disguising socially generated inequality. In particular, young women in this study comprehend domestic violence, unequal parenting and housework as matters of choice, while also implicitly understanding that they do not live up to the imagined unencumbered rational choice individuals of liberalism.The implications of an invigorated conservative, masculinist agenda disguised in a women's rights discourse are discussed. Feminists are confronted with a changed socio-political climate where the subordination of girls and women is allowed to occur more covertly within a framework of ostensible commitment to equality, the valorisation of choice and through seductive incitements to individual responsibility. (c) 2007 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Electronic Resource Number:
DOI 10.1016/j.wsif.2007.11.001
Author's Address:
Baker, JJames Cook Univ N Queensland, Sch Arts & Social Sci, Dept Social Work & Community Welf, Townsville, Qld, AustraliaJames Cook Univ N Queensland, Sch Arts & Social Sci, Dept Social Work & Community Welf, Townsville, Qld, AustraliaJames Cook Univ N Queensland, Sch Arts & Social Sci, Dept Social Work & Community Welf, Townsville, Qld, Australia
269KHTimes Cited:17Cited References Count:62
URI: https://anrows.intersearch.com.au/anrowsjspui/handle/1/12254
ISSN: 0277-5395
Physical description: Pages 53-64
Appears in Collections:Journal Articles

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