Ellenségkép, hegemónia és reflexió : A gender fogalmának tartalma és funkciója az Orbán-rezsim és a német radikális jobboldal politikájában
In: Socio.hu: társadalomtudományi szemle : social science review, Band 12, Heft 2, S. 78-90
ISSN: 2063-0468
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In: Socio.hu: társadalomtudományi szemle : social science review, Band 12, Heft 2, S. 78-90
ISSN: 2063-0468
In: Intersections: East European journal of society and politics, Band 8, Heft 1, S. 110-127
ISSN: 2416-089X
The goal of this theoretical paper is to link right-wing anti-gender claims to real processes of the individualization of gender analysis in light of the critical literature on how neoliberal ideology has been affecting feminist politics and gender scholarship. While there has been reflexion about the co-optation of feminist vocabularies such as choice, liberation, and self-determination by neoliberal ideology for a long time, recent critiques add to this the individualist turn within gender theory, and feminist and LGBT activism too. I argue that uncovering these latter trends can contribute to a better understanding of the resonance of right-wing anti-gender messages among large segments of European electorates but also to (self-) critical discussion within gender theory and feminist and LGBT practice about the individualization of structural problems.
In: Soziopolis: Gesellschaft beobachten
Lilian Hümmler: Wenn Rechte reden - Die Bibliothek des Konservatismus als (extrem) rechter Thinktank. Hamburg: Marta Press 2021. 978-3-944-44271-6
In: Gender: Zeitschrift für Geschlecht, Kultur und Gesellschaft, Band 13, Heft 1-2021, S. 76-90
ISSN: 2196-4467
Anti-gender actors in East-Central Europe (ECE) too claim that gender is an ideological colonization. In this article, in contrasting these accusations with actually existing power relations of the global and European gender architecture, I discuss whether they are – at least to some extent – based on social realities. Neither anti-gender campaigns nor the rise of illiberal forces are ECE phenomena per se and should not be treated as such. However, the relevance of the geopolitical embeddedness of gender equality policies, of gender studies and of feminist and LGBT politics needs to be analysed thoroughly in order to better understand the right-wing discourse. This paper offers a theoretical explanation, based on existing empirical studies and critical theoretical literature. Focussing on the four Visegrád countries, Poland, Czech Republic, Slovakia and Hungary, it attempts to demonstrate the specific drivers of the anti-gender mobilization in this region and argues that anti-gender discourse is a right-wing language of resistance against existing material and symbolic East-West inequalities in Europe.
In: Gender: Zeitschrift für Geschlecht, Kultur und Gesellschaft, Band 13, Heft 1, S. 76-90
ISSN: 2196-4467
Anti-gender actors in East-Central Europe (ECE) too claim that gender is an ideological colonization. In this article, in contrasting these accusations with actually existing power relations of the global and European gender architecture, I discuss whether they are - at least to some extent - based on social realities. Neither anti-gender campaigns nor the rise of illiberal forces are ECE phenomena per se and should not be treated as such. However, the relevance of the geopolitical embeddedness of gender equality policies, of gender studies and of feminist and LGBT politics needs to be analysed thoroughly in order to better understand the right-wing discourse. This paper offers a theoretical explanation, based on existing empirical studies and critical theoretical literature. Focussing on the four Visegrád countries, Poland, Czech Republic, Slovakia and Hungary, it attempts to demonstrate the specific drivers of the anti-gender mobilization in this region and argues that anti-gender discourse is a right-wing language of resistance against existing material and symbolic East-West inequalities in Europe.
In: Intersections: East European journal of society and politics, Band 5, Heft 2
ISSN: 2416-089X
As early as 1995, Nancy Fraser problematized the shift of justice claims from redistribution towards recognition (Fraser, 1995). Since then, this shift has proven even more pronounced, displacing redistribution claims and reiterating identities (Fraser, 2000). At the same time, we can see how recognition claims in the form of identity politics became overall present in the social justice activism of the Anglo-Saxon countries, stirring heated controversies there, not only from the Right, but from Marxist, liberal and feminist points of view, too. On the European continent, these debates take the form of mostly right-wing movements mobilizing against 'gender ideology' and 'political correctness', portrayed as imminent danger coming from the US and/or the West.
In my paper I critically engage with the widespread matrix of visualizing political positions and fault lines as being on two axes: economic (left and right) and cultural (liberal and authoritarian), and discuss why placing the attitudes towards 'oppressed minorities' on the cultural axis cuts the related issues from their embeddedness in material conditions. I point out that the cultural axes, the recognition shift, and the human rights paradigm type of articulation of injustices are going into the same direction, namely a culturalist interpretation of oppressions. Empirically based on the controversies around the Istanbul Convention (2017) and the Gender Studies MA programs (2017-2018) in Hungary and theoretically on Fraser's concept of 'perspectivic dualism' as outlined in her debate with Axel Honneth (Fraser and Honneth, 2003), I argue that this culturalist interpretation both of prevailing injustices and of the right-wing contestations actually reinforces the cultural war framework of the Right rather than overcoming it.
In: Femina politica / Femina Politic e.V: Zeitschrift für feministische Politik-Wissenschaft, Band 27, Heft 1, S. 75-88
ISSN: 2196-1646
In: Sociological research online, Band 23, Heft 2, S. 528-538
ISSN: 1360-7804
Since 2012, several European countries (among others Austria, Croatia, France, Germany, Hungary, Poland, Slovenia or Slovakia) have seen the rise of conservative and, in part, fundamentalist social movements against the perceived threat of what they call (depending on the context) 'gender ideology', 'gender theory', or 'genderism'. The movements mobilizing against 'gender ideology' are frequently understood as a conservative backlash against achieved levels of equality between women and men and/or LGBTQ rights. This perspective of 'the patriarchy/heteronormativity fighting back' seems as tempting as it is simplifying. I discuss the transnational movements against 'gender ideology' in the context of the rise of right-wing populism and on the basis of considerations seeking to explain their demand side. On one hand, I argue that the study of this phenomenon provides important clues for understanding the reasons behind the rise of populist forces in Europe and beyond. On the other hand, I propose that 'gender' is not the final target for these movements and that they should not be understood primarily as mobilizations against equality. Rather, I see the emergence of these movements as a symptom of a larger systemic crisis. 'Gender ideology' in this sense embodies numerous deficits of the so-called progressive actors, and the movements or parties that mobilize against the perceived threat of 'gender ideology' react to these deficits by re-politicizing certain issues in a polarized language. Based on Chantal Mouffe's critique of the established hegemonic idea of consensus in liberal democracy, I discuss two consensuses that are characteristic of the so-called progressive actors (including the feminist and LGBTQ actors), namely, the neoliberal consensus and the human rights consensus, and their contribution to the rise of the movements against 'gender ideology'.
In: International feminist journal of politics, Band 19, Heft 4, S. 543-545
ISSN: 1468-4470
In: Gender and Far Right Politics in Europe, S. 175-189
In: Politické vedy: časopis pre politológiu, najnovšie dejiny, medzinárodné vztʹahy, bezpec̆nostné s̆túdiá = Political sciences : journal for political sciences, modern history, international relations, security studies, Band 24, Heft 4, S. 56-82
ISSN: 1338-5623
Recent years have seen a rise in prominence – at both national and European levels – of anti-gender movements and parties. While actors using this rhetoric can be found across most EU member states, anti-gender rhetoric represents government policy in a few East-Central European countries, bringing these objections to the European level. In this article, we analyse and interpret this ECE-led state opposition to 'gender' by examining the diversification of the meaning of this term at EU level, including a shift from a structural to an individualist one, which we argue lends empirical credibility to the anti-gender rhetoric of right-wing populist parties. Based on interviews with EU stakeholders in the European Commission, European Parliament and EU-level civil society, as well as on the analysis of European Commission documents and Council Conclusions, we track the use of the term 'gender' and the definition which has been attached to it. We conclude that these changes result at least in part from feminist taboos and neoliberal tendencies within feminist theory arriving to the EU polity. We believe that the shifts around the concept of gender on the progressive side shed light on the popularity of the anti-gender discourse and of the right-wing itself. ; publishedVersion ; Peer reviewed
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In: Társadalmi Nemek Tudománya Interdiszciplináris eFolyóirat, Band 10, Heft 1, S. 39-66
ISSN: 2062-7084
Tanulmányunkban végigvesszük az interszekcionalitás történetét, az 1960-as évek identitáspolitikai küzdelmeitől napjaink interszekcionális politikai gyakorlataiig. Majd kifejtük a kortárs individualista, excelszemléletű interszekcionalitással szembeni kritikáinkat. Excelszemléletűnek nevezzük az interszekcionalitás azon kortárs kvantifikálódott és individualizálódott inkarnációját, mely az Excel-táblázathoz hasonlóan csak összeszámolja az egyéni elnyomási tapasztalatokat. Végül, ezzel szemben, felvázoljuk egy komplex interszekcionalitás lehetőségét.
In: Socio.hu: társadalomtudományi szemle : social science review, Band 9, Heft Special Issue, S. 91-115
ISSN: 2063-0468
Based on theories of the relations of labor and care, as well as previous research on the past 30 years of gender inequalities in Hungary, the paper aims to interpret these results and further develop the existing knowledge on the situation of women and gender relations in Hungarian society in the context of the social, economic, and political transformations of the past 30 years while considering the intersecting mechanisms ofemployment, family and care policies from a gender perspective. In 2017 we conducted six focus group interviews with lower-class women across the country and a representative survey on a sample of 1,000 respondents (both men and women), that will provide the empirical data for the paper. One of the core findings of the research is the striking tension that women experience on the labor market in relation to their care responsibilities incl. elderly care, especially in low-income and working-class groups. The counter-interest of the employers concerning care for dependent family members was a recurrent topic brought up by the participants of our interviews as well as the lack of expectations towards state support and towards men in the share of care work.
In: Anti-Gender Campaign in Europe. Eds. Roman Kuhar, David Paternotte, 2017
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