As a gender scholar, I was thrilled to be asked to review Nancy Fraser鈥檚 latest book, which Verso insists will become 鈥渁 landmark of feminist thought鈥. Fraser is one of the most influential feminist voices in the critical theory field, and her work has long been a staple of gender studies programmes. I was therefore disappointed to find that this book is not a 鈥渘ew鈥 work, but rather a collection of essays that have been published before, some of them numerous times. Now that I鈥檝e stated what the book 颈蝉苍鈥檛, I will spend the rest of the review talking about what it is; in a work spanning three decades, there is plenty to discuss.
Reading through this collection of essays, the earliest of which was published in 1985, I was reminded of the aphorism (often attributed to Mark Twain), 鈥渉istory doesn鈥檛 repeat itself, but it does rhyme鈥 鈥 the present echoes through even the oldest pieces. For example, chapter 3鈥檚 genealogy of 鈥渄ependency鈥 in US welfare programmes mirrors the austerity debates in the UK today 鈥 with 鈥渇reeloading immigrants鈥 in Britain replacing the 鈥渂lack welfare queens鈥 of the 1990s in the US. Readers in the UK will find the return to Fraser鈥檚 early work illuminating, given the current flux. In this sense, the timeliness of this collection cannot be overstated, reminding us that an alternative to global capitalism鈥檚 discouraging levels of inequality is desperately needed.
Given this immediacy, Part II, encompassing the 鈥渃ultural turn鈥 of the 1990s, feels somewhat detached. A chapter recounting Fraser鈥檚 theoretical headbutting with Judith Butler 鈥 an argument played out ad nauseam in feminist circles 鈥 feels particularly so. Those familiar with Fraser鈥檚 work may not be surprised that this is the most disconnected of the book鈥檚 three parts. Fraser blames the 鈥渃ultural turn鈥 on many of feminism鈥檚 shortcomings, arguing that identity politics shifted the focus from economic critique and resulted in a failure to address the advent of neoliberal capitalism (an argument described at length in Part III).
The timeliness of this collection cannot be overstated, reminding us that an alternative to global capitalism鈥檚 discouraging levels of inequality is desperately needed
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The second part鈥檚 focus on the theoretical, to the detriment of the practical, is illustrative of my largest bone to pick with this book. A collection of Fraser鈥檚 work needn鈥檛 solely take this tone; especially when it is advertised as 鈥渁nticipating a new鈥hase of feminist thought and action鈥 (my emphasis). Fraser herself is no stranger to 鈥渁ction鈥; she has been on the front lines of welfare debates in the US and the subject of numerous interviews linking her academic work to the activism of feminists and the Left, the inclusion of which would have provided examples of the 鈥渁ction鈥 promised by the publisher.
Beyond this critique, Fortunes of Feminism goes a long way in bringing together Fraser鈥檚 substantial body of work on redistribution and recognition which, taken collectively, shows that the devaluation of care work has long been the greatest factor in capitalist maldistribution and women鈥檚 oppression. Scholars interested in these themes will find this book invaluable 鈥 or at least they should. Which brings me to my final point. Fraser contends that contemporary 鈥渇eminism鈥ust join with other anti-capitalist forces, even while exposing their continued failure to absorb the insights of decades of feminist activism鈥.
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Above all, this collection demonstrates 鈥 in extensive detail 鈥 Fraser鈥檚 persistent engagement with critical theorists鈥 failure to take gender, race and sexuality seriously. Her life鈥檚 work is dedicated to showing that this failure affects not only women but everyone. It is unacceptable that, even while Fraser鈥檚 work is essential to feminist theory, certain strands of critical theory perpetually ignore gender.
Importantly, and as Fraser maintains, failing to take these issues seriously theoretically translates into a failure to do so in practice. In order to win the fight against global capitalism, we cannot afford to continue to look the other way. Critical theorists and anti-capitalist activists take note.
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