Affiliation:
1. Carleton University, Canada
Abstract
This article explores recent charges of Western-centrism and gender essentialism in care ethics. In response to these charges, and informed by the work of Carol Gilligan, I argue for a view of care ethics that regards it not primarily as a normative theory advocating for care and care
workers, but as a critical ethics that voices and enacts resistance to Cartesian splits and hierarchies. These are not just gender hierarchies; rather, care ethics resists all binaries that divide people into categories and separate them from others, and, indeed, from themselves.
Subject
Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Health Policy,Sociology and Political Science,Health (social science)
Cited by
27 articles.
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