@article{Adami_2018, title={In a Man’s words - the politics of female representation in the public}, volume={6}, url={https://tidsskrift.dk/spf/article/view/102213}, DOI={10.7146/spf.v6i1.102213}, abstractNote={<p>What one decides fit for appearance through writing and speech bears a political signifi cance that risk being distorted through both language, reception in the public, and through calls for gendered representations. How can work of female philosophers be interpreted as a concern for the world from that of having to respond to a male-dominated discourse through which speech becomes trapped into what one might represent as ‘other’? In this paper, I explore the public reception of two female thinkers who question, in diff erent ways, the dominant notion of the author or philosopher as a male subject; what kind of limitations does the relative notion of ‘female’ pose political action, and how can privilege constitute a hindrance to feminist solidarity?</p>}, number={1}, journal={Studier i Pædagogisk Filosofi}, author={Adami, Rebecca}, year={2018}, month={mar.}, pages={55–68} }