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216 pp
5.5x8.25
"Analyzing moral discourses from the Mayflower Compact to contemporary abstinence campaigns, Jocelyn Boryczka traces raced, classed, and gendered assumptions about virtue and vice that challenge long-cherished myths concerning liberty, equality and secularism in the United States. Demonstrating how sexual divisions of labor structure moral guardianship of the family and the nation, Suspect Citizens provides a compelling account of the peculiarly American dynamics of sexual oppression, while also offering a cogent strategy to free democratic participation from perfectionist traditions incompatible with equal citizenship."
Mary Hawkesworth, Rutgers University
What drives the cycle of backlashes against women's ongoing struggle for equality, freedom, and inclusion in American politics? In her innovative and provocative book, Suspect Citizens, Jocelyn Boryczka presents a feminist conceptual history that shows how American politics have largely defined women in terms of their reproductive and socializing functions. This framework not only denies women full citizenship, but also devalues the active political engagement of all citizens who place each other and their government under suspicion.
Developing the gendered dynamics of virtue and vice, Boryczka exposes the paradox of how women are perceived as both virtuous moral guardians and vice-ridden suspect citizens capable of jeopardizing the entire nation's exceptional future. She uses wide-ranging examples from the Puritans and contemporary debates over sex education to S&M lesbian feminists and the ethics of care to show how to move beyond virtue and vice to a democratic feminist ethics.
Suspect Citizens advances a politics of collective responsibility and belonging.
Excerpt available at www.temple.edu/tempress
"Using examples from ancient, modern, and contemporary political and feminist theory and practice, Boryczka thoughtfully and critically examines the shifting moral boundaries between virtue and vice in order to understand and expose how gendered notions of morality have constructed women as suspect citizens: unequal, constrained, and excluded from full citizenship within American democracy. By adopting a conceptual histories approach that reexamines the dualism of virtue and vice in the American political script, Boryczka provides an original, powerful, and compelling argument that contemporary political and feminist theorists must engage. Her work constitutes essential reading for students of political theory, feminist theory, and anyone interested in advancing a democratic feminist ethics."
Dr. Jennifer Leigh Disney, Associate Professor of Political Science and Director of the Women's Studies Program, Winthrop University
"Boryczka addresses categories of virtue and vice that operate to render women 'suspect citizens' in the American political script.... The book contains many interesting and provocative juxtapositions. Summing Up: Highly recommended."
Choice
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Moral Guardians but Suspect Citizens: Women, Virtue, and Vice in the Western Political Imaginary
Defining Virtue and Vice
Virtue and Vice in Contemporary Political Theory: Displacing Women and Politics
Methodological Matters
The Plan of the Book
1. Conceptual Locations: Where Virtue, Vice, and Citizenship Intersect
Virtue and Vice in Ancient and Medieval Western Political Thought
Modern Theoretical Groundings: Alexis de Tocqueville and Mary Wollstonecraft in America
Suspect Citizenship: At the Intersection of Morality and Politics
2. The Religious Roots of Moral Guardianship: American Women as the Daughters of Eve and Zion
The Puritan Point of Emergence: Infinite and Finite Virtue and Vce
The Infinite as a Necessary Problem: Mary Daly’s Gyn/Ecology and Pure Lust
Martyrs for Democracy: The Sacred, Profane, and Double Burden of Moral Responsibility
3. “Back to Virtue” Backlash Politics: Privileging Irresponsibility
Debating Women’s Education and Moral Guardianship in the Republican Era
Debating Contemporary Sex Education: Resurrecting the Daughters of Eve and Zion
Scapegoats for Democracy: Trust, Blame, and Irresponsibility in American Citizenship
4. Suspect Citizenship: From Lowell Mill Girls to Lesbian Feminists and Sadomasochism
Lowell Mill Girl Debates: The Trap of True Womanhood
The Rebels: Weakening the Bonds of Virtue
Lesbian Feminist S/M Debates: The Moral Bondage of Moral Guardianship
Fantasy and Imagination in Lesbian S/M and Contemporary Feminist Ethics
Suspect Citizens as Innovative Ideologists
5. “Ozzie and Harriet” Morality: Resetting Liberal Democracy’s Moral Compass
The Separate Spheres Paradox: Alexis de Tocqueville’s Democracy in America
A “Curl Back” to Virtue: Neutralizing Gender in Contemporary Morality
Habitual Inattention to Democracy: The Power of Vice
6. The Legacy of Virtue and Vice: Mary Wollstonecraft and Contemporary Feminist Care Ethics
Sex, Sexuality, and Suspicion in Mary Wollstonecraft’s Political Thought
Moral Perfectionism in Feminist Care Ethics: The Problems of Infinite Virtue, Patriarchal Moral Standards, and Omitting Vice
Parochialism: Practice and the Limits of Finite Virtues
The Vice of Omission: Sex and Sexuality in Feminist Care Ethics
Conclusion: Beyond Virtue and Vice: Toward a Democratic Feminist Ethic
The Frontiers of Collective Responsibility: Toward a Democratic Feminist Ethics of Belonging
Notes
References
Index
Jocelyn M. Boryczka is Associate Professor of Politics at Fairfield University.
Political Science and Public Policy
Women's Studies
Philosophy and Ethics
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