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여성은 평화적인가? 엘쉬타인의 전쟁과 평화에 관한 논의를 중심으로
Feminine Peace and Peaceful Femininity : Jean Elshtain’s Problematic Theory of “Problematic” Peace

  • 간행물
    인문언어 KCI 등재 바로가기
  • 권호(발행년)
    제17권 1호 (2015.05) 바로가기
  • 페이지
    pp.87-125
  • 저자
    권석우
  • 언어
    한국어(KOR)
  • URL
    https://www.earticle.net/Article/A251972

원문정보

초록

영어
There have been arguments concerning whether femininity is inherently peaceful or peace is in itself feminine. Whereas most radical feminists such as Sara Ruddick and Betty Reardon and anti-militaristic feminists such as Cynthia Enloe advocate the notion of peaceful women, equal rights or liberal feminists such as Barbara Ehrenreich and political realist such as Jean Elshtain reject the idea but with a different reason. Ehrenreich insists women are not peaceful and even war prone in order to prove that men and women are equal in their performances; Elshtain proclaims women can not be pacifists to advocate that war is functionally necessary to the sustenance of the state. Among many theories, however, Elshtain’s political thought related with gender, peace and war is under scrutiny here in this article, in that she has delved into these issues in a sustained and very controversial manner. As an exemplary proponent of political realism and liberal or “neoliberal” feminism in the arena of international relations, Elshtain negates the notion of feminine peace or peaceful femininity by providing examples of various women participating in the war around the world. The political realization that war has always been in the world and will not be “obsolete” makes her say peace is “problematic” and even “sterile,” because it robs a vital and driving force from the people and their history. In her ideal civic state where “purified patriots” do carry “necessary” just war against terror, no place is given therefore for the perpetual peace. Whether women are peaceful, bellicose, peaceful but warring if necessary (Johan Galtung, Christine Sylvester, Jan Pettman, and Dan Smith and Inger Skjelsboek, among others), one thing commonly accepted for all the feminists and IR theorists despite their political differences is that, ultimately “peace is better than war.” Elshtain’s theory of problematic peace, then, turns out to be “problematic” because she claims war has been inevitable as a vital force through which the world is constituted and thus peace, categorically passive and inferior, will politically never be actualized. For Elshtain, war matters, not peace. This article insists however that the notion of “negative peace” should be transcended by not positioning peace opposite to war in the world of nuclear war which in the end nullifies the notion of constituting war itself. A new notion of peace is thus desirable to move away from the outdated notion peace as an absence of war and from the obsolete notion of nuclear catastrophe, a structural and ultimate outcome of negative peace. After one massive nuclear war, there will be no more “deterrent” wars. The awareness that war’s opposite is not peace but ordinariness and “fullness of life”(Panikkar), and that ordinary “full” life is not achieved by war may relieve Elshtain from her relentlessly realistic but nevertheless idealistic conundrum, who is driven with the political notion of “homo homini lupus” and “bellum omnium contra omnes,” which should be negated in the civil society in vain.

목차

Ⅰ. 서론
 Ⅱ. 엘쉬타인의 전쟁과 평화에 관한 사유: 여성은 평화적이지도 않으며 평화는 문제적이다.
 Ⅲ. 급진주의적 페미니즘의 주장과 한계: 여성은 평화적이건 호전적이건 우월하다
 Ⅳ. 결론— 여성은 평화적이며 때로는 전쟁에 참여한다
 인용문헌
 [Abstract]

저자

  • 권석우 [ Seokwoo Kwon | 서울시립대학교 ]

참고문헌

자료제공 : 네이버학술정보

    간행물 정보

    • 간행물
      인문언어 [LINGUA HUMANITATIS]
    • 간기
      반년간
    • pISSN
      1598-2130
    • 수록기간
      2000~2025
    • 등재여부
      KCI 등재
    • 십진분류
      KDC 705 DDC 405