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ESSAY 101 Colum. L. Rev. 181 (2001).
Theorizing Yes: An Essay on Feminism, Law, and Desire
Katherine M. Franke
In this Essay, Professor Franke observes that, unlike feminists from other
disciplines, feminist legal theorists have neglected to formulate a positive
theory of female sexuality. Instead, discussions of female sexuality have
been framed as either a matter of dependency or danger. Professor Franke begins
her challenge to this scheme by asking why legal feminism has accepted unquestionably
the fact that most women reproduce in their lifetimes. Why have not social
forces that incentivize motherhood—a dynamic she terms repronormativity—been
exposed to as exacting a feminist critique as have heteronormative forces
that normalize heterosexuality? Furthermore, she continues by noting that
when feminist legal theory renders sex as dangerous, such analysis risks advancing
the view that the only acceptable answer to any sexual proposition is "no."
Professor Franke cautions that the willingness of most legal feminists to
maternalize uncritically the female subject or to conceptualize sex as the
inevitable site of danger for women, effectively marginalizes, if not erases,
the possibility of non-reproductive female sexual desire and pleasure.
? Copyright 2002 by the Columbia Law Review. All rights reserved.