This article presents ‘Communitarianism’ in political theory as a ‘Blind Alley’. This is on the grounds that it is difficult to find a political theorist who is willing to be called a communitarian, because the literature lacks any well delineated concept of community, and because a number of awkward theoretical questions, notably about power, arise which are not clearly addressed within the literature. Furthermore, communitarianism has been a blind alley for feminists. Although feminism and so-called communitarianism share an opposition to some other varieties of social and political theory, the apparent affinities between feminism and communitarianism mask significant differences.
[1]
A. Oakley.
Women Confined: Towards a Sociology of Childbirth
,
1979
.
[2]
C. Bell,et al.
Community Studies: An Introduction to the Sociology of the Local Community
,
1973
.
[3]
Sophie Watson,et al.
The Sexual Contract
,
1989
.
[4]
Allen S. Mandel.
Comment …
,
1978,
British heart journal.
[5]
Charles Taylor,et al.
Multiculturalism And The Politics Of Recognition
,
1992
.
[6]
M. Walzer.
The Communitarian Critique of Liberalism
,
1990
.