Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Marilyn Friedman

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Nationality
  
American

Other names
  
Marilyn Ann Friedman

Name
  
Marilyn Friedman


Marilyn Friedman magazinearchiveswustleduspring06imagespg16jpg

Born
  
April 7, 1945 (age 78) (
1945-04-07
)

Notable work
  
Autonomy, Gender, Politics

Alma mater
  
University of Western Ontario

Main interests
  
Women's rights, Cultural diversity

Books
  
Autonomy - Gender - Politics, Women and Citizenship, Political Correctness: For and A, What are Friends For?: Fe, Autonomy - Gender - Politics S

Marilyn Ann Friedman (born April 7, 1945), is an American philosopher. She is the W. Alton Jones Chair of Philosophy at Vanderbilt University.

Contents

Education

In 1967, she received an A.B. in political science from Washington University in St. Louis. In 1968, she moved to Canada for political reasons and resided there for a decade. And by 1974 she received a Ph.D. in Philosophy from the University of Western Ontario in London, Canada. In 1964, while Friedman was taking a year off from college, she was persuaded by what she refers to as “a kind of political ignorance and apathy” by political chaos.

Career

Friedman's full-time teaching career began in 1973 where she spent four years teaching at Denison University. Since then she has also taught in the U.S. and Canada, ranging from small private liberal arts college to a large state university, such as University of Western Ontario, Bowling Green State University, Purdue University, and Washington University in St. Louis.

By the mid-1980s, autonomy had begun her main academic focus. “Many feminists thought that the moral ideal of autonomy represented male but not female modes of moral reasoning,” said Friedman. “Most people saw autonomy as a separation of self from loved ones—a kind of selfishness. I see it in terms of self-determination, and I didn't think it had to carry specifically masculine associations.” Friedman considers the impact of familial and community relationships on autonomy and considers critical reflection as a way to diminish oppression. She has also explored such topics as: the nature of close interpersonal relationships, women in poverty, care and justice, partiality and impartiality, autonomy, gender identity, and multicultural education. Friedman gained tenure in 1993, twenty years after she first began teaching. Currently she works in social and political philosophy, ethics, and feminist theory at Vanderbilt University.

Publications

Friedman's first book, What Are Friends For? Feminist Perspectives on Personal Relationships on Moral Theory discusses friendship, care ethics, partiality, and impartiality. Her most recent book, Autonomy, Gender, Politics, defends the ideals of autonomy against various analyses and applies that model to issues like domestic violence and multicultural political relationships. Friedman is also the editor of Women and Citizenship, which contains essays by leading feminist scholars, and has co-edited Feminism and Community, Mind and Morals: Essays on Ethics and Cognitive Science, and Rights and Reason: Essays in Honor of Carl Wellman. Her articles have appeared in anthologies, as well as the Journal of Philosophy, Ethics, Hypatia, and others.

Awards and recognition

Throughout Friedman's career, she has earned several research fellowships and directed a woman’s studies program. Her fields of special interest are female terrorists, women’s rights, and cultural diversity. Friedman's current interests include a project on female terrorists, and she is covering topics such as whether virtue is required for happiness, how to engage in blaming people in a responsible manner, and how to understand abused women who are convicted of failing to protect their children from the same abusers who are abusing them.

Personal life

Friedman was raised in the city of Chicago by parents who were poorly educated, working class Jewish immigrants. She is married to philosopher, Larry May, and has one daughter.

References

Marilyn Friedman Wikipedia