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"Throwing like a Girl: A Phenomenology of Feminine Body Comportment Motility and Spatiality" is a 1980 essay by political philosopher and feminist Iris Marion Young which examines differences in feminine and masculine norms of movement in the context of a gendered and embodied phenomenological perspective.
- Iris Marion Young
- 1980
The young girl acquires many subtle habits of feminine body comportment--walking like a girl, tilting her head like a girl, standing and sitting like a girl, gesturing like a girl, and so on. The girl learns actively to hamper her movements.
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24. Aug. 2014 · The “girlie throw” results from a restricted use of lateral space that tends to come only from the localized part of the body that is doing the action — the hand and forearm — and rarely uses...
Throwing like a girl: A phenomenology of feminine body comportment motility and spatiality. Published: December 1980. Volume 3 , pages 137–156, ( 1980 ) Cite this article. Download PDF. Iris Marion Young. 9717 Accesses.
- Iris Marion Young
- 1980
Straus explains the difference in style of throwing by referring to a “feminine attitude” in relation to the world and to space. The difference for him is biologically based, but he denies that it is specifically anatomical. Girls throw in a way different from boys because girls are “feminine.”
13. Jan. 2005 · These essays describe diverse aspects of women’s lived body experience in modern Western societies. They combine theoretical description of experience with normative evaluation of the unjust constraints on freedom and opportunity that continue to burden many women.
insights from Iris Marion Young’s (2005) ‘‘Throwing Like a Girl,’’ will argue that the modalities of feminine bodily existence (at least for many women living in contemporary industrial societies) pose barriers to women’s success in combat sports. Young discusses ways in which lived body experience is