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Old wives' tales and philosophical delusions: on ‘the problem of women and
Abstract
This article represents a response to ‘the problem of women and African philosophy', which refers mainly to the absence of strong women's and feminist
voices within the discipline of African philosophy. I investigate the possibility that African women are not so much excluded from the institutionalized discipline of philosophy, as preferring fiction as a genre for intellectual expression. This hypothesis can be supported by some feminists who read the absolute prioritisation of abstraction and generalization over the concrete and the particular as a masculine and western oppressive strategy. Attention to the concrete and the unique which is made possible by literature more readily
than by philosophy, could thus operate as a form of political resistance in certain contexts. If fiction is currently the preferred form of intellectual expression of African women, it is crucial that the community of professional philosophers in a context like South Africa should come to terms with the relevance of such a preference for philosophy's self-conception, and it should work to make these intellectual contributions philosophically fruitful. In the
process, we may entertain the hope that philosophy itself will move closer to its root or source as ‘love of wisdom'.
South African Journal of Philosophy Vol. 27 (4) 2008: pp. 413-429