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Joanne Wright associate professor

Joanne Wright is the author of Origin Stories in Political Thought: Discourses on Gender, Power and Citizenship (2004), which is a comparative study of the construction and use of narratives about the beginnings of politics in works by Plato, Hobbes, and second wave radical feminists. Since completing her PhD in political theory from York University in 1999, her research has centered on feminist analyses of early modern political thought and on interpretations of consent and sexual violence in law and in the Second Wave feminist movement. Dr. Wright's recent work examines the meanings and intersections of public and private in the medical writings of John Locke and in the drama and orations of seventeenth-century political writer Margaret Cavendish. She is currently working on a study of women's war writings that encompasses ideas on violence and masculinity in selected works by Margaret Cavendish and Virginia Woolf. Dr. Wright is co-editing, with Nancy Hirschmann, Feminist Interpretations of Hobbes, the first collection of feminist readings of Hobbes's works.

Joanne Wright
Recent Publications:
 Teaching areas:

Political ideologies & rights conflicts in North America

    POLS 1403 Contemporary Political Ideas & Ideologies

    POLS 3103 Rights in Conflict in North America

Second Wave feminist movement in North America

    POLS 2503 Women and Politics*

Feminist theory & women's political thought

    POLS 3443 Feminist Issues in Political Thought*

    POLS 3441 Women political thinkers*

Law and politics

    POLS 3257 Law and Politics in Canada

* can be taken for credit in Women's Studies.

 

Professor Wright joined the Department of Political Science at the University of New Brunswick in 2005.

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