Fairfield University professor to discuss women and politics at Fairfield University Bookstore

Fairfield University professor to discuss women and politics at Fairfield University Bookstore

Image: J Boryczka Jocelyn Boryczka, Ph.D., associate professor of politics at Fairfield University, will discuss her new book, "Suspect Citizens: Women, Virtue, and Vice in Backlash Politics," at 7 p.m. on Wednesday, November 28, at the Fairfield University Bookstore, 1499 Post Road, Fairfield. The talk is free and open to the public.

In her timely work, Dr. Boryczka considers the factors that drive the cycle of backlashes against women's struggle for equality, freedom and inclusion in American politics. She presents a wide-ranging feminist conceptual history and delves into the ideas of virtue and vice from the Puritans through contemporary debates over sex education and reproductive rights.

"Suspect Citizens" challenges virtue and vice as a moral paradigm consistent with contemporary democratic citizenship and advances a politics of collective responsibility and belonging.

"Using examples from ancient, modern, and contemporary political and feminist theory and practice, Boryczka thoughtfully and critically examines the shifting moral boundaries between virtue and vice in order to understand and expose how gendered notions of morality have constructed women as suspect citizens: unequal, constrained, and excluded from full citizenship within American democracy," wrote Jennifer Leigh Disney, Ph.D., associate professor of political science and director of the Women's Studies Program at Winthrop University. "Her work constitutes essential reading for students of political theory, feminist theory, and anyone interested in advancing a democratic feminist ethics."

Dr. Boryczka teaches several courses on political theory, feminist thought, race, class and gender. She holds a Ph.D. from The Graduate Center, City University of New York.

For more information, contact Elizabeth Hastings, ehastings@fairfield.edu or (203) 254-4000, ext. 2688. For more information on Fairfield's MFA in Creative Writing Program, visit www.fairfield.edu/mfa .

Posted On: 11-14-2012 11:11 AM

Volume: 45 Number: 103