Age, Biography and Wiki
Daphne Patai was born on 1943 in in Jerusalem, is an American scholar and author (born 1943). Discover Daphne Patai's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is she in this year and how she spends money? Also learn how she earned most of networth at the age of 81 years old?
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She is a member of famous author with the age 81 years old group.
Daphne Patai Height, Weight & Measurements
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Daphne Patai Net Worth
Her net worth has been growing significantly in 2023-2024. So, how much is Daphne Patai worth at the age of 81 years old? Daphne Patai’s income source is mostly from being a successful author. She is from United States. We have estimated Daphne Patai's net worth, money, salary, income, and assets.
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$1 Million - $5 Million |
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Timeline
Patai is credited with discovering who wrote the notable feminist dystopian novel Swastika Night and other feminist speculative fiction in the 1930s.
They were published under the pseudonym of Murray Constantine but were written by an English woman named Katharine Burdekin.
Patai has been involved in their republication.
In addition to her work on women's studies and feminism, she continues to write about utopian studies and oral history.
Many of her opinion pieces have appeared in the Chronicle of Higher Education and in the online magazine Minding the Campus. She serves on the Board of Directors of The Foundation for Individual Rights in Education (FIRE), a non-profit organization devoted to protecting First Amendment rights on college campuses.
Daphne Patai (born 1943) is an American scholar and author.
She is professor emeritus of the Department of Languages, Literatures, and Cultures at the University of Massachusetts Amherst.
Her PhD is in Brazilian literature, but her early work also focused on utopian and dystopian fiction.
After spending ten years with a joint appointment in women's studies and in Portuguese, Patai became highly critical of what she saw as the imposition of a political agenda on educational programs.
In Patai's view, this politicization not only debases education, but also threatens the integrity of education generally.
Having done, earlier in her career, a good deal of research using personal interview techniques, she drew on these techniques in her book, co-authored with philosopher of science Noretta Koertge, entitled Professing Feminism.
Their research included personal interviews with feminist professors who had become disillusioned with feminist initiatives in education.
Drawing on these interviews and on materials defining and defending women's studies programs, the book analyzed practices within women's studies that the authors felt were incompatible with serious education and scholarship — above all, the explicit subservience of educational to political aims.
A recent enlarged edition of this book provided extensive documentation from current feminist writings of the continuation, and indeed exacerbation, of these practices.
Routinely challenged by feminists who declare that "all education is political," Patai has responded with the claim that this view is simplistic.
She argues that a significant difference exists between the reality that education may have political implications and the intentional use of education to indoctrinate.
The latter, she argues, is no more acceptable when done by feminists than when done by fundamentalists.
Patai's thesis is that a failure to defend the integrity of education and a habit of dismissing data and research on political grounds, not only seriously hurt students but also leave feminists helpless in trying to defend education against other ideological incursions (such as intelligent design).
Only positive knowledge, respect for logic, evidence, and scrupulous scholarship not held to political standards, Patai contends, can lead to a better future.
Twentieth-century examples of contrary educational practices have a sordid history, one that has hardly promoted women's rights (or any other human rights).
Among Patai's concerns are what she sees as draconian sexual harassment regulations as implemented in the academic world.
She argues that contemporary feminism is poisoned by a strong element of hostility to sexual interaction between men and women and an effort to suppress it through micromanagement of everyday relations.
This idea is developed in her 1998 book Heterophobia: Sexual Harassment and the Future of Feminism.
Patai has also written about the negative impact of Critical Theory on the study of literature.
Together with Will H. Corral she edited Theory's Empire: An Anthology of Dissent (Columbia University Press), a collection of essays by fifty scholars taking issue with Theory orthodoxies of the past few decades.
Patai insists that to criticize feminism and women's studies is not to seek to turn the clock back.
From her perspective, she is addressing her critiques to other educators (including feminist educators), in the hope that they will see the importance of defending education from those who want to force it into a particular political mould, regardless of the popularity of particular views at any given moment.
In 2008 Patai published ''What Price Utopia?
Essays on Ideological Policing, Feminism, and Academic Affairs'' (Rowman and Littlefield) -- which brings together her writing on the culture wars of the past two decades and also includes a few new pieces.
Her latest book, published in 2010 in Brazil, is a selection of her essays titled Historia Oral, Feminismo e Politica (São Paulo: Letra e Voz).