subjectivity
English
Etymology
From French subjectivité, equivalent to subjective + -ity.
Noun
subjectivity (countable and uncountable, plural subjectivities)
- (singular only) The state of being subjective.
- Synonyms: see Thesaurus:subjectivity
- Coordinate term: objectivity
- A subjective thought or idea.
- 1998, Lee, Ching Kwan, Gender and the South China Miracle, University of California Press, →ISBN, LCCN 97-25832, OCLC 615110024, OL 679333M, page 23:
- Beyond bringing women back into analyses of the workplace and the labor process, we now have to analyze how work is gendered and gendering: gender as a means of control and an organizing principle for class relations at the point of production, and workplace as a site for gender construction, formation, and reproduction. In the latest development, seeing gender as a power process also directs our attention toward the politics of identity, or the formation and claiming of collective subjectivities.
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Synonyms
- subjectiveness (less common)
Translations
state of being subjective — See also translations at objectivity
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a subjective thought
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