Philosophical discourse Bordo's writing aims to engage audiences beyond the academic sphere while remaining firmly rooted in
theoretical frameworks. Her work draws on philosophical discourse to examine issues such as
rationality,
objectivity, and
mind–body dualism, situating the body within historical and cultural contexts. Bordo argues that throughout history, the body has been constructed as separate from the "true self"—variously conceived as soul, mind, spirit, will, creativity, or freedom—and as an entity that undermines the efforts of that self. She traces the concept of the body to writers such as
Plato,
Augustine of Hippo, and the authors of the
Bible, which have portrayed the body as animalistic, appetitive, deceptive, and a prison for the soul. Bordo has examined the dualistic nature of the mind-body relationship through the philosophies of
Aristotle,
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, and
René Descartes. She has analyzed how binaries such as spirit/matter and male activity/female passivity have historically reinforced gender roles and categorizations. According to Bordo, these dualisms have positioned men as aligned with intellect and the mind or spirit, while women have been associated with the body, often the subordinate and negatively connoted term in this dichotomy.
Materialism Bordo argues that "knowledge is 'embodied,' produced from a 'standpoint,' by a body that exists as a material entity among other material entities." Bordo has critiqued this approach, observing that treating the body as pure text highlights "subversive" and "destabilizing" elements while celebrating freedom and self-determination but may overlook the material aspects of the body. Bordo has argued that cultural definitions of the body and its materiality must be resisted and insists that "real" bodies remain central to feminist analysis and resistance.
Feminism Bordo's critique of gendered, particularly feminine, bodies incorporates methodologies from feminist and gender studies. She has re-examined and modified other feminist approaches, including those that focused on dichotomies like oppressor/oppressed and victimizer/victim. Bordo has noted that
second-wave feminism often regarded "the female body [as] a socially shaped and historically 'colonized' territory," a perspective that, she argues, framed women and their bodies primarily as passive victims within a
patriarchal society. Bordo has highlighted newer feminist critiques that focus on "racial, economic and class differences among women" and examine both women's participation in patriarchal culture and their efforts to resist it.
Cultural studies Situated within feminist and gender studies frameworks, Bordo's theories also draw from
cultural studies, analyzing the influence of
mass media as tools of domination and resistance. While some cultural theorists, such as
John Fiske in
Television Culture (1990), view media as shaping perception through representational codes while also offering opportunities for resistance through audience reinterpretation, Bordo has taken a more critical stance. She has argued that cultural codes function as pervasive and constraining forces. According to Bordo, "the rules of femininity have come to be culturally transmitted more and more through the deployment of standardized visual images," with mass media insidiously imposing ideals of bodily beauty that are perceived by those affected as freely chosen options. Bordo has written in favor of Foucault's conceptualization of power as a network of decentralized forces for understanding the formation and regulation of gender. In this framework, power operates from below, meaning that societal norms, including gender, are maintained less through coercion and more through self-surveillance and self-regulation. ==Writing==