Rosemarie Tong

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Rosemarie Putnam Tong
Born
Rosemarie Behensky

19 July 1949
Health care ethics
, Genetic and reproductive technology

Rosemarie "Rosie" Tong is an American

feminist philosopher
. The author of 1998's Feminist Thought: A More Comprehensive Introduction, an overview of the major traditions of feminist theory, she is the emeritus distinguished professor of health care ethics in the Department of Philosophy at the University of North Carolina, Charlotte.

Tong's research is focused on ethical issues in long-term care,

cognitive enhancement and genetics. She has been recognized for contributions to bioethics, health care reform, genetic and reproductive technology, and the implications of caregiving for parents and children, a role performed primarily by women.[1][2]

Early life

Tong was born Rosemarie Behensky in

Czech ancestry.[3][4] Her paternal grandfather was an immigrant from Nehodiv.[5]

Education

Tong holds a BA in religious studies and German from Marygrove College, an MA in philosophy from Catholic University and a PhD from Temple University. Her MA thesis was on the 19th-century German philosopher Wilhelm Dilthey. She earned her PhD with a dissertation titled "Towards a Rational reconstruction of Anglo-American Criminal Law: The Insanity Defense."[6]

Career and affiliations

Tong has held professorships at Williams College and Lafayette College. She was the Thatcher Professor in Medical Humanities at Davidson College until 1999, when she began her professorship at the University of North Carolina.[7]

She chaired the American Philosophical Association's Committee on the Status of Women from 2003-2007. From 1999-2002 she was the co-coordinator of the International Network for Feminist Approaches to Bioethics. Tong has also served as chair of the Institutional Review Board's Conflict of Interest Committee at Chesapeake Research, Inc., co-chair of the North Carolina Institute of Medicine's Task Force on Pandemic Influenza, and on the boards of the U.S. Women's Bioethics Project, the North Carolina Biotechnology Center and the Association for Practical and Professional Ethics.

Tong has been a consultant to the Advanced Center for Learning Studies, the

Sloan Foundation, the Ford Foundation, the Fullerton Foundation and the National Endowment for the Humanities.[2][7]

She has written 13 books and more than 100 papers, and was the series editor of the Point/Counterpoint series and the New Feminist Perspectives series from Rowman and Littlefield Press.[2]

In Feminist Thought,[8] Tong describes intersectionality and its importance to the globalization of feminism. Tong explains the different sections of feminism that have emerged throughout the years. Tong suggests that intersectionality represents the commitment of women and global feminists, regardless of culture, to "widen the scope of feminist thought." Although global feminism is defined by the sexual issues and gender discrimination of women, its personal twist stems from the political and economic disparities. "Third World" women are far more concerned with the latter disparities separating them from their privileged oppressors. The political agenda of the western world has direct implications on the globalization of the rest of the world, the "non-west."

Personal life

Her first husband, Dr. Paul Ki King Tong, was a

Glassboro State College.[9] The couple bore 2 sons. After Paul died in 1988, she married Jeremiah Putnam.[citation needed] Her son Paul died in 2013.[10]

Partial bibliography

Author

Co-author and co-editor

  • Globalizing Feminist Bioethics (co-authored with Aida Santos and Gwen Anderson)
  • Feminist Philosophy: Essential Readings in Theory, Reinterpretation, and Application' (Co-edited with Nancy Tuana) Westview, 1994,
  • Feminist Philosophies: Problems, Theories, and Applications (Co-edited with James Sterba and Janet Kourany) Prentice-Hall, 1991.

References

  1. PMID 12221502
    .
  2. ^ a b c "Rosemarie Tong". University of North Carolina. Retrieved 9 October 2016.
  3. ^ Behensky (2005). "United States Social Security Death Index". FamilySearch.
  4. ^ Nedved (1981). "Illinois, Cook County Deaths, 1878-1994". FamilySearch.
  5. ^ "Census 1900 Nehodiv (Nehodiw, Nehodivo), Nr. 24 | Porta fontium". www.portafontium.eu. Retrieved 2020-04-30.
  6. ^ Hull, Gordon. "Remarks" (PDF). uncc.edu. UCC Ethics. Retrieved 10 October 2016.
  7. ^ a b "Rosemarie Tong". cddc.vt.edu. CDCC. Retrieved 10 October 2016.
  8. ^ .
  9. ^ "The Transcript from North Adams, Massachusetts on April 2, 1988 · 2". Newspapers.com. Retrieved 2020-04-30.
  10. ^ "Paul Shih-Mien Tong '95 – Davidson College – In Memoriam". Retrieved 2020-04-30.