Representing the Intersection in France and America:
Theories of Intersectionality Meet Social Science
Alexandre Jaunait
University of Poitiers
alexjaunait@hotmail.com
Sébastien Chauvin
University of Amsterdam
chauvin@uva.nl
Revue Française de Science Politique (English edition), 2012/1. Vol.62, p.1-15.
DOI: 10.3917/rfspe.621.0001
ISSN 2263-7494
Abstract
Forged in the United States in the 1980s, the notion of intersectionality sought to provide an umbrella
name for the strategic and identity dilemmas faced by categories of persons suffering from combined
forms of domination. This article retraces the comparative genealogy of the notion in the United States
and in France since the 1970s, and describes how its appropriation in social scientific inquiry allowed
reformulating what were normative problems specific to the politico-juridical sphere, into principles of
empirical investigation. Increasingly used in France since the mid-2000s, the notion of intersectionality
has led to the exploration of new objects and the development of new research agendas, especially
within political science.