Roswitha Scholz, born in Germany in 1959, is a philosopher and a social theorist.[1] She works as a editor for EXIT! journal, which she co-founded in 2004, after participating in the Krisis group and magazine (founded in 1986 in Nuremberg by the philosopher Robert Kurz, Ernst Lohoff, Klaus Braunwarth and Udo Winkel).[2][1][3]
Inspired by the social theory of Theodor W. Adorno, she revolutionized the theoretical current of value criticism in 1992 with her article Value is the male(Der Wert ist der Mann) which contained theses on socialization in relationship to the value form and the relationship between the sexes. The text initiated the theoretical current of value dissociation criticism, which enriched the field of value criticism with the feminist question, as well as transformed it in terms of both content and method.[4][5]
She is committed to theorizing a question that remains, in her view, "an unsolved problem" in feminism, the internal link between capitalism and modern patriarchy and its metamorphoses, and tries to theorize a move beyond feminisms of equality, differancé, deconstructionism, materialism, ecofeminisms and "class struggle" feminisms.[6]
^Roswitha, Scholz (2014). "Patriarchy and Commodity Society". In Larsen, Niel; Nilges, Mathias; Robinson, Josh; Brown, Nicholas (eds.). Marxism and the critique of value. Chicago (Ill.): MCM' Publishing. pp. 123–142. ISBN978-0-9895497-0-7.