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Ronny Miron
The XVIIIth Symposium of the International Association of Woman Philosophers, IAPh, 2021, Defining the Future, Rethinking the Past,
Blackwell Companion to Hermeneutics, edited by Niall Keane and Chris Lawn, Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell.
Hermeneutics and feminist philosophy
2015 •
Sara Heinämaa
The Blackwell Guide to Feminist Philosophy
salih acraa
“Feminist Aesthetics and the Politics of Modernism.” APA Newsletter on Feminism and Philosophy. 10:1. Fall 2013. 25-27.
Summer Renault-Steele
WUW
Becoming bell hooks. A story about the self-empowerment of a Black girl who became a feminist
2023 •
Aneta Ostaszewska
This book is the story of Gloria Jean Watkins (1952–2021), a Black woman from a small town in Kentucky who became a bell hooks—a feminist icon, one of the most significant and courageous voices of the contemporary debates on racial discrimination, feminism, and women’s and minority rights. The author focuses on the autobiographical dimension of bell hooks’ essays—it is a story about “biographical work” of a woman who creates herself in the course of writing her autobiography. THE BOOK IS AN OPEN-ACCESS E-BOOK & FREE TO DOWNLOAD HERE: https://www.wuw.pl/product-pol-18627-Becoming-bell-hooks-A-story-about-the-self-empowerment-of-a-Black-girl-who-became-a-feminist-EBOOK.html
The Position of a Woman: A Poetics of Grace Paley’s Political Storytelling
2019 •
Jamie Zabinsky
ions severed from the doings of living people, fed back to people as slogans. Theory––the seeing of patterns, showing the forest as well as the trees––theory can be a dew that rises from the earth and collects in the rain cloud and returns to earth over and over. But if it doesn’t smell of the earth, it isn’t good for the earth. (BBP 213214)
The Circle of Nothingness - The Problem of the Phenomenological Beginning and the Possibility for Metaphysics
2021 •
Ronny Miron
Philosophy and progress
Gender Discrimination and its Epistemological Basis: A Study on Feminist Epistemology
2022 •
SANTOSH KUMAR PAL
Policy Futures in Education
Biswas et al., Childism and philosophy: A conceptual co-exploration
2023 •
Ohad Zehavi
This article is a conceptual co-exploration of the relationship between philosophy and childism. It draws upon a colloquium in December 2021 at the Childism Institute at Rutgers University. Nine co-authors lay out and interweave scholarly imaginations to collectively explore the concept of childism in critical philosophical depth. Through diverse entry points, the co-authors bring a wide range of theoretical perspectives to this task, some engaging the term childism explicitly in their work, others approaching it anew. The result is an extended conversation about the possibilities for deconstructing ingrained historical adultism and reconstructing social norms and structures in response to what is marginalized in the experiences of children. Our own conclusion, having initiated this dialogue, is that we have learned to think about childism with greater plurality, that is, as childisms.
The New School ProQuest Dissertations Publishing
Losing Like a Girl: Feminist Grief and the Phallicism of Identity Politics
2023 •
Setareh Shohadaei
This work grapples with some limitations of feminist identity politics, particularly in the instances where feminist discourses have been co-opted into global sectarian wars, alt-right nationalisms, or neoliberal racisms. While such appropriations have been critically diagnosed to stem from a missing analytic of intersectionality, I argue that at a more elemental level, there is a missing analysis of how feminist politics identify with phallogocentric violence in such instances. I introduce the work of Luce Irigaray into feminist political thought and show that the underlying process of identification is rooted in a structurally masculinist model of encountering loss: the consolidation and enclosure of sameness into a sovereign ‘I’ or ‘we’ in reaction to the trauma of (maternal) loss and the expulsion and appropriation of difference as threat. While this mode of identity formation is typically understood through the Freudian analysis of melancholia, I argue that the standard readings of the Freudian alternatives of mourning and mania also pursue a phallic deferment or disavowal of loss, trapping the subject into a fixed identity. Building on Irigaray’s work, I propose that the feminine consists of a relation to maternal loss that is at once mournful, melancholic, and manic, breaking open the phallic temporality of the progressive disavowal or the deferring substitution of the lost object. I then turn to Sophocles’s Antigone to show that feminine mourning is not only melancholic and manic, it also introduces a difference within each of these categories in remaining in touch with and fractured by the irreplaceable void of (maternal) loss. This grief must be at the heart of decolonial intersectional feminist resistance if the latter is not to be re-subjugated into the violence of identity politics.