Feminist Interpretations of RenŽ DescartesSusan Bordo Contributors are Susan Bordo, Stanley Clarke, Erica Harth, Leslie Heywood, Luce Irigaray, Genevieve Lloyd, Mario Moussa, Eileen O'Neill, Adrianna Paliyenko, Ruth Perry, Mario S&áenz, Karl Stern, Thomas Wartenberg, and James Winders. |
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Page 3
... . Happily , since feminist philosophers began to produce their epistemological and cultural critiques in the early and mid - 1980s , philosophy has engaged in the reconstruction we called for ( although the male philosophers Introduction 3.
... . Happily , since feminist philosophers began to produce their epistemological and cultural critiques in the early and mid - 1980s , philosophy has engaged in the reconstruction we called for ( although the male philosophers Introduction 3.
Page 4
... called it " the greatest sorrow that he had ever experienced in his life . " According to his first biogra- pher , Baillet , he " wept for his child with a tenderness which showed that the thought of eternity is capable of being ...
... called it " the greatest sorrow that he had ever experienced in his life . " According to his first biogra- pher , Baillet , he " wept for his child with a tenderness which showed that the thought of eternity is capable of being ...
Page 19
... called it ) . Although Cartesian Man has been officially declared dead , like Freddy Kruger he just keeps popping up again — particularly in aca- demia ! We end our piece with the suggestion that there are other “ post Carte- sian ...
... called it ) . Although Cartesian Man has been officially declared dead , like Freddy Kruger he just keeps popping up again — particularly in aca- demia ! We end our piece with the suggestion that there are other “ post Carte- sian ...
Page 30
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Page 50
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Contents
Descartes Karl Stern | 29 |
Selections from The Flight to Objectivity Susan Bordo | 48 |
Reason as Attainment Genevieve Lloyd | 70 |
Descartess Gender Stanley Clarke | 82 |
Gender and Other Trouble in the Meditations | 103 |
Wonder A Reading of Descartes The Passions of the Soul Luce Irigaray | 105 |
Writing Like a Man? Descartes Science and Madness James A Winders | 114 |
Postmodern Turns Against the Cartesian Subject Descartess I Lacans Other Adrianna M Paliyenko | 141 |
Cartesian Women Erica Harth | 213 |
Women Cartesians Feminine Philosophy and Historical Exclusion Eileen ONeill | 232 |
Cartesian Man | 259 |
When Descartes Met the Fitness Babe Academic Cartesianism and the Late TwentiethCentury Cult of the Body Leslie Heyivood | 261 |
Rehabilitating the I Susan Bordo and Mario Moussa | 280 |
Cartesian AutobiographyPostCartesian Testimonials Mario Saenz | 305 |
Select Bibliography on Descartes Cartesianism and Gender | 328 |
Contributors | 332 |
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activity Anorexia anorexic argues Astell believe body Cambridge canon cartes cartes's Cartesian dualism Cartesian subject Cartesian Women Catherine Descartes chameleon Christina Christina of Sweden claim cogito conception conscious contemporary context correspondence critical critique cultural Derrida Descartes's dialogue discourse Discourse on Method doubt dreams dualism Elisabeth Elizabeth of Bohemia epistemic epistemological essay Evelyn Fox Keller example existence fact female feminine Feminism feminist Flight to Objectivity Foucault Freud gender Harth human ideas imagination intellectual interpretation Irigaray Keller knowledge Lacan language letter Luce Irigaray male Mama Day Mary Astell masculine mental metaphysical method Michel Foucault mind moral nature Nietzsche one's Paris passions perspective philosophical political postmodern question rational reading reality reason reflection relation René Descartes Rigoberta Menchú role salon scientific Scudéry Scudéry's sense seventeenth century social soul speaking Susan Bordo texts things thinking thought tion tradition truth unconscious understanding Vigne woman writings York