Je, Tu, NousIrigaray offers the clearest available introduction to her own work. Focusing on power, women, gender and patriarchal mythologies, she lays out what for her has become the central problem for women in the modern world. |
Contents
Equal or Different? | 9 |
The Neglect of Female Genealogies | 15 |
Religious and Civil Myths | 23 |
three | 29 |
four | 37 |
five | 45 |
I Wont Get AIDS | 61 |
eight | 67 |
nine | 75 |
eleven | 93 |
twelve | 101 |
thirteen | 107 |
fourteen | 113 |
fifteen | 119 |
sixteen | 133 |
Other editions - View all
Je, Tu, Nous: Toward a Culture of Difference : with a Personal Note by the ... Luce Irigaray No preview available - 2007 |
Common terms and phrases
Alice Jardine artificial become between-men culture child civil concern defined dimension divine economy enables equal especially example exchange exist fact father female body female identity female subjects feminine feminists fetus forms French gender of words genealogy girls give given grammatical gender Hestia History human images issue Italian Italian referendum lack language linguistic living Luce Irigaray male masculine maternal means men's motherhood mothers and daughters myths nature neutral objects oneself organ ourselves particularly patriarchal phallus placenta political possession possessive adjective problems procreation production psychoanalysis question reality relation relationship religious respect Romance languages Second Sex sexed subjects sexual difference significant Simone de Beauvoir Simone Weil social justice society speak spiritual spiritual possession status strict sense there's things thought tion trans transformation truth tural tween universal valorized virginity What's woman women Women's Discourse women's liberation writing