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Thinking Life with Luce Irigaray

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A broad exploration of Irigaray's philosophy of life and living.Featuring a highly accessible essay from Irigaray herself, this volume explores her philosophy of life and living. Life-thinking, an ...
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  • 01 April 2020
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A broad exploration of Irigaray's philosophy of life and living.

Featuring a highly accessible essay from Irigaray herself, this volume explores her philosophy of life and living. Life-thinking, an important contemporary trend in philosophy and in women's and gender studies, stands in contrast to philosophy's traditional grounding in death, exemplified in the work of philosophers such as Socrates, Plato, and Schopenhauer. The contributors to Thinking Life with Luce Irigaray consider Irigaray's criticisms of the traditional Western philosophy of death, including its either-or dualisms and binary logic, as well as some of Irigaray's "solutions" for cultivating life. The book is comprehensive in its analyses of Irigaray's relationship to classical and contemporary philosophers, writers, and artists, and produces extremely fruitful intersections between Irigaray and figures as diverse as Homer and Plato; Alexis Wright, the First-Nations novelist of Australia; and twentieth-century French philosophers like Sartre, Badiou, Deleuze, and Guattari. It also develops Irigaray's relationship to the arts, with essays on theater, poetry, architecture, sculpture, and film.

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Price: £72.50
Pages: 382
Publisher: State University of New York Press
Imprint: SUNY Press
Series: SUNY series in Gender Theory
Publication Date: 01 April 2020
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9781438477817
Format: Hardcover
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"This is a very timely text; it places Irigaray scholarship in conversation with the lively field of feminist philosophies of life, and this is a really wonderful, fruitful match. The collection itself contains many marvelous pieces. Luce Irigaray's essay is strong and pithy—she reiterates a number of her important ideas, in accessible language, and places them in the context of pertinent questions in feminism." — Sabrina L. Hom, coeditor of Thinking with Irigaray