French Feminists on Religion: A ReaderMorny Joy, Kathleen O'Grady, Judith L. Poxon Psychology Press, 2002 - 291 頁 Bevat essays van Luce Irigaray, Julia Kristeva, Hélène Cixous, Monique Wittig en Catherine Clément over feminisme en religie. Elk van deze feministische denkers wordt geïntroduceerd door een bibliografische beschrijving en elk essay bevat een toelichting over het belang van de tekst voor de bestudering van religie. Part 1: Luce Irigaray: 'Plato's Hystera' (abr.) from 'Speculum of the other woman'; 'La Mystérique' from 'Speculum of the other woman'; 'Divine women' (abr.) from 'Sexes and genealogies'; 'When the Gods are born' (abr.) from 'Marine lover of Friedrich Nietzsche'; 'Sexual difference' (abr.) from 'An ethics of sexual difference'; 'The forgotten mystery of female ancestry' (abr.) from 'Thinking the difference: for a peaceful revolution'; 'Practical teachings: love - between passion and civility' (abr.) from 'I love to you: sketch of a possible felicity in history'. Part 2: Julia Kristeva: 'Approaching abjection' (abr.) and 'Semiotics of biblical abomination' (abr.) from 'Powers of horror: an essay on abjection'; 'Credence-credit' (abr.) and 'Credo' (abr.) from 'In the beginning was love: psychoanalysis and faith'; 'Stabat mater' from 'Tales of love'; 'Psychoanalysis - a counterdepressant' (abr.) and 'Holbein's dead Christ' (abr.) from 'Black sun: depression and melancholia'; 'The chosen people and the choice of foreignness' from 'Strangers to ourselves'; 'Reading the bible' from 'New maladies of the soul'. Part 3: Catherine Clément: 'Sorceress and hysteric' (abr.) from 'The newly born woman'; 'The child, the savage' (abr.) from 'The newly born woman'; 'Where am I?' (abr.) from 'Syncope: the philosophy of rapture'; 'Jouissances: between the angel and the placenta' (abr.) from 'Syncope: the philosophy of rapture'. Part 4: Hélène Cixous: 'Sorties' (abr.) from 'The newly born woman'; 'The author in truth' (abr.) from 'Coming to writing and other essays'; 'Coming to writing' (abr.) from 'Coming to writing and other essays'; 'Grace and innocence: Heinrich von Kleist' (abr.) from 'Readings: the poetics of Blanchot, Joyce, Kafka, Kleist, Lispector, and Tsvetayeva'; 'The school of dreams' (abr.) from 'Three steps on the ladder of writing'; 'Writing blind' (abr.) from 'Stigmata: escaping texts'. Part 5: Monique Wittig: 'The lesbian body' (excerpts). |
內容
PART | 13 |
La Mystérique | 28 |
When the Gods Are Born abridged | 49 |
The Forgotten Mystery of Female Ancestry abridged | 68 |
Love Between Passion | 76 |
PART | 83 |
Approaching Abjection abridged and Semiotics | 93 |
CredenceCredit abridged and Credo abridged | 105 |
Reading the Bible | 161 |
PART THREE | 173 |
Sorceress and Hysteric abridged | 181 |
Where Am I? abridged | 193 |
Between the Angel and the Placenta | 197 |
Sorties abridged | 213 |
Heinrich von Kleist abridged | 233 |
PART FIVE | 247 |
Stabat Mater | 112 |
Psychoanalysis A Counterdepressant abridged | 139 |
The Chosen People and the Choice of Foreignness | 150 |
268 | |
284 | |
其他版本 - 查看全部
常見字詞
angel appears become Bible biblical Book of Ruth breath Catherine Clément child Christ Christian Cixous's culture daughter death desire discourse divine dream écriture féminine ecstasy English essay ethics everything excerpt exchange existence experience eyes faith father female feminine figure flesh foreigner French feminism French feminist Freud Friedrich Nietzsche gender give goddess Hélène Cixous human identity imaginary incarnation innocence interpretation Irigaray Irigaray's Jewish jouissance Julia Kristeva Lacan ladder language Lesbian Leviticus linguistic live logic Luce Irigaray male Mary masculine maternal meaning melancholia mirror Monique Wittig mother motherhood movement mystical myth never object oneself passion Persephone philosophy pleasure possible psychoanalysis relation relationship religion religious represents Romain Rolland Ruth sacred semiotic separation sexual difference social sorceress soul space speak spirit Stabat Mater story symbolic syncope themes theory tion tradition translated Virgin Wittig woman women word writing