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"...if your words have such seductive power, such a potent charge of investment, is it not because they come to fill the place of a desire deprived of words? Borrowing their strength from energy free from any declaration. A fundamental misunderstanding lies within your language: what it carries of persuasive power does not belong to speech but to what it covers in silence."(36)
Another way Irigaray problematizes the othering of the spirit world is through exploding linear, normative conceptions of time and space in her reconstruction of infinity. She speaks of the current model of time as something which holds power by relying on a timeless void as its opposite. She defies this dualistic construction, describing not an abyss which relies on fullness and definition, but a fullness so vast it has the capacity to lodge emptiness within it.
"That invisible presence bearing you, supporting you there where you set up an opposing illusion of indifference as limit to your own desire. As a stasis at each point, guarding against the risk of overflowing which would lead to your downfall. Your vanishing into the immense space where you place that void which maintains your coherence." (Passions, 20)
This book is a delightful contrast to the cold, hard and cerebral discourse most noted for contemporary theories of psychology, philosophy, feminism, and politics!
I wish to know the addresses of following writers email/residential addresses with phone number 1. Luce Irigaray 2. Julia Kristeva 3. Helene Cixous
You are requested to mail it to me at the earliest my email address is rkpanja@sansad.nic.in.
Submitted for an early response from your side.
Smt. S. Chatterjee
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In the past couple of decades, we've seen Monique Wittig, Luce Irigaray, Julia Kristeva, Helene Cixous, Judith Butler, and others advance a conception of feminism based on radical existentialist and poststructuralist critiques of truth, meaning, representation, and subjectivity. These feminists have come to be known as French Feminists, and what's exciting about them is their ability to link struggles over gender with struggles over sexuality, and their way of thinking heterosexism and sexism as part of a larger problem with Western industrial culture. French Feminism has done a great deal of good by bringing feminist perspectives into debates over issues ranging from psychoanalysis to science to architecture. To put it (over)simply, the French Feminist project is that of uncovering the way in which not just sexism, but the notion of gender itself, is involved in every corner of Western culture. So you want to learn about French Feminism? Luce Irigaray is a great place to start, as she's probably the most unique feminist thinker in the world. While THE SEX THAT IS NOT ONE is clearly Irigaray's magnum opus, this is a great introduction to Irigaray's thought. Irigaray essentially criticizes the way in which Western philosophy excludes and does violence to femininity, and seeks 'an ethics of sexual difference' that would help us to establish a better relationship between the genders in the Western imaginary. She accomplishes this via a wide review of the history of Western philosophy in which she makes a lot of connections that have never been thought of before. In that respect, this book is very novel and its originality is really refreshing.
That said, I'll say that Irigaray is crazy. The basis of Irigaray's philosophy could best be described as a hodgepodge of Heidegger, Freud, and Lacan. Irigaray begins with what are essentially phenomenological concepts concerning Western theories of space, time, difference, dialectics, etc., and then relates these concepts to what she sees as being the corresponding psychological concept. Space becomes the uterus, difference becomes heterosexuality, etc. I was getting a little iffy when I got this far. Then things got worse. She started relating space-time and motion to mucous membranes. That's right. Mucous. As in the mucous that lubricates sexual contact.
Essentially, Irigaray imagines that every time we make a statement about space, we're expressing our unconscious relationship to the uterus; whenever we conceive of motion, we're expression an unconscious association with lubrication.
Wow, what nonsense! Irigaray's bad habit of assuming that the psychological and the phenomenological form a lateral continuum leads to disaster, for example, in her discussion of Descartes. Descartes advances a vaguely Heideggerian analysis of "wonder," which occurs upon encountering unprecedented difference. This is a purely phenomenological concept that is based on Descartes' subject-object formulation. Irigaray, however, thinks that this phenomenological state is now encroached upon by psychological states of lust, etc... as though there are both phenomenological and psychological moods... not one or the other.
This may or may not be valid, but what it represents is Irigaray's carelessness. She's content to string together Spinoza, Hegel, and Freud simply by associating them, without paying attention to the legitimacy of their connections. This allows her to pull [stuff] like talking about how space is conceived of as the uterus, which leaves women without a "place." Um, OK. The solution apparently is some kind of revolution in our understanding of philosophy that we're too assume is going to trickle down to our psyche and make us not lustful little bastards. Again, um, OK.
Irigaray is crazy. Crazy, crazy, crazy. This book is interesting but there's not a trace of academic rigor anywhere in it. It's totally extravagant, verging on totally ridiculous. I'll be sure to fantasize about the vagina next time I read my physics textbook on two-dimensional motion.
"The principal focus of my work on feminine subjectivity is, in a way, the inverse of de Beauvoir's as far as the question of the other is concerned. Instead of saying, "I do not want to be the other of the masculine subject and, in order to avoid being that other, I claim to be his equal," I say, "The question of the other has been poorly formulated in the western tradition, for the other is always seen as the other of the same, the other of the subject itself, rather than an other subject, irreducible to the masculine subject and sharing equivalent dignity. It all comes down to the same thing: In our tradition there has never really been an other of the philosophical subject, or, more generally, of the cultural and political subject."
The problematic for Irigaray then is the starting point is the masculine. Not to reduce her thesis but to jump to a broader thesis - can the problem of "intersubjectivity" be reduced to the masculine contra the feminine? In a truly intertextual and intersubjective world, where we find concentric discourses and discourses within discourses, the duality of the model of two - despite their own space - seems limiting.
In "Place, Interval" her reading of Aristotle, she outlines:
"If I may return to the parallel I have been drawing between the issue of place and issue of sexual difference, I shall affirm that the masculine is attracted to the maternal-feminine as place. But what place does the masculine offer to attract the feminine? His soul? His relation to the divine? Can the feminine be inscribed or situated there? Is this not the only place where he can live, contrary to what has always been assumed? For the masculine has to constitute itself as a vessel to receive and welcome. And the masculine's morphology, existence, and essence do not really fit it for such an architecture of place." p. 39.
As much as she finds de Beauvoir's and Aristotle's Otherness problematic, I too find her "model of two" problematic. However, discussion of these and related issues via books like "The Ethics of Sexual Difference" is a step in the right direction. Caution, lest we limit ourselves to the model of two.
Miguel Llora
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Deleuze (the first half of the book) and Irigaray (the second) are good antidotes to this. There is much there to investigate in terms of something more 'visceral', but this does not mean simply a 'philosophy of the body'. It discusses and develops ideas going around this set of problematics, looking at metaphors of fluidity and bodily experience, as well as theorisations of overcoming and transforming the bodily.
I am well-read in Deleuze, so Lorraine's treatment was a little basic, but would serve as a good introduction to some of the most important ideas, including the famous 'body without organs'. But I didn't know Irigaray well, and this book was a useful platform from which to jump into much of the relevant material. Lorraine quotes often and well, right from across the respective oeuvres, and so would be useful for someone who is not widely-read in this area to launch right in. It helps, too, that Lorraine writes clearly and understandably, and is able to convey some of the most complex of ideas in a comprehensible manner.
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The introduction by Irigaray (dated 1998) discusses the relationship of interviews to written texts. The interviews in this book generally discuss her own corpus of written texts.
Overall, I found this book very thought-provoking. Irigaray discusses feminism, mother-daughter relationships, language, and spirituality. Particularly fascinating are her observations on the "sexed" nature of language; this material reminds me somewhat of the debates over Black English. Also intriguing are her discourses on the significance of her other books' titles. She draws on an eclectic body of knowledge, citing Marguerite Yourcenar, Heidegger, Greek mythology, Marx, the life of Jesus, etc.
At times she strikes me as overly fixated on "sexual difference" as a "universal reality." Nevertheless, I still find the book intriguing and worthwhile.
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