Thinking Life with Luce Irigaray
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223 pages
English

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Description

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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Date de parution 01 avril 2020
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9781438477831
Langue English

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,1698€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

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Thinking Life with Luce Irigaray
SUNY series in Gender Theory

Tina Chanter, editor
Thinking Life with Luce Irigaray
Language, Origin, Art, Love
Edited by
Gail M. Schwab
Cover art: Elemental Congruence by Marcie Van Auken
Published by State University of New York Press, Albany
© 2020 State University of New York
All rights reserved
Printed in the United States of America
No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission. No part of this book may be stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means including electronic, electrostatic, magnetic tape, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise without the prior permission in writing of the publisher.
For information, contact State University of New York Press, Albany, NY
www.sunypress.edu
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Names: Schwab, Gail M., editor.
Title: Thinking life with Luce Irigaray : language, origin, art, love / edited by Gail M. Schwab.
Description: Albany : State University of New York, 2020. | Series: SUNY series in gender theory | Includes bibliographical references and index.
Identifiers: LCCN 2019014127 | ISBN 9781438477817 (hardcover : alk. paper) | ISBN 9781438477831 (ebook)
Subjects: LCSH: Irigaray, Luce.
Classification: LCC B2430.I74 T548 2020 | DDC 194—dc23
LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2019014127
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
With immense gratitude to Neil, who even attended the conferences, and to Julien, Allison, and Wolfie
Contents
Acknowledgments
P ART I
T HINKING L IFE WITH L UCE I RIGARAY
Introduction: Thinking Life with Luce Irigaray: Language, Origin, Art, Love
Gail M. Schwab
How Could We Achieve Women’s Liberation?
Luce Irigaray
P ART II
L IFE I N AND T HROUGH N ATURE , D ESIRE , F REEDOM, AND L OVE
The Re-Enchanted Garden: Participatory Sentience and Becoming-Subject in “Third Space”
Cheryl Lynch-Lawler
Thinking Life through the Early Greeks
Kristin Sampson
Between Her and Her: Place and Relations between Women in Irigaray and Wright
Rebecca Hill
Nature, Culture, and Sexuate Difference in Luce Irigaray’s Pluralist Model of Embodied Life
Erla Karlsdottir and Sigridur Thorgeirsdottir
Between Heidegger’s Poetic Thinking and Deleuzian Affect: Irigaray’s The Way of Love
Ellen Mortensen
Time for Love: Plato and Irigaray on Erotic Relations
Fanny Söderbäck
Life-Giving Sex versus Mere Animal Existence: Irigaray’s and Badiou’s Paradoxically Chiasmatic Conceptions of “Woman” and Sexual Pleasure
Louise Burchill
Freedom, Desire, and the Other: Reading Sartre with Irigaray
Gail M. Schwab
Daughters, Difference, and Irigaray’s Economy of Desire
Phyllis H. Kaminski
P ART III
R EVITALIZING H ISTORY , P HILOSOPHY , P EDAGOGY, AND THE A RTS
The Age of the Spirit: Irigaray, Apocalypse, and the Trinitarian View of History
Emily A. Holmes
Tragedy: An Irigarayan Approach
Alison Stone
The Ethics of Elemental Passions in Eugène Guillevic and Luce Irigaray
Eva Maria Korsisaari
Deconstruction, Defiguration, Disconcertion: On Reading Speculum de l’autre femme with Derrida and Lacan
Anne van Leeuwen
Dewey and Irigaray on Education and Democracy: The Classroom, the Ineffable, and Recognition
Tomoka Toraiwa
Discursive Desire and the Student Imaginary
Karen Schiler
Building Sexuate Architectures of Sustainability
Peg Rawes
Habitats for Desire: Sculptural Gestures toward Sexuate Living
Britt-Marie Schiller
The Feminist Distance: Space in Luce Irigaray and Jane Campion’s The Piano
Caroline Godart
List of Contributors
Index
Acknowledgments
First and foremost, on behalf of all contributors to this volume, I wish to thank Luce Irigaray for the beauty and the amplitude of her work. She has been, and continues to be, a daring and inspiring philosophical, political, and spiritual leader for those who desire change in the world.
Thinking Life was the title of the Luce Irigaray Circle conference held at the University of Bergen, in Bergen, Norway, in June of 2013, directed by Professor Ellen Mortensen of the University of Bergen. Many of the chapters in this volume were presented initially at the Thinking Life conference, and I, along with the Luce Irigaray Circle, am grateful to Ellen and her team at Bergen for a great conference. I am also grateful to Ellen for her initial work on the volume, work that allowed me to complete the editing.
Many thanks to the Luce Irigaray Circle, a labor of love that has borne fruit. I would also like to thank Tina Chanter, editor of the SUNY Series in Gender Theory, whose ongoing support for the Irigaray Circle has been invaluable.
The Luce Irigaray Circle extends its thanks to Hofstra University for funding Luce Irigaray’s contribution and to Stony Brook University and Mary C. Rawlinson for their generous support over the years.
I wish to express my gratitude and appreciation for the generosity of Marcie Van Auken, senior graphic designer at Columbia University, who created the cover image, Elemental Congruence I (2019).
Peg Rawes and I thank Bloomsbury Publishing Plc. for permission to reprint in Peg Rawes’s “Building Sexuate Architectures of Sustainability” a short extract from “Biopolitical Ecological Poetics,” chapter 1 of Poetic Biopolitics: Practices of Relation in Architecture and the Arts , Peg Rawes, Timothy Mathews, and Stephen Loo, eds. London: I.B. Tauris, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing Plc., 2016.
PART I
THINKING LIFE WITH LUCE IRIGARAY
Introduction
Thinking Life with Luce Irigaray: Language, Origin, Art, Love
GAIL M. SCHWAB
In the first chapter of Between East and West: From Singularity to Community (2002), in a critique of what she considers Schopenhauer’s (mis)reading and (mis)representation of Indian philosophy and spirituality, Irigaray writes that “philosophy is a matter of death,” and she goes on to quote Schopenhauer: “Death is the real inspiring genius or Musagetes of philosophy, and for this reason Socrates defined philosophy as thanatou mélétè (preparation for death; Plato, Phaedo , 81a). Indeed, without death there would hardly have been any philosophizing” (Schopenhauer, The World as Will and Representation cited in Between East and West 23). Irigaray further notes: “A philosopher living and thinking life is a priori suspect in our philosophical culture” (ibid.). Nevertheless, she will forcefully declare in the introduction to Between East and West : “I love life, and I have searched for solutions in order to defend it, to cultivate it” (4), and ask: “How to go against the current? To stop the exploitation, in particular through a simple inventory, of the human and of his or her environment? How to return to where death has taken place because of the cessation of becoming, mistaking what we are? How to renew a cultivation of life, and recover our energy, the path of our growth?” (viii). Many thinkers and theorists are currently pursuing answers to these questions.
The contributors to Thinking Life with Luce Irigaray , the latest in a series of volumes resulting from ten conferences of the Luce Irigaray Circle, which took place between 2006 and 2019, attempt to address these questions and to “think life” through the multifarious strands of Irigaray’s philosophy, including, of course, the foundational strand of sexuate difference, and to show how the possibility of life in sexuate difference, far from freezing up into a rigidly codified binary of “two sexes,” might blossom rather into a living continuum of ever-evolving change(s) and difference(s) in language, culture, art, spirit, nature, human relations, and politics. The philosophy of Man, of the Universal and the One, as Schopenhauer understood (without understanding), is rooted, grounded, in death. However, as Mary C. Rawlinson, feminist philosopher of life and Irigaray Circle co-founder, has written in her 2016 book, Just Life: Bioethics and the Future of Sexual Difference , “Man has had his day” (13). It is time to move on, to try something different—to try difference. Life is never One, as Irigaray frequently reminds us; in fact, life is always at least two, and always generating the diverse and the multiple. The chapters that follow Irigaray’s both explore and illustrate what it might mean to think life in all of the above-mentioned domains, and in others besides.
Origin, Maternity, and Relationality
Part 1: “ Thinking Life with Luce Irigaray ,” in addition to this introduction to the entire volume, includes an essay by Irigaray, “ How Could We Achieve Women’s Liberation? ,” presented via video link at the third conference of the Luce Irigaray Circle in the Fall of 2008. Irigaray began her brief but densely rich remarks by questioning the discouraging failure of twentieth-century women’s movements to have achieved women’s “evolution” at either the personal or the collective level—beyond, that is, a certain undeniable economic and social progress, both the importance of which and the limits of which Irigaray went on to acknowledge. Urging women to take control of their own liberation and to cultivate freedom for themselves and for their own becom

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