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The Body Politics of Julia Kristeva

Hypatia 3 (3):104-118 (1988)

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  1. Motherhood, Sexuality, and Pregnant Embodiment: Twenty-Five Years of Gestation.Kelly Oliver - 2010 - Hypatia 25 (4):760-777.
    My essay is framed by Hypatia's first special issue on Motherhood and Sexuality at one end, and by the most recent special issue (as of this writing) on the work of Iris Young, whose work on pregnant embodiment has become canonical, at the other. The questions driving this essay are: When we look back over the last twenty-five years, what has changed in our conceptions of pregnancy and maternity, both in feminist theory and in popular culture? What aspects of feminist (...)
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  • Julia Kristeva's Feminist Revolutions.Kelly Oliver - 1993 - Hypatia 8 (3):94-114.
    Julia Kristeva is known as rejecting feminism, nonetheless her work is useful for feminist theory. I reconsider Kristeva's rejection of feminism and her theories of difference, identity, and maternity, elaborating on Kristeva's contributions to debates over the necessity of identity politics, indicating how Kristeva's theory suggests the cause of and possible solutions to women's oppression in Western culture, and, using Kristeva's theory, setting up a framework for a feminist rethinking of politics and ethics.
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  • Essentialism and Punishment in the Icelandic Women's Movement: all ideas (no matter how liberating in some contexts or for some purposes) are condemned to be haunted by a voice from the margins, either already speaking or presently muted but awaiting the conditions for speech, that awakens us to what has been excluded, effaced, 'damaged'.Sigrí∂ur Dúna Kristmundsdóttir & Inga Dóra Björnsdóttir - 1995 - European Journal of Women's Studies 2 (2):171-183.
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  • Exclusion and Essentialism in Feminist Theory: The Problem of Mothering.Patrice DiQuinzio - 1993 - Hypatia 8 (3):1 - 20.
    Accounts of mothering have both contributed to feminist theory's development and depended on certain of its central concepts. Some of its critics, however, argue that feminist theory is undermined by the problems of exclusion and essentialism. Here I distinguish between these two problems and consider their implications for questions about mothering. I conclude that exclusion and essentialism do not present insurmountable obstacles to theorizing motherhood, but do suggest new directions for such theorizing.
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  • 'Sex' and the Problem of the Body: Reconstructing Judith Butler's Theory of Sex/gender.Samuel A. Chambers - 2007 - Body and Society 13 (4):47-75.
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  • Feminist phenomenology, pregnancy, and transcendental subjectivity.Stella Sandford - 2016 - In Jonna Bornemark & Nicholas Smith (eds.), Phenomenology of Pregnancy. Stockholm: Södertörn University. pp. 51–69.
    In 1930 Husserl wrote that phenomenology is ‘a transcendental idealism that is nothing more than a consequentially executed self-explication in the form of an egological science, an explication of my ego as subject of every possible cognition, and indeed with respect to every sense of what exists, wherewith the latter might be able to have a sense for me, the ego.’ In transcendental-phenomenological theory, according to Husserl, ‘every sort of existent itself, real or ideal, becomes understandable as a “product” of (...)
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  • De la diferencia como identidad: génesis y postulados contemporáneos del pensamiento de la diferencia sexual.Luisa Posada Kubissa - 2006 - Araucaria 8 (16).
    El presente texto se propone recoger el impacto que la postmoderna reivindicación de la diferencia ha tenido en el pensamiento feminista actual. Partiendo de algunos antecedentes de la teoría feminista norteamericana, el artículo entra a considerar los llamados feminismos europeos de la diferencia, en particular los de las pensadoras actuales Luce Irigaray y Luisa Muraro, para revisar cómo en sus elaboraciones han ido sustituyendo el concepto de igualdad –que el feminismo ha venido reclamando desde el discurso ilustrado – por el (...)
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