Hypatia 38 (3):453-474 (
2023)
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Abstract
In The Second Sex, Simone de Beauvoir diagnoses “woman” as the “lost sex,” torn between
her individual autonomy and her “feminine destiny.” Becoming a “real woman” in patriarchal
societies demands that women lose their authentic, autonomous selves to become
the “inessential Other” for Man. To better understand this diagnosis and how women
might refind themselves, I rehabilitate the influence of Søren Kierkegaard and his concept
of repetition as what must be lost to be found again in Beauvoir’s account of freedom and,
specifically, the liberation of women. Beauvoir offers a dual account of repetition, that of
mundane repetition and sacrificial repetition, bringing them to bear both on her diagnosis
of women’s oppression and her theorization of our liberation. Sacrificial repetition
becomes a temporality for freedom—one must be able to repeat or retake their autonomy
continuously toward an open future. For this to happen concretely, Beauvoir insists that
we must sacrifice the (racist, classist) patriarchal ideals of the “real woman” and “real man”
as we retake our autonomy and reconfigure the meaning of sex difference anew.