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  1. States of Fantasy.Jacqueline Rose - 1998 - Oxford University Press UK.
    Jacqueline Rose argues for an expansion of the new boundaries of `English', and for the importance of psychoanalysis to the understanding of our literary and historical lives.
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  • Psychoanalysis and Feminism.Juliet Mitchell - 1974 - Pantheon.
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  • Feminism and Psychoanalytic Theory.Nancy J. Chodorow - 1989 - New Haven [Conn.] : Yale University Press.
    Essays discuss the relations among gender, self, and society, the significance of women's mothering for gender personality and gender relations, and how the psychodynamics of gender create and sustain individualism.
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  • Mary Wollstonecraft and the Feminist Imagination.Barbara Taylor - 2003 - Cambridge University Press.
    In the two centuries since Mary Wollstonecraft published A Vindication of the Rights of Woman (1792), she has become an icon of modern feminism: a stature that has paradoxically obscured her real historic significance. In the most in-depth study to date of Wollstonecraft s thought, Barbara Taylor develops an alternative reading of her as a writer steeped in the utopianism of Britain s radical Enlightenment. Wollstonecraft s feminist aspirations, Taylor shows, were part of a revolutionary programme for universal equality and (...)
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  • Touching, unbelonging, and the absence of affect.Ranjana Khanna - 2012 - Feminist Theory 13 (2):213-232.
    This article argues that psychoanalytic notions of affect – including ideas of anxiety and melancholia, as well as deconstructive concepts of auto-affection – offer a feminist ethico-politics and a notion of affect as interface. Beyond the confines of the experiential and the positivist, both psychoanalysis and deconstruction provide insights into affect as a technology that understands the subject as porous. I consider works by Derek Jarman and Shirin Neshat to demonstrate the importance of the ethico-politics of affect as interface in (...)
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  • (1 other version)Mary Wollstonecraft and the tensions in feminist philosophy.Jean Grimshaw - 1984 - In Peter Osborne & Sean Sayers (eds.), Socialism, Feminism and Philosophy: A Radical Philosophy Reader. New York: Routledge. pp. 9--26.
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  • Dark continents: psychoanalysis and colonialism.Ranjana Khanna - 2003 - Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
    Genealogies -- Psychoanalysis and archaeology -- Freud in the sacred grove -- Colonial rescriptings -- War, decolonization, psychoanalysis -- Colonial melancholy -- Haunting and the future -- The ethical ambiguities of transnational feminism -- Hamlet in the colonial archive.
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  • The incommensurability of psychoanalysis and history.Joan W. Scott - 2012 - History and Theory 51 (1):63-83.
    ABSTRACTThis article argues that, although psychoanalysis and history have different conceptions of time and causality, there can be a productive relationship between them. Psychoanalysis can force historians to question their certainty about facts, narrative, and cause; it introduces disturbing notions about unconscious motivation and the effects of fantasy on the making of history. This was not the case with the movement for psychohistory that began in the 1970s. Then the influence of American ego‐psychology on history‐writing promoted the idea of compatibility (...)
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  • Why stories matter: the political grammar of feminist theory.Clare Hemmings - 2011 - Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
    Progress -- Loss -- Return -- Amenability -- Citation tactics -- Affective subjects.
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  • Emma Goldman on Mary Wollstonecraft.Alice Wexler - 1981 - Feminist Studies 7 (1):113.
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  • Romantic Anarchism and Pedestrian Liberalism.Don Herzog - 2007 - Political Theory 35 (3):313-333.
    Emma Goldman's stance toward anarchism was oddly mystified, even loving. Precisely this enchantment led her to see clearly the deep vices of Soviet Russia, when so many on the sane and sober Left were blind to them. So pedestrian liberals ought to relish having the extreme likes of Goldman in their midst. They-we-can faithfully recite their lessons from Mill about free speech, eccentrics, and the proliferation of viewpoints. But more recent liberals and deliberative democrats, insisting on the political centrality of (...)
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  • Telling feminist stories.Clare Hemmings - 2005 - Feminist Theory 6 (2):115-139.
    This article identifies and analyses the dominant stories that academics tell about the development of Western second wave feminist theory. Through an examination of recent production of interdisciplinary feminist and cultural theory journals, I suggest that despite a rhetorical insistence on multiple feminisms, Western feminist trajectories emerge as startlingly singular. In particular, I am critical of an insistent narrative that sees the development of feminist thought as a relentless march of progress or loss. This dominant approach oversimplifies the complex history (...)
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  • Postanarchism and meta-ethics.B. Franks - unknown
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