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  1. Volatile Bodies: Toward a Corporeal Feminism.Elizabeth Grosz - 1997 - Hypatia 12 (4):211-217.
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  • Undoing Theory: The “Transgender Question” and the Epistemic Violence of Anglo-American Feminist Theory.Viviane Namaste - 2008 - Hypatia 24 (3):11-32.
    For nearly twenty years, Anglo-American feminist theory has posed its own epistemological questions by looking at the lives and bodies of transsexuals and transvestites. This paper examines the impact of such scholarship on improving the everyday lives of the people central to such feminist argumentation. Drawing on indigenous scholarship and activisms, I conclude with a consideration of some central principles necessary to engage in feminist research and theory—to involve marginal people in the production of knowledge and to transform the knowledge-production (...)
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  • Living a feminist life.Aalya Ahmad - 2017 - Contemporary Political Theory 18 (2):125-128.
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  • Bodies of Philosophy.Esther Wolfe & Elizabeth Grosz - 2014 - Stance 7 (1):115-126.
    Article published in Stance by Wolfe and Grosz.
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  • The incorporeal: ontology, ethics, and the limits of materialism.Elizabeth A. Grosz - 2017 - New York: Columbia University Press.
    A new resolution of the mind-body problem that reconciles materialism and idealism.
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  • A requiem to sexual difference:A response to Luciana Parisi's “event and evolution”.Jami Weinstein - 2010 - Southern Journal of Philosophy 48 (s1):165-187.
    Aside from constructing a compelling case for how rereading evolution from a neomaterialist and radical empiricist perspective undermines an enduring binary of sexual difference, Luciana Parisi underscores a tension in the work of Elizabeth Grosz, known both for her novel, feminist, neomaterialist study of Darwinian evolution and her staunch support of sexual difference. Parisi contends, and I suspect Grosz herself is keenly aware, that there is a paradox in holding these views simultaneously. Thus, this paper will not only expand upon (...)
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