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8The Poetry of Habit Beauvoir and Merleau-Ponty on Aging EmbodimentIn Silvia Stoller (ed.), Simone de Beauvoir's Philosophy of Age: Gender, Ethics, and Time, De Gruyter. pp. 69-82. 2014.
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29Irigaray : Dwelling with language : Irigaray respondsIn David Pettigrew & François Raffoul (eds.), French Interpretations of Heidegger: An Exceptional Reception, State University of New York Press. 2009.This chapter is a study on Luce Irigaray’s engagement with Martin Heidegger’s approach to language. Although language is central to both thinkers, rather than privileging language in terms of the poëtic event of being, the arising of something out of itself, Irigaray reveals how language is privileged in terms of its promise of dialogue between two who are different. This difference provides for a limit to what can be known or recognized, as well as for a creative potentiality that is directed t…Read more
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156Time in Feminist Phenomenology (edited book)Indiana University Press. 2011.The contributors to this international volume take up questions about a phenomenology of time that begins with and attunes to gender issues. Themes such as feminist conceptions of time, change and becoming, the body and identity, memory and modes of experience, and the relevance of time as a moral and political question, shape Time in Feminist Phenomenology and allow readers to explore connections between feminist philosophy, phenomenology, and time. With its insistence on the importance of gend…Read more
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33Fragments: the collected wisdom of HeraclitusViking Press. 2001."Disillusioned with life as a literary publicist in London, as well as with her hotshot, unevolved TV presenter boyfriend, Rosie Richardson chucks the glitz and escapes to run a refugee camp in the African desert. When famine strikes and a massive refugee influx threatens to overwhelm the camp... Richardson returns to London to organize a star-studded and risky emergency appeal."--Front jacket.
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31Cultivating perception through artworks: phenomenological enactments of ethics, politics, and cultureIndiana University Press. 2021.What are the ethical, political and cultural consequences of forgetting how to trust our senses? How can artworks help us see, sense, think, and interact in ways that are outside of the systems of convention and order that frame so much of our lives? In Cultivating Perception through Artworks, Helen Fielding challenges us to think alongside and according to artworks, cultivating a perception of what is really there and being expressed by them. Drawing from and expanding on the work of philosophe…Read more
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27Maurice Merleau-PontyIn Felicity Colman (ed.), Film, Theory, and Philosophy: The Key Thinkers, Acumen Publishing. pp. 81-90. 2009.
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45Future Directions in Feminist Phenomenology (edited book)Indiana University Press. 2017.Distinguished feminist philosophers consider the future of feminist phenomenology and chart its political and ethical future in this forward-looking volume. Engaging with themes such as the historical trajectory of feminist phenomenology, ways of perceiving and making sense of the contemporary world, and the feminist body in health and ethics, these essays affirm the base of the discipline as well as open new theoretical spaces for work that bridges bioethics, social identity, physical ability, …Read more
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Beyond the Surface: Towards a Feminist Phenomenology of the Body-as-DepthDissertation, York University (Canada). 1996.This dissertation employs a phenomenological perspective to explore recent attempts in poststructuralist feminist theory to return to the body. Importantly, these current approaches try to theorize the body in a way that avoids biological and essentialist accounts; what this means, however, is that they think the body in terms of representation and signification, and not embodiment. This is not surprising given that in this modern epoch, which is characterized by a propersity to rationalize all …Read more
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1009White Logic and the Constancy of ColorIn Dorothea Olkowski & Gail Weiss (eds.), Feminist Interpretations of Maurice Merleau-Ponty, Pennsylvania State University Press. pp. 71-89. 2006.This chapter considers the ways in which whiteness as a skin color and ideology becomes a dominant level that sets the background against which all things, people and relations appear. Drawing on Merleau-Ponty's phenomenology, it takes up a series of films by Bruce Nauman and Marlon Riggs to consider ways in which this level is phenomenally challenged providing insights into the embodiment of racialization.
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87Dwelling and Public Art: Serra and BourgeoisIn Patricia M. Locke & Rachel McCann (eds.), Merleau-Ponty: Space, Place, Architecture, Ohio University Press. pp. 258-281. 2015.How do permanent artworks installed in public places shape the relations that take place around them? Drawing upon the works of Maurice Merleau-Ponty and Luce Irigaray I claim that two public artworks, Richard Serra’s Tilted Spheres (2002-2004) and a bronze casting of Louise Bourgeois’ Maman (1999) work to open up embodied being and to creatively transform reality. Serra’s work reveals an important aspect of public space, that of the space/time of the anonymous body, as well as the ways in which…Read more
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49Open Future, Regaining PossibilityIn Fielding Helen A. & Olkowski Dorothea (eds.), Feminist Phenomenology Futures, Indiana University Press. pp. 91-109. 2017.Helen Fielding considers how the repetition of the same can be phenomenally shifted. Considering the phenomenon of death by suicide in response to cyberbullying, she asks how cyberspace as a system can be opened up and become more responsive to the living affect of young women subjected to abuse. At the heart of this problem is the breakdown of personal time into objective time, whereby the inexhaustible potentiality of the living world is collapsed into the indifferent infinity of the possible …Read more
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106A Feminist Phenomenology ManifestoIn Fielding Helen A. & Olkowski Dorothea (eds.), Feminist Phenomenology Futures, Indiana University Press. 2017.In this volume we situate the future directions of feminist phenomenology in the here and now. We contend that in this moment feminist phenomenology is well positioned to take a leading role, not simply in terms of consolidating existing feminist methodologies but also in engaging the difficult task of thinking through the actual in the fullness of its relational, agential, ontological, experiential, and fleshly being, thereby opening up future possibilities. We also think there is some urgency …Read more
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51Feminist Phenomenology Futures (edited book)Indiana University Press. 2017.Distinguished feminist philosophers consider the future of their field and chart its political and ethical course in this forward-looking volume. Engaging with themes such as the historical trajectory of feminist phenomenology, ways of perceiving and making sense of the contemporary world, and the feminist body in health and ethics, these essays affirm the base of the discipline as well as open new theoretical spaces for work that bridges bioethics, social identity, physical ability, and the ver…Read more
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88Merleau-Ponty's Last Vision: A Proposal for the Completion of 'The Visible and the Invisible' (review)Journal of the History of Philosophy 40 (1): 134-135. 2002.In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Journal of the History of Philosophy 40.1 (2002) 134-135 [Access article in PDF] Book Review Merleau-Ponty's Last Vision: A Proposal for the Completion of 'The Visible and the Invisible Douglas Low. Merleau-Ponty's Last Vision: A Proposal for the Completion of 'The Visible and the Invisible.' Evanston, IL: Northwestern University Press, 2000. Pp. xv + 124. Cloth, $75.00. Paper, $19.95. Low sets himself an impossible task, that of com…Read more
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165Questioning nature: Irigaray, Heidegger and the potentiality of matterContinental Philosophy Review 36 (1): 1-26. 2003.Irigaray's insistence on sexual difference as the primary difference arises out of a phenomenological perception of nature. Drawing on Heidegger's insights into physis, she begins with his critique of the nature/culture binary. Both philosophers maintain that nature is not matter to be ordered by technical know-how; yet Irigaray reveals that although Heidegger distinguishes physis from techn in his work, his forgetting of the potentiality of matter, the maternal-feminine, and the two-fold essenc…Read more
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179Depth of Embodiment: Spatial and Temporal Bodies in Foucault and Merleau-PontyPhilosophy Today 43 (1): 73-85. 1999.Fielding discusses how Michel Foucault and Maurice Merleau-Ponty view spatial and temporal bodies. Foucault dismisses the understanding of an inside soul surrounded by a body.
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61The other: feminist reflections in ethics (edited book)Palgrave-Macmillan. 2007.The western philosophical tradition, with its focus on universal concepts and a presumed neuter, but ultimately male subject, has only relatively recently become open to the question of alterity, in particular the alterity of woman as the other of man. The essays of this volume reflect in particular on the ethical implications of taking the feminine other into account. This necessitates a rethinking of the implicit structures of Western philosophy which continue to exclude women as subjects who …Read more
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2263Multiple Moving Perceptions of the Real: Arendt, Merleau-Ponty, and TruittHypatia 26 (3): 518-534. 2011.This paper explores the ethical insights provided by Anne Truitt's minimalist sculptures, as viewed through the phenomenological lenses of Hannah Arendt's investigations into the co-constitution of reality and Maurice Merleau-Ponty's investigations into perception. Artworks in their material presence can lay out new ways of relating and perceiving. Truitt's works accomplish this task by revealing the interactive motion of our embodied relations and how material objects can actually help to groun…Read more
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83A Phenomenology of 'The Other World': On Irigaray's' To Paint the Invisible'Chiasmi International: Trilingual Studies Concerning Merleau-Ponty's Thought 9 518-534. 2008.As we know, Merleau-Ponty was struggling with a dynamic shift in his thinking at the premature end of his life. In those last notes he raises the question of how to elaborate a phenomenology of “’the other world’, as the limit of a phenomenology of the imaginary and the ‘hidden’”—a phenomenology that would open onto an invisible life, community, other and culture. In her essay on “Eye and Mind”, “To Paint the Invisible”, Luce Irigaray argues that Merleau-Ponty was not yet ready to address this q…Read more
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85The finitude of nature: Rethinking the ethics of biotechnologyMedicine, Health Care and Philosophy 4 (3): 327-334. 2001.In order to open new possibilities for bioethics, I argue that we need to rethink our concept of nature. The established cognitive framework determines in advance how new technologies will become visible. Indeed, in this dualistic approach of metaphysics, nature is posited as limitless, as material endowed with force which causes us to lose the sense of nature as arising out of itself, of having limits, an end. In contrast, drawing upon the example of the gender assignment and construction of in…Read more
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38Dwelling with language : Irigaray respondsIn David Pettigrew & François Raffoul (eds.), French Interpretations of Heidegger: An Exceptional Reception, State University of New York Press. pp. 215-230. 2009.This chapter is a study on Luce Irigaray’s engagement with Martin Heidegger’s approach to language. Although language is central to both thinkers, rather than privileging language in terms of the poëtic event of being, the arising of something out of itself, Irigaray reveals how language is privileged in terms of its promise of dialogue between two who are different. This difference provides for a limit to what can be known or recognized, as well as for a creative potentiality that is directed t…Read more
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95The Poetry of Habit: Beauvoir and Merleau-Ponty on Aging EmbodimentIn Silvia Stoller (ed.), Simone de Beauvoir’s Philosophy of Age: Gender, Ethics, De Gruyter. pp. 69-82. 2014.As people age their actions often become entrenched—we might say they are not open to the new; they are less able to adapt; they are stuck in a rut. Indeed, in The Coming of Age (La Vieillesse) Simone de Beauvoir writes that to be old is to be condemned neither to freedom nor to meaning, but rather to boredom (Beauvoir 1996, 461; 486). While in many ways a very pessimistic account of ageing, the text does provide promising moments where her descriptions do capture other possibilities for aged ex…Read more
London, Ontario, Canada
Areas of Interest
| Aesthetics |
| Philosophy of Gender, Race, and Sexuality |
| Continental Philosophy |