God Between Their Lips: Desire Between Women in Irigaray, Brontë, and EliotThis book explores desire between women as a form of "spiritual materialism" in writings by Luce Irigaray, Charlotte Brontë, and George Eliot. To begin with the study's underlying paradox, "spiritual materialism": the author wishes to understand why the act of grasping materialities a sob in the body or the body itself has so often required a spiritual discourse; why materialism, as a way of naming matter-on-its-own-terms, and material relations that still lie submerged, hidden from view, evoke the shadowy forms we call "spiritual." |
ما يقوله الناس - كتابة مراجعة
لم نعثر على أي مراجعات في الأماكن المعتادة.
المحتوى
Poststructuralist Feminists | 3 |
Irigarays Erotics of | 40 |
Labour Is Ever | 61 |
Interlude | 93 |
Recollecting Charlotte Brontë | 99 |
Recognizing George Eliot | 166 |
The Saint at Home with Men | 174 |
Cooking Feuerbach | 186 |
The Domestication | 193 |
Postlude | 251 |
259 | |
269 | |
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
appears argues becomes begins believe body bourgeois Brontë capital Carlyle castration Chapter character Christ Christian claim close concealment constructions course critics desire discourse discussion domestic Dorothea Eliot escape essay example exchange fact fall feel female feminine feminist figure force George hope interest Irigaray Irigaray's kind labor Lacan lack least lips look loss Lucy Lucy's marriage Mary masculine material means Middlemarch mirror mystical narrative narrator never novel object offers once opacity pain particular passage passion Paul perhaps play pleasure political position possible post-structuralist present produce question reader reference relations religious remains represents reveals Rosamond scene seeks seems seen sense separate sexual space spiritual stress suggest tell thing tion touch turn Victorian Villette vocation woman women writes