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Psyche of Feminism: Sand, Colette, Sarraute

Contributor(s): Peebles, Catherine M (Author)

ISBN: 9781557533296

Publisher: Purdue University Press

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Pub Date: December 1, 2003

Dewey: 843.91099287

LCCN: 2003019825

Lexile Code: 0000

Features: Bibliography

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 0.65" H x 9.22" L x 6.22" W ( 0.91 lbs) 232 pages

Series: Purdue Studies in Romance Literatures

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Description: The Psyche of Feminism argues that a feminist ethic, in order to be both feminist and ethical, needs to embrace psychoanalysis. After reviewing the relation between feminism and psychoanalysis and arguing for the centrality of psychoanalysis to feminist thought, the study offers an analysis of two attempts by George Sand to reimagine the sexual relationship (Letters to Marcie, Lelia), where the emphasis is on political injustice and the impossibility of women's desires. Moving from rights and desires to the question of pleasures, Peebles then takes up a relatively little-read work by Colette, The Pure and the Impure, in which the narrator suggests that pleasure and its corporeal language hold the key to any understanding of masculinity and femininity. We are then led to the risky question of neutrality put forward by Nathalie Sarraute (You Don't Love Yourself), whose work forces a psychoanan-lytic feminism to face the question: what if sexual difference itself is a ruse? Does the notion of a human neutrality condemn us either to a bygone humanism or to psychoanalysis? The final chapter of the work synthesizes these analyses and argues for a fundamental feminist rethinking of the ideal of equality, an ideal that figures significantly--and uneasily--in each of the works this book treats.

Brief description: Catherine M. Peebles has written on French literature and film, psychoanalytic theory, and feminist theory. She received her Ph.D in comparative literature from the State University of New York at Binghamton in 2000. She has written on French literature and film, psychoanalytic theory, and feminist theory. Currently she is working on a project tentatively titled Anxiety, Equality, and the Will to Power.

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