Time in feminist phenomenology /

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Bibliographic Details
Imprint:Bloomington : Indiana University Press, ©2011.
Description:1 online resource (vi, 196 pages)
Language:English
Subject:
Format: E-Resource Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/11101665
Hidden Bibliographic Details
Other authors / contributors:Schües, Christina.
Olkowski, Dorothea.
Fielding, Helen, 1963-
ISBN:9780253001603
0253001609
9780253356307
025335630X
9780253223142
0253223148
025335630X
9780253356307
Notes:Includes bibliographical references and index.
Print version record.
Summary: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 gender experience to the experience of time, this volume is a welcome opening to new and critical thinking about being, knowledge, aesthetics, and ethics.
Other form:Print version: Time in feminist phenomenology. Bloomington : Indiana University Press, ©2011 9780253356307
Standard no.:9780253356307
Table of Contents:
  • Introduction : Toward a feminist phenomenology of time / Christina Schües
  • Prologue : The origin of time, the origin of philosophy / Dorothea Olkowski
  • Personality, anonymity, and sexual difference : the temporal formation of the transcendental ego / Sara Heinämaa
  • The power of time : temporal experiences and a-temporal thinking? / Christina Schües
  • Gender and anonymous temporality / Silvia Stoller
  • Gendering embodied memory / Linda Fisher
  • The time of the self : a feminist reflection on Ricoeur's notion of narrative identity / Annemie Halsema
  • Contingency, newness, and freedom : Arendt's recovery of the temporal condition of politics / Veronica Vasterling
  • Questioning "homeland" through Yael Bartana's Wild seeds / Helen A. Fielding
  • Sharing time across unshared horizons / Gail Weiss.