Can Existentialism be a Posthumanism?: Beauvoir as Precursor to Material Feminism

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Daigle , C 2020 , ' Can Existentialism be a Posthumanism?: Beauvoir as Precursor to Material Feminism ' , Philosophy Today , vol. 64 , no. 3 , pp. 763-780 . https://doi.org/10.5840/philtoday2020109358

Title: Can Existentialism be a Posthumanism?: Beauvoir as Precursor to Material Feminism
Author: Daigle, Christine
Contributor organization: Helsinki Collegium for Advanced Studies
Date: 2020
Language: eng
Number of pages: 18
Belongs to series: Philosophy Today
ISSN: 0031-8256
DOI: https://doi.org/10.5840/philtoday2020109358
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10138/340764
Abstract: In this article, I demonstrate that Simone de Beauvoir's philosophy represents a first major step toward a rejection of the humanist subject and therefore was influential for the development of contemporary posthumanist material feminism. Specifically, her unprecedented attention to embodiment and biology, in The Second Sex and other works, as well as her notion of ambiguity, serve to challenge the humanist subject. While I am not claiming that Beauvoir was a posthumanist or material feminist thinker avant la lettre, I show that she is an important precursor to some of their key ideas. Indeed, her thinking about the body, sex, gender, and the importance of embodiment and situation constitutes a challenge to the subject of humanism, thereby opening up a path for thinkers that follow to push Beauvoir's critique and articulate a posthumanism that does away with the subject of humanism.
Subject: 611 Philosophy
Embodiment
Feminism
Materiality
Ambiguity
Poststructuralism
Oppression
Peer reviewed: Yes
Usage restriction: openAccess
Self-archived version: acceptedVersion


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