Description
Book SynopsisDrawing on a wide range of films, María Pía Lara dissects cinematic images of women's struggles and their oppression. She builds on this analysis, developing a concept of the feminist social imaginary as a broader and more complex space that provides a way of thinking through the possibilities for emancipatory social transformation.
Trade ReviewMaría Pía Lara's magnificent book brings an urgent new perspective into old debates about the public sphere: by exploring the potential of the current cinematic imagination, she discloses powerful new tools for feminist critique. A must-read." - Chiara Bottici, author of
A Philosophy of Political Myth"
Beyond the Public Sphere offers a highly original conceptualization of the feminist cinematic imaginary as a way of thinking through the possibilities for emancipatory social transformation in response to the forms of domination perpetuated by patriarchal capitalism. By foregrounding issues of gender subordination and sexual violence, Lara's book shows brilliantly how critical theory of the Frankfurt School tradition can speak to the political paradoxes and challenges of the #MeToo era." - Amy Allen, author of
The End of Progress: Decolonizing the Normative Foundations of Critical Theory"Fighting domination and promoting emancipation is not only a matter of norms and arguments but also of powerful images, creative metaphors and the bold imagination of different lives and other spaces. Reconstructing and recovering an important but often neglected thematic strand in Critical Social Theory and Feminist Philosophy, MarÍa PÍa Lara powerfully advances and exemplifies a view of political and social struggles that highlights the decisive role of images and the imagination." - Martin Saar, author of
The Immanence of Power: Political Theory After/According to SpinozaTable of Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: The New Topography of Space
- 1. The Feminist Imaginary Through the Cinematic Imagination
- 2. Three Models of Imagination: As Faculty, as Context, and as Imaginal
- 3. A Genealogy of the Concept/Image of Rape: A Critical Reconstruction of the Patriarchal Social Imaginary
- 4. Anachronisms and Representations as Tools for a Critical Feminist Social Imaginary
- 5. The Lost Promise of Feminist Agency in Modern Political Theories
- Conclusion: The New Road to Visibilities: Overcoming Secrets, Invisibility, and Exclusion
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index