Description
Book Synopsis* Catherine Malabou is a rising star of French philosophy and has a high reputation in the English speaking world. * She is particularly well known for her innovative arguments about plasticity and the body, and for her work at the intersection of philosophy, feminism and neuroscience.
Trade Review"Complex and suggestive … Malabou's concept of plasticity has considerable potential to advance our thinking about gender and essentialism."
LSE Review of Books "Confronting the current anti-essentialist
doxa, Malabou claims for woman an essence that is never more itself than when it escapes its own clutches. This essentialism is not merely tactical or pragmatic, it is a bold philosophical position that gives back to feminism its prematurely sacrificed reason to be. A rare book, one of the few in history, in which philosophy rises to the challenges posed by sexual difference."
Professor Joan Copjec, University of Buffalo "Changing Difference will introduce many new readers to the remarkable work of Catherine Malabou. It extends the profound philosophical iconoclasm of her readings of Derrida, Hegel and Heidegger and her emergent thought of plasticity to an encounter with queer and gender theory on the question of ontological and sexual difference. Yet it is above all a passionate and inspiring meditation on 'what, for a woman, is the life of a philosopher'."
Professor Howard Caygill, Kingston University London
Table of ContentsTranslator's Preface
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Introduction
The Meaning of the "Feminine"
Admiring the Wonders of Difference
Why the "Feminine"? Isn't the privilege of the feminine
determined by a particular situation of "woman"?
The Vulva's Schema
The Dangers of Deneutralizing Difference, or the
Ambivalence of the Feminine
The Neuter and Evil
Grammatology and Plasticity
The Phoenix, The Spider and The Salamander
Woman's Possibility, Philosophy's Impossibility
Acting As If
Acting Together
Acting Without