✨ New Arrivals Just Dropped!Explore
Retrieving Experience: Subjectivity and Recognition in Feminist Politics
HomeStore

Retrieving Experience: Subjectivity and Recognition in Feminist Politics

Retrieving Experience: Subjectivity and Recognition in Feminist Politics

$24.27
Retrieving Experience: Subjectivity and Recognition in Feminist Politics
$24.27

The Story

In Retrieving Experience, Sonia Kruks engages critically with the postmodern turn in feminist and social theory. She contends that, although postmodern analyses yield important insights about the place of discourse in constituting subjectivity, they lack the ability to examine how experience often exceeds the limits of discourse. To address this lack and explain why it matters for feminist politics, Kruks retrieves and employs aspects of postwar French existential theorya tradition that, she argues, postmodernism has obscured by militantly rejecting its own genealogy.Kruks seeks to refocus our attention on the importance for feminism of embodied and lived experiences. Through her original readings of Simone de Beauvoir and other existential thinkersincluding Sartre, Fanon, and MerleauPontyand her own analyses inspired by their work, Kruks sheds new light on central problems in feminist theory and politics. These include debates about subjectivity and individual agency; questions about recognition and identity politics; and discussion of whether embodied experiences may sometimes facilitate solidarity among groups of different women.

Description

In Retrieving Experience, Sonia Kruks engages critically with the postmodern turn in feminist and social theory. She contends that, although postmodern analyses yield important insights about the place of discourse in constituting subjectivity, they lack the ability to examine how experience often exceeds the limits of discourse. To address this lack and explain why it matters for feminist politics, Kruks retrieves and employs aspects of postwar French existential theorya tradition that, she argues, postmodernism has obscured by militantly rejecting its own genealogy.Kruks seeks to refocus our attention on the importance for feminism of embodied and lived experiences. Through her original readings of Simone de Beauvoir and other existential thinkersincluding Sartre, Fanon, and MerleauPontyand her own analyses inspired by their work, Kruks sheds new light on central problems in feminist theory and politics. These include debates about subjectivity and individual agency; questions about recognition and identity politics; and discussion of whether embodied experiences may sometimes facilitate solidarity among groups of different women.