Abstract
The phenomenological area most avoided by feminists is the one for which Husserl is most famous: his descriptions of how the transcendental ego constitutes objects in Ideas I.1 Because these analyses take place after the epoché, where the positing of existence—and thus all social relations understood in a causal world—have been set aside, the gendered subject seems to be absolutely excluded. However, as Husserl makes clear, everything that is experienced in the world is allowed after the epoché in a modified sense, and thus the concept and experience of gender would be included as well. In other words, analyses of gendered experiences can certainly take place after the epoché—as long as we take...