Results for ' L’Invitée (She Came to Stay)'

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  1. The feminist phenomenology of excess: Ontological multiplicity, auto-jealousy, and suicide in Beauvoir’s L’Invitée.Jennifer McWeeny - 2011 - Continental Philosophy Review 45 (1):41-75.
    In this paper, I present a new reading of Simone de Beauvoir’s first major work, L’Invitée ( She Came to Stay ), in order to reveal the text as a vital place of origin for feminist phenomenological philosophy. My reading of L’Invitée departs from most scholarly interpretations of the text in three notable respects: (1) it is inclusive of the “two unpublished chapters” that were excised from the original manuscript at the publisher’s request, (2) it takes (...)
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    Simone de Beauvoir and the Dialectic of Desire in L'Invitée.Anne Leeuwen - 2017 - In Laura Hengehold & Nancy Bauer (eds.), A Companion to Simone de Beauvoir. Chichester, UK: Wiley. pp. 356–366.
    This chapter focuses on the dialectic of desire in She Came to Stay. What it seeks to show is that this dialectic is not strictly a Hegelian or Kojèvean one but in fact introduces a similar transformation of this dialectic similar to the one we find in Lacan. As such, She Came to Stay is not an incomplete or insufficient restaging of the dialectical constitution of the subject of consciousness; instead it presents the dialectic of desire (...)
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    Wartime Diary.Simone de Beauvoir, Margaret A. Simons, Sylvie Le Bon de Beauvoir & Anne Deing Cordero (eds.) - 2009 - University of Illinois Press.
    Written from September 1939 to January 1941, Simone de Beauvoir’s Wartime Diary gives English readers unabridged access to one of the scandalous texts that threaten to overturn traditional views of Beauvoir’s life and work. The account in Beauvoir’s Wartime Diary of her clandestine affair with Jacques Bost and sexual relationships with various young women challenges the conventional picture of Beauvoir as the devoted companion of Jean-Paul Sartre, just as her account of completing her novel She Came to Stay (...)
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