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  1.  90
    Hannah Arendt, Feminism, and the Politics of Alterity: "What Will We Lose If We Win?".Joanne Cutting-Gray - 1993 - Hypatia 8 (1):35 - 54.
    Hannah Arendt's early biography of Rahel Varnhagen, an eighteenth-century German-Jew, provides a revolutionary feminist component to her political theory. In it, Arendt grapples with the theoretical constitution of a female subject and relates Jewish alterity, identity, and history to feminist politics. Because she understood the "female condition" of difference as belonging to the political subject rather than an autonomous self, her theory entails a "politics of alterity" with applications for feminist practice.
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  2.  35
    Hannah Arendt, Feminism, and the Politics of Alterity: “What Will We Lose If We Win?”.Joanne Cutting-Gray - 1993 - Hypatia 8 (1):35-54.
    Hannah Arendt's early biography of Rahel Varnhagen, an eighteenth-century German-Jew, provides a revolutionary feminist component to her political theory. In it, Arendt grapples with the theoretical constitution of a female subject and relates Jewish alterity, identity, and history to feminist politics. Because she understood the "female condition" of difference as belonging to the political subject rather than an autonomous self, her theory entails a "politics of alterity" with applications for feminist practice.
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  3.  21
    Hannah Arendt's Rahel Varnhagen.Joanne Cutting-Gray - 1991 - Philosophy and Literature 15 (2):229-245.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Joanne Cutting-Gray HANNAH ARENDT'S RAHEL VARNHAGEN Hannah Arendt fled Nazi Germany in 1933, a year she called the end of Jewish history. She was 27 years old at the time and carried with her a manuscript that was later to become the peculiar biography of an eighteenth-century German-Jewish "pariah," Rahel Varnhagen (1771-1833). The Life of a fewish Woman, subtitle of the biography by Arendt, distills the largely unpublished Varnhagen (...)
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  4.  1
    The Vanishing Subject: Early Psychology and Literary Modernism (review).Joanne Cutting-Gray - 1992 - Philosophy and Literature 16 (1):219-220.
  5.  17
    Extreme beauty: aesthetics, politics, death.James E. Swearingen & Joanne Cutting-Gray (eds.) - 2002 - New York: Continuum.
    The essays range from Hegel and Modernism to Marcel Duchamp and the Avant-Garde, postmodern poetics, boredom and Proust, the romance of Arendt and Heidegger, ...
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