Results for 'Maternal ambivalence'

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  1.  32
    Mother Love, Maternal Ambivalence, and the Possibility of Empowered Mothering.Tatjana Takševa - 2017 - Hypatia 32 (1):152-168.
    Dominant cultural ideologies of motherhood define the nature of mother love. Recent developments in motherhood studies, and the work of a small number of feminist philosophers and scholars of motherhood, have challenged the tenets of these ideologies by daring to speak the “unspeakable”: that mother love is often and for all mothers, whether consciously or not, permeated by powerful negative and conflicting emotions termed maternal ambivalence. In this essay, relying on recorded personal narratives by Bosnian women who are (...)
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  2.  34
    Mother Love, Maternal Ambivalence, and the Possibility of Empowered Mothering.Tatjana Takševa - 2016 - Hypatia 31 (4).
    Dominant cultural ideologies of motherhood define the nature of mother love. Recent developments in motherhood studies, and the work of a small number of feminist philosophers and scholars of motherhood, have challenged the tenets of these ideologies by daring to speak the “unspeakable”: that mother love is often and for all mothers, whether consciously or not, permeated by powerful negative and conflicting emotions termed maternal ambivalence. In this essay, relying on recorded personal narratives by Bosnian women who are (...)
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  3. What is Pregnancy Ambivalence? Is it Maternal Ambivalence?Amanda Roth - 2020 - In The Maternal Tug: Ambivalence, Identity, and Agency. pp. 45-72.
     
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  4. Not a matter of will : a narrative and cross-cultural exploration of maternal ambivalence.Peta White, Sandra Wooltorton & Marilyn Palmer - 2018 - In Alison L. Black & Susanne Garvis (eds.), Women activating agency in academia: metaphors, manifestos and memoir. New York, NY: Routledge.
     
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  5.  33
    Frontiers in Parenthood: Queer Mothering, Maternal Ambivalence, Adoption, and Reproductive Technology.Maureen Sander-Staudt - 2016 - Hypatia 31 (2):460-465.
  6. The Maternal Tug: Ambivalence, Identity, and Agency.Amanda Roth (ed.) - 2020
     
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  7.  11
    Mad Mothers, Bad Mothers, and What a "Good" Mother Would Do: The Ethics of Ambivalence.Sarah LaChance Adams - 2014 - New York: Columbia University Press.
    When a mother kills her child, we call her a bad mother, but, as this book shows, even mothers who intend to do their children harm are not easily categorized as "mad" or "bad." Maternal love is a complex emotion rich with contradictory impulses and desires, and motherhood is a conflicted state in which women constantly renegotiate the needs mother and child, the self and the other. Applying care ethics philosophy and the work of Emmanuel Levinas, Maurice Merleau-Ponty, and (...)
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  8.  12
    Louise Bourgeois, Ageing, and Maternal Bodies.Rosemary Betterton - 2009 - Feminist Review 93 (1):27-45.
    This article explores late works by contemporary artist Louise Bourgeois that illuminate current concerns about ageing maternal bodies and the ambivalent responses of fear and loathing that they provoke. In 2003, Louise Bourgeois made an installation for the Freud Museum in Vienna entitled The Reticent Child, on the subject of her own earlier pregnancy and birth of her son, one of several works featuring maternity and fertility which Bourgeois has created in old age. In Nature Study 2007, made at (...)
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  9. Mad Mothers, Bad Mothers, and What a "Good" Mother Would Do: The Ethics of Ambivalence by Sarah LaChance Adams.Fiona Woollard - 2018 - Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 28 (1):1-7.
    When a mother deliberately harms her child, it is tempting to assume that she must be either insane or lacking the "natural" love of a mother for her children. We want to believe that such mothers have almost nothing in common with "good" mothers. Drawing extensively on empirical research, Sarah LaChance Adams' Mad Mothers, Bad Mothers, and What A "Good" Mother Would Do shows that maternal ambivalence, simultaneous desires to nurture and violently reject one's children, is both common (...)
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  10.  27
    Interpreting the maternal organisation.Heather Höpfl & Monika Kostera (eds.) - 2003 - New York: Routledge.
    This book examines the organization as embodied experience. An international range of contributors is assembled to deal explicitly with the 'maternal' aspects of organization. This challenging book will be of essential interest to all critical management theorists. With its innovative approach, it will also appeal to students, teachers, and all those looking for an approach to management that does justice to the complexity, ambivalence and chaos of the world of organizing.
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  11.  5
    Violence and the Maternal in the Marquis de Sade.Dr Beverley Clack - 2009 - Feminist Theology 17 (3):273-291.
    Feminist philosophers of religion have drawn attention to desire as a neglected category for approaching the sources and concerns of religion. This paper extends this discussion by engaging with one particularly disturbing aspect of the writings of the Marquis de Sade. In a world where ultimate sexual pleasure is derived from destruction of the Other, Sade glories in describing the suffering of mothers, often at the hands of their own children. This paper offers one possible reading of these dark desires (...)
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  12. Julia Kristeva’s subversive semiotic politics. A conceptual analysis of Kristeva’s notions of the semiotic chora, maternity and feminism.Evelien Geerts - manuscript
    In this paper, I tried to analyze a couple of Kristeva's ideas and concepts. I tried to engage myself in the debate on whether Kristeva's semiotic politics could be seen as subversive enough to be feminist. I have claimed that some of her basic concepts can be read in a feminist manner, nonetheless Kristeva's oeuvre is packed with all sorts of ambiguities and ambivalences, which makes it hard to define her position towards feminism. At the end of this paper, I (...)
     
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  13.  59
    Contamination and contagion: Environmental toxins, HIV/AIDS, and the problem of the maternal body.Bernice L. Hausman - 2006 - Hypatia 21 (1):137-156.
    : Contemporary global health crises that involve mothers necessarily invoke the varied cultural problematics of maternal embodiment. Examining breastfeeding in light of current concerns about maternal contagion and contamination, with special attention to HIV and environmental toxins, allows us to consider how ambivalence toward maternal embodiment affects the ways we address these health crises within which mothers figure so significantly.
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  14.  19
    Contamination and Contagion: Environmental Toxins, HIV/AIDS, and the Problem of the Maternal Body.Bernice L. Hausman - 2006 - Hypatia 21 (1):137-156.
    Contemporary global health crises that involve mothers necessarily invoke the varied cultural problematics of maternal embodiment. Examining breastfeeding in light of current concerns about maternal contagion and contamination, with special attention to HIV and environmental toxins, allows us to consider how ambivalence toward maternal embodiment affects the ways we address these health crises within which mothers figure so significantly.
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  15. Sadie Plant.After Decades Of Ambivalence - 2000 - In Gill Kirkup (ed.), The gendered cyborg: a reader. New York: Routledge in association with the Open University.
     
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  16.  4
    Intersubjective openings: Rethinking feminist psychoanalytics of desire beyond heteronormative ambivalence.Susan Driver - 2005 - Feminist Theory 6 (1):5-24.
    This essay explores notions of maternal desire within feminist psychoanalysis with an interest in challenging heteronormative frameworks of analysis. Providing close critical readings of texts by Jessica Benjamin, Julia Kristeva, Kaja Silverman and Hortense Spillers, I trace conceptual openings through which to interpret maternal sexuality as a mobile process of intersubjectivity that is grounded in changing historical relations of experience. I argue that Spillers’ approach transforms a critical process of reading desire away from the insularities and exclusions of (...)
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  17.  4
    Call for Papers.Maternal Bodies - 2004 - Hypatia 19 (3):246-246.
  18.  12
    N. O. Lossky’s Use of the Concept of Intuition.Frederick Matern - 2015 - Maritain Studies/Etudes Maritainiennes 31:23-33.
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  19.  2
    S.L. Frank and the.Frederick Matern - 2015 - Philosophy, Culture, and Traditions 11:31-41.
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  20.  2
    Nikolai Berdyaev versus the Eurasianists on Interfaith Dialogue and Ecumenism.Frederick Matern - 2014 - Maritain Studies/Etudes Maritainiennes 30:109-120.
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  21.  1
    A Sacralized Cosmopolitanism? Alexander S. Panarin’s Russian Orthodox Political Economy as a Response to Globalization.Frederick Matern - 2012 - Maritain Studies/Etudes Maritainiennes 28:57-79.
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  22.  11
    Bibelhermeneutik und dogmatische Theologie nach Kant.Harald Matern, Alexander Heit & Enno Edzard Popkes (eds.) - 2016 - Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck.
    Kant's contribution to modern Protestant theology is as unmistakable as it is controversial. The authors of this volume are investigating a new perspective on the work of theology and the effects of Kant's philosophy of religion concentrated on biblical hermeneutics and dogmatic theology.
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  23.  1
    Creative Experience on the Stage: Stanislavski, Erlebnis, and Scholasticism.Frederick Matern - 2013 - Maritain Studies/Etudes Maritainiennes 29:26-39.
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  24.  10
    Eschatologie und Ethik bei Paul Tillich.Harald Matern - 2015 - International Yearbook for Tillich Research 10 (1).
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  25.  4
    Integral Education in a Sensate Age—Reflections on Maritain, Sorokin and the Technological Society.Frederick Matern - 2019 - Maritain Studies/Etudes Maritainiennes 35:61-73.
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  26.  42
    La réception de la théologie politique de J.B. Metz.Pierre-Yves Materne - 2007 - Laval Théologique et Philosophique 63 (2):275-290.
    Cet article a pour objectif de montrer l’importance de la réception de la théologie politique de J.B. Metz auprès de certains théologiens soucieux de la dimension politique de la foi chrétienne. L’étude présente les réactions immédiates au projet théologique de Metz pour ensuite se focaliser sur des théologiens contemporains. Premièrement, on trouve J. Milbank, qui apprécie la pensée de Metz en la confrontant à son programme de Radical Orthodoxy. Deuxièmement, on rencontre H.-J. Gagey et J.-L. Souletie, qui évaluent la force (...)
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  27.  4
    Nostalgia or Criticism? A New Middle Ages in Maritain, Berdyaev, and Sorokin.Frederick Matern - 2018 - Maritain Studies/Etudes Maritainiennes 34:115-122.
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  28.  7
    On Forms and Causes.Frederick Matern - 2016 - Maritain Studies/Etudes Maritainiennes 32:37-50.
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  29.  7
    Progress, Chronolatry and Perennial Philosophy.Frederick Matern - 2020 - Maritain Studies/Etudes Maritainiennes 36:57-67.
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  30.  4
    Sorokin, Maritain and Integral Sociology.Frederick Matern - 2017 - Maritain Studies/Etudes Maritainiennes 33:116-129.
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  31.  4
    “Things and Ghosts” or a Common Task: Approaches to Concern Over the Far-Distant Future.Frederick Matern - 2021 - Maritain Studies/Etudes Maritainiennes 37:24-33.
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  32. [The Kingdom of Peace. An introduction to Christian ethics].Pierre-Yves Materne - 2009 - Revue Théologique de Louvain 40 (1):101-105.
     
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  33.  8
    The response of lentil cultivars to sowing date and plant density in the southern Mallee of Victoria.Jason Brand, R. Armstrong, M. Materne & G. Antonoff - 2003 - Emergence: Complexity and Organization 283 (2.35):260.
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  34.  6
    Book Review: Pierre-Yves Materne, La condition de disciple: Ethique et politique chez J.B. Metz et S. Hauerwas. [REVIEW]Pierre-Yves Materne & H. StJ Broadbent - 2015 - Studies in Christian Ethics 28 (2):236-240.
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  35.  37
    Book Review: Pierre-Yves Materne, La condition de disciple: Ethique et politique chez J.B. Metz et S. Hauerwas. [REVIEW]Pierre-Yves Materne & H. StJ Broadbent - 2015 - Studies in Christian Ethics 28 (2):236-240.
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  36.  16
    Der Herstellungsbegriff in der Synthetischen Biologie.Joachim Boldt, Harald Matern, Oliver Müller, Tobias Eichinger & Jens Ried - 2012 - Jahrbuch für Wissenschaft Und Ethik 17 (1):89-116.
    In den Publikationen der Synthetischen Biologie und in Darstellungen dieser neuen Biotechnologie finden sich häufig Begriffe des Herstellens, Konstruierens, Erschaffens und Kreierens. Im folgenden Beitrag wird dieses Begriffsfeld auf der Basis von technikphilosophischen und kunsttheoretischen Ansätzen systematisiert. Es wird erstens untersucht, inwiefern sich die verschiedenen Forschungsrichtungen in der Synthetischen Biologie mit diesem Begriffsinstrumentarium angemessen beschreiben lassen; zweitens wird analysiert, welche ethischen Fragestellungen mit den unterschiedlichen Begriffen des Herstellens und Erschaffens im Fall der Synthetischen Biologie verbunden sind.
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  37. Simulation, or hybrid?J. Allan Hobson & I. Ambivalence - 2005 - In Christopher Grau (ed.), Philosophers Explore the Matrix. Oxford University Press. pp. 177.
     
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  38.  10
    Beauvoir and the Ambiguities of Motherhood.Alison Stone - 2017 - In Laura Hengehold & Nancy Bauer (eds.), A Companion to Simone de Beauvoir. Chichester, UK: Wiley. pp. 122–133.
    This chapter introduces Beauvoir's conception of motherhood in The Second Sex. Beauvoir sets out to demystify motherhood by presenting women's experiences of pregnancy and mothering in all their difficulty, complexity, and ambivalence. However, Beauvoir works with a contrast between transcendence and immanence which inclines her to interpret pregnancy and maternity in terms of immanence (i.e. unfreedom). This chapter identifies alternative lines of thought in Beauvoir's work which portray maternity more positively: as disclosing our fundamental ambiguity, the bodily roots of (...)
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  39.  15
    Awful Gladness”: The Dual Political Rhetorics of Du Bois’s “Of the Passing of the First-Born.Annie Menzel - 2019 - Political Theory 47 (1):32-56.
    W.E.B. Du Bois’s elegy for his infant son, “Of the Passing of the First-Born,” in The Souls of Black Folk, has received relatively scant attention from political theorists. Yet it illuminates crucial developments in Du Bois’s political thought. It memorializes a tragedy central to his turn from scientific facts to rhetorical appeals to emotion. Its rhetoric also exemplifies a broader tension in his writings, between masculinist and elitist commitments and more insurrectionary impulses. In its normalizing rhetorical mode, which dominates, the (...)
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  40. Invisible women in reproductive technologies: Critical reflections.Piyali Mitra - 2018 - Indian Journal of Medical Ethics 3 (2):NS: 113-9.
    The recent spectacular progress in assisted reproductive technologies (ARTs) has resulted in new ethical dilemmas. Though women occupy a central role in the reproductive process, within the ART paradigm, the importance accorded to the embryo commonly surpasses that given to the mother. This commentary questions the increasing tendency to position the embryonic subject in an antagonistic relation with the mother. I examine how the mother’s reproductive autonomy is compromised in relation to that of her embryo and argue in favour of (...)
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  41.  7
    Rendered invisible? The absent presence of egg providers in U.K. debates on the acceptability of research and therapy for mitochondrial disease.Ken Taylor & Erica Haimes - 2015 - Monash Bioethics Review 33 (4):360-378.
    Techniques for resolving some types of inherited mitochondrial diseases have recently been the subject of scientific research, ethical scrutiny, media coverage and regulatory initiatives in the UK. Building on research using eggs from a variety of providers, scientists hope to eradicate maternally transmitted mutations in mitochondrial DNA by transferring the nuclear DNA of a fertilised egg, created by an intending mother at risk of transmitting mitochondrial disease, and her male partner, into an enucleated egg provided by another woman. In this (...)
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  42.  5
    The virtual mother: Mumsnet and the emergence of new forms of ‘good mothering’ online.Lucy Bailey - 2023 - Discourse and Communication 17 (1):40-56.
    Whilst previous research into mothering on social media has focused on representations of intensive mothering ideology, this paper argues that social media are fundamentally changing mothering discourses for some users. The paper explores ‘good’ mothering in digital communities by considering: the legitimised expression of ambivalent emotions in digital mothering communities; the shifting relationship between private and public, with implications for new forms of maternal intimacy; the forms of surveillance engaged in, and resisted, online; and the opportunities for women to (...)
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  43.  15
    I Don’t Love My Baby?!Idun Røseth & Rob Bongaardt - 2019 - Journal of Phenomenological Psychology 50 (1):90-111.
    Many new mothers question the nature of their motherly love after birth. This affectionate relationship towards the infant is commonly called bonding in everyday speech, clinical practice and research. Bonding may not sufficiently describe the mother’s emotional response to the infant and does not capture the ambivalence and struggle to develop maternal affection of many women. This study aims to explore the phenomenon of disturbed maternal affection through the clinical case of one mother who experienced severe and (...)
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  44.  14
    Childhood behavioral inhibition and attachment: Links to generalized anxiety disorder in young adulthood.Magdalena A. Zdebik, Katherine Pascuzzo, Jean-François Bureau & Ellen Moss - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    Generalized anxiety disorder is under-treated yet prevalent among young adults. Identifying early risk factors for GAD would contribute to its etiological model and identify potential targets for intervention. Insecure attachment patterns, specifically ambivalent and disorganized, have long been proposed as childhood risk factors for GAD. Similarly, childhood behavioral inhibition has been consistently associated with anxiety disorders in adulthood, including GAD. Intolerance of uncertainty, the tendency to react negatively to uncertain situations, has also been shown to be a crucial component of (...)
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  45.  18
    The Paradoxical Home and Body in Jennifer Johnston’s The Christmas Tree (1981).Jennifer A. Slivka - 2023 - Journal of Medical Humanities 44 (1):91-105.
    Jennifer Johnston’s fiction presents the conditions of Irish culture and society by exploring the separations between interior and exterior realms and past and present temporalities persisting within the insulating privacy of the familial home space. In _The Christmas Tree_ (1981), the home is both haven and prison for Johnston’s heroine. In this paper, I argue that the home—which assumes the form of the individual body and the familial home—is paradoxical. The protagonist leaves 1950s Ireland because of the country’s rigid gender (...)
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  46.  22
    From the Little Wife to the Supermom? Maternographies of Feminism and Mothering in Australia since 1945.Pascoe Leahy - 2019 - Feminist Studies 45 (1):100-128.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:100 Feminist Studies 45, no. 1. © 2019 by Feminist Studies, Inc. Carla Pascoe Leahy From the Little Wife to the Supermom? Maternographies of Feminism and Mothering in Australia since 1945 Men didn’t do anything.... The mother did for the child. The father went out to work.... I was a very determined, modern woman, but I didn’t mind being the little wife. —Marjorie, 1950s mother1 There were competing narratives. (...)
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  47.  8
    Is Queen Christina a Woman?: Gender, Performance and Feminist Experimentation in Pam Gems’s Queen Christina.Jozefina Kompor·ly - 2004 - European Journal of Women's Studies 11 (2):143-157.
    This article interprets Pam Gems’s play Queen Christina as an avant la lettrethesis on the performance of gender, identifying correspondences between the protagonist’s trajectory and the successive feminist interventions. Focusing on the 17th-century Swedish queen’s transformation from a masculine-identified bastion of patriarchy into an untamed rebel against political and sexual conservatism, Gems, in fact, indirectly shares her views on aspects of western feminist thought. This article’s analysis demonstrates that following Christina’s initial appropriation and subsequent contestation of patriarchal values, she engages (...)
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  48.  40
    Reading The Second Sex Sixty Years Later.Julia Kristeva & Timothy Hackett - 2011 - philoSOPHIA: A Journal of Continental Feminism 1 (2):137-149.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reading The Second Sex Sixty Years LaterJulia KristevaTranslated by Timothy HackettPublished in 1949, today The Second Sex is a youthful sixty-year-old woman who has created a scandal, but also a school of thought: She marks a decisive stage in women's liberation and continues to accelerate it.Let's try to place ourselves in that year, 1949: The world has barely dressed its wounds from World War II and onto the scene (...)
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  49.  19
    Celles par qui les métissages arrivent.Carmen Bernand - 2008 - Clio 27:101-113.
    Les statuts hybrides sont en premier lieu ceux des métis, écartelés entre deux loyautés et deux appartenances. Ce texte porte plutôt sur « celles par qui les métissages arrivent », ces mères de métis, généralement indiennes, qui donnent à leurs enfants la langue maternelle et les enracinent dans le sol américain : deux atouts essentiels, mais qui sont disqualifiés par les discours que tiennent Espagnols et Indiens, en vertu de leur sensualité et de leurs vices supposés. Etres ambivalents par excellence, (...)
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  50.  12
    Vacant Wombs: Feminist Challenges to Psychoanalytic Theories of Childless Women.Myra J. Hird - 2003 - Feminist Review 75 (1):5-19.
    This paper concerns a theoretical struggle to situate childless women within contemporary feminist debates about gender, the body and sexuality. Although psychoanalytic theory offers a compelling approach to the body, a Freudian account of childless women has largely escaped investigation. This paper will provide such an analysis, arguing that competing interpretations of psychoanalytic theory reveal a salient tension in the interpretation of gender identification. On the one hand, some theorists focus on a social development model of gender identification. This model (...)
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