The Body as Situation: A Darwinian Reading of The Second Sex
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/18062Dato
2019-02-04Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Bleie, ToneSammendrag
Challenging the influential view that the chapter on biology in the first volume of The Second Sex is exposing scientific myths in severe prose, in the view of this paper, the chapter is as much about scientific facts as it is an intriguingly open-ended dialogue between phenomenology and science. Beauvoir’s consuming epistemological and scientific preoccupation with the category of biology is analysed in a bid to advance a new, naturalist–feminist conception of Beauvoir’s theory of natural history. The analysis unravels the theoretical edifice, with its tensions between Beauvoir’s selective but brilliant appropriation of recent discoveries in evolutionary biology and genetics and certain deliberate rejections and omissions of Darwinian evolutionary thinking. Contrary to Beauvoir’s intentions, she ends up conflating the term biology with, in particular, reproductive physiology, and perpetuating the ill-fated division between body and psyche. In contributing to a reformulation of an empirically grounded approach to the embodied mind and situated body, this paper debates some promising insights from contemporary neuroscience and primatology. These insights are critical to theory development, based on a non-anthropocentric stance and non-dualistic understanding of the mind–brain continuum and the body as a situation.
Beskrivelse
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in NORA - Nordic Journal of Feminist and Gender Research on 04 Feb 2019, available online: http://www.tandfonline.com/https://doi.org/10.1080/08038740.2018.1550110.
Forlag
Taylor & FrancisSitering
Bleie T. The Body as Situation: A Darwinian Reading of The Second Sex. NORA - Nordic Journal of Feminist and Gender Research. 2019;27(1):54-71Metadata
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