| The Psyche of Feminism argues that a feminist
ethics, in order to be both feminist and ethical, needs to embrace psychoanalysis.
After reviewing the relation between feminism and psychoanalysis and
arguing for the centrality of psychoanalysis to feminist thought, the
study offers an analysis of two attempts by George Sand to reimagine the
sexual relationship (Lettres à Marcie [Letters to Marcie],
Lélia), where the emphasis is on political injustice and the
impossibility of women’s desires. Moving from rights and desires
to the question of pleasures, Peebles then takes up a relatively little-read
work by Colette, Le pur et l’impur (The Pure and the Impure),
in which the narrator suggests that pleasure and its corporeal language
hold the key to any understanding of masculinity and femininity. We are
then led to the risky question of “neutrality” put forward
by Nathalie Sarraute (Tu ne t’aimes pas [You don’t
love yourself]), whose work forces a psychoanalytic feminism to face the
question: what if sexual difference itself is a ruse? Does the notion
of a human neutrality condemn us either to a bygone humanism or to psychosis?
The final chapter of the work synthesizes these analyses and argues for
a fundamental feminist rethinking of the ideal of equality, an ideal that
figures significantly and uneasily in each of the works this book treats.
"[The Pysche of Feminism] weaves its readings of novels
by three women into a history of psychoanalytic, especially post-Freudian,
thought. . . . The work will certainly interest those who are
already convinced of the validity of psychoanalysis and the importance
of psychoanalysis to feminist thought." —Pamela A.
Genova, author of André Gide dans le labyrinthe de
la mythotextualité
"Peebles's conclusion endorses the Sarrautean move beyond
a 'feminine subject' as a valuable contribution to the psyche
of feminism, which continually dissolves and is reborn. The study
thus ends with a new twist to the long-running debate about the
kind of subjectivity (equal or different?) that would best serve
contemporary feminism. Readers looking for a detailed study of
Sand, Colette and Sarraute ... will at least be given some illuminating
new readings of these authors. Those, on the other hand, looking
for a sustained and engaged development of (Irigarayan) psycholanalytic
feminist literary criticism will find much to think about."
—Olga Gómez, French Studies
For the full review, see French Studies 59.4 (2005):
581.
"One of the most daunting challenges for feminist theory
has always been the problem of conceiving a feminine subject that
is not defined in terms of a relation to man. As Peebles effectively
demonstrates, it is a dilemma best elucidated in light of insights
provided by psychoanalytic theory. ... I found the argument eloquent,
intriguing, and stimulating." —Karlis Racevskis,
French Review
For the full review, see French Review 79.6 (2006):
1370-71.
Catherine M. Peebles, University of New Hampshire, has written on
French literature and film, psychoanalytic theory, and feminist theory.
Currently she is working on a project tentatively entitled Anxiety,
Equality, and the Will to Power.
1-55753-329-6
2003. Vol. 28. xvi, 232 pp. Paper $32.95
|