Divine love explores the work of Luce Irigaray from the perspective of religious studies. The book examines the development of religious themes in Irigaray’s work from Speculum of the Other Woman, in which she rejects traditional forms of western religion, to her more recent explorations of eastern religions. Irigaray’s ideas on love, the divine, the ethics of sexual difference and normative heterosexuality are analysed and placed in the context of the reception of her work by secular feminists such as Judith Butler, Drucilla Cornell and Elizabeth Grosz, as well as by feminists in Religious Studies such as Pamela Sue Anderson, Ellen Armour, Amy Hollywood and Grace Jantzen.
Finally, Irigaray’s own spiritual path, which has been influenced by eastern religions, specifically the disciplines of yoga and tantra in Hinduism and Buddhism, is evaluated in the light of recent theoretical developments in orientalism and postcolonialism.
Mục lục
Introduction: Encountering Irigaray
1. What’s God got to do with it?
2. Cartesian mediations
3. Effacements: Emmanuel Levinas and Irigaray
4. Love and the labour of the negative: Irigaray and Hegel
5. Homo and heterogenous zones
6. Irigaray’s eastern excursion
7. Conclusion: A world of difference
Bibliography
Index
Giới thiệu về tác giả
Morny Joy is a Professor in the Department of Religious Studies at the University of Calgary, Canada